Transition Culture

An Evolving Exploration into the Head, Heart and Hands of Energy Descent

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Monthly archive for March 2006

Showing results 21 - 25 of 28 for the month of March, 2006.


8 Mar 2006

Top Five Things to Do With Oil Barrels When There’s No More Oil To Fill Them – #2. Make Comfrey Liquor.

comfreyComfrey is the superhero of plants. It is truly wonderful, so multifunctional as to almost be outrageous. Comfrey is what is known as a dynamic accumulator, that is it is incredibly good at mining nutrients from deep in the soil and bringing them to the surface. The combination of comfrey and oil drum can be a win/win for any gardener.

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Discussion: 4 Comments

Categories: Peak Oil, Permaculture, Waste/Recycling


7 Mar 2006

Top Five Things to Do With Oil Barrels When There’s No More Oil To Fill Them – #1. Make Charcoal.

cartoonOver this week I will be taking a look at five things we could do with oil barrels when we are no longer able to put oil in them. The idea came from the cover of Peter Tertzakian’s new book A Thousand Barrels a Second : The Coming Oil Break Point and the Challenges Facing an Energy Dependent World (you can hear an interview with the author here) which I just started reading, which has a great picture which shows a huge collection of such barrels. Struck me that we’re going to have an awful lot of them left lying about the place, and perhaps they might become rather useful things.

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Discussion: 7 Comments

Categories: Energy, Food, Waste/Recycling


6 Mar 2006

Updated Kinsale Article Posted by Popular Demand…

KOS*This article on Energy Descent Planning and the Kinsale experience has appeared in various places now, but Permaculture Activist recently, in its Peak Oil edition, published this expanded and updated version. Several people have emailed and asked where they can get a copy of it, so here it is, by popular demand (I always wanted to be able to say that…). It was edited by PC Activist editor Scott Horton into US-speak, with ‘gosh’ and ‘crikey’ removed and replaced with ‘gotten’ and ‘eggplant’. Go tell your friends…*

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6 Mar 2006

“Revenge of Gaia” – James Lovelock Speaks at Dartington.

lovelockLast Friday I went to see James Lovelock speaking to a packed Barn Cinema in Dartington as a promotion for his new book “The Revenge of Gaia”. The evening was, as I expected, one of mixed emotions, although ultimately I found it deeply frustrating. Lovelock is of course best known as creator of the Gaia theory, that of the Earth as a self-regulating organism. The original book on this theory had a profound effect on me. Seeing him last night, telling us that we are all doomed, and nothing we can think or do will have the slightest effect, felt a bit like seeing a band whose first album completely changed your life and became the soundtrack of a part of your history playing, ten years later, in Butlins, all flabby and sweaty and directionless.

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3 Mar 2006

The Oil Drum’s 8 Reasons Why Peak Oil is Here / The Fine Art of Falling Off Building Sites.

fallingOver at **The Oil Drum**, Stuart Staniford has written a piece called Why The Peak is Probably About Now which you really ought to read. The Oil Drum is an amazing site, number crunching computer modelling academics (most of them using pseudonyms as they still work in Universities) sift through all the peak oil data and attempt to make some sense of it all. At least half of it goes completely over my head. In this article, however, he sets out the key arguments which for him are the key indicators that we are at or near the peak. This whole peak oil thing seems to have developed a horrible momentum, an inevitability about it which I guess I always knew it would, but now I can actually *feel* it rather than just intellectually *knowing* about it. It brought to mind the time

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Discussion: 1 Comment

Categories: Peak Oil