Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Learning About Self Sufficiency in Thailand




So far our travels through Thailand have found endless natural beauty, smiling people, inspiring craft. Thailand is a very easy place to travel, the country is well prepared for the millions of tourists that visit the country each year. Life for the tourist can easily consist walking the endless markets of beautiful handimades, enjoying a constant array of Thai delicacies, somtum salads (spicy green papaya) and fresh coconut shakes to name a few.

Now since my intent for this trip was a voyage of discovery more than a vacation I started to feel a bit frustrated with the tourist tracks that had been laid down through the country. After endulging for a week or two I was starting to feel that my method of travel was becoming unsustainably self indulgent for my own health not to mention the trail of plastic cups and bottles I left in my wake as I toured. With frustration growing, at the reality that I was really a big wallet full of baht in the eyes of many Thais, I was looking for something that would bring some deeper discovery. Chaa and I reformulated our trip to head north to a 10 day vipassana, then continue on to Laos to visit an organic farm, an attempting a jump off of the tourist tracks.

We live in a fascinating point in human history. And it is my intent to write and share my experiences from this perspective. We as a global community are experiencing the peak of oil, the massive populations of the subcontinent and China going middle class, mass ecological destruction, global warming, resource wars, abuses of power by multi-nationals, governments and the media. If you feel that I have made overstatement here I invite you to have a look these links….


















Despite this perspective I do not feel desperation or nihilism there are a lot of amazing ideas and intiatives that are being realized the world over, in some of the most unlikely places and by people who have some of the least access to educational and financial resources. I am excited to be living in this time and traveling the world. Being another set of eyes, to see all of this and share the highlights with you. That is part of the point of this blog is to spread some good news and good ideas. And so I will follow up that above list with twice as many positive, regenerative, hopeful links that contain ideas and stories that will inspire and might just change the future of life on the planet here are a few and there will be a larger list of links compiled…

earth building and food:




Global Conciousness Project




Maharasi University:




Earth Building:
BaanDin.org

Sustainable Living and Seed saving:



Ok so on with the story...

It was late one evening in an internet shop in the ancient capital ayyuttha that I was accessing the more inspirational pockets of consciousness on the web.
I learned about a couple of small projects in the north one of which was, PUN-PUN, with a humble website I thought it was an anamoloy in a culture and landscape that is increasingly being dominated by hyper-consumerism.

That night I found that there was a sustainability tour offered by pun-pun. We changed our plans to go to Vipassana and headed to Isan province on the next train out of town, a mere few hours away from that late night stillness in the internet shop. I really had little idea of what it was that we would find as we slid across the landscape in an old wooden train car with wide open windows that allowed us to experience the sights and smells of the passing landscape. I knew that we would be traveling considerable distance to find sites of organic, self sufficient lifestyle and traditional medicine. I knew it would be worth a peek.

We caught up with our group. Thirteen people, from all over the western world, a community leader in earthen building, a farmer from Holland, a hobby gardener from England, earth building geeks from the Canada and the us, a writer from SF bay area, interested in susutainable development (check out her blog at >...http://amandakovattana.blogspot.com/ ).

And of course our tour guides, translators and inspiration Peggy Reents and Jo Jandai and their son Thon, who are leaders and great advocates in Thailand in earthen building, (check their biographies at the bottom of this article). It was a diverse and interesting group. And as alica and I climbed on the bus, a wave of curiosity and excitement came over me, leaving the logistics and linguistic barriers of solo travel behind and being taken on a inside look at Thai rural culture and the sustainable developments in Thailand.

During our travels we would cover some 800kms, eat all organic food, visit 13 sites of sustainable development ranging from a family farm, to university research sites, to massive spiritual communities, co-ops, medicine makers, we would eat all vegetarian organic local grown meals, play theater games with each other, watch educational films, slideshows about world wide innovative and work on some earthen buildings, all in a 10day period.

Here are a few of the highlights:

The Story of the Santi-Asoka movement in Thailand and how they intend to
“Feed the Whole World Garbage”

Of the largest and most impressive examples of sustainability that we witnessed on the tour was the efforts of the Santi-Asoka Buddhist Movement. A sect of Theravada Buddhism was established by former television personality and songwriter Phra Bodhirak. He was originally ordained by a Thai Singha. Asoka meaning “no sorrow” or “happiness” in Thai, is gaining momentum in Thai society. Although exact numbers are difficult to source the late
the latest report I found published in 2003 suggested the Asok movement includes thousands of members living throughout the country and hundreds living in 18 self-sustaining communities. You can be sure the numbers are larger since the movement has been growing exponentially.

They extol a system of “meritism” that can be described as pro-self reliance, pro-community, anti-materialist and anti-consumerist. This is best expressed in their dictum to “eat little, use little, work a lot, save the rest for society” Everyone living in the community must adhere to Buddah’s Five Precepts, which include no killing, no lying, no sexual misconduct (sex without commitment), stealing, or taking of intoxicants. The day begins at 3:30 am and after two hours of meditation, members spend most of the day working. They eat two meals a day…and work all day with a smile.

Arriving on A New Earth…

Upon arriving at the Ratchtani Asoka Community, which is an impressive sustainable compound. Arriving there it felt like science fiction, I just been transported to another planet, some eco- utopian village authored by Star Hawk. Our songthaow bus wound through the verdant streets, passed beautiful stilted homes, massive houseboats perched on rocky outcroppings, gardens cultivated full of food, sculptures and water gardens. Boheimoth hulls of beached boats placed curiously throughout the village. We stopped infront of a massive building that looked like it had been built by giants, flanked on one side by two trees that towered 200 ft into the sky. These people are seriously organized and thrivingly self sufficient. The Asoka symbology the rudder features promonatly at the entrances to their villages. And being there I was really reminded of biblical accounts of the great flood, and it made feel that I was standing in one of the sites that would survive such eco-catastrophy. And as tour commenced I realized that they were in fact truly prepared for such a flood. The land that the village is built upon was given to the Asoka and I am sure that that the philanthropist considered the land uninhabitable seeing as it floods about eight feet for three months a year! All of this beautiful cultivation gets washed out every year, the Asoka don’t seem to mind, it is a good opportunity for all to pull together, practice non attachment and relax on the large communal houseboats. The Asoka pay for much of their expenses through their recycling efforts, check the photos of their recycling center. And it is through these efforts that they jokingly say that “they want to feed the whole world garbage” proceeds of simple recycling funds incredible educational and chartible efforts throughout the country.

Social Business Model:

From our guide we learn that the Asok have a curious business model, first they often give crop surpluses away, feeding the poor, the protesting, the ill. Secondly they make all natural soaps and natural fermented agricultural products, these sell for below market value in their stores and restaurants in the cities, food is also all organic. They also produce medicine. Not only that but each Asoka community hosts trainings that range from weekend to month long in self-sufficiency and organic farming techniques free of charge to thousands of Thai farmers who have become economic slaves through agricultural chemical dependency. The Asok had many farmers turn to them for guidance after the devestation of the 1997 Asian economic collapse that hit Thailand particularly hard.

Detoxing from Economic and Chemical Dependancies

On this tour I got to see first hand the links between chemical dependence on the land forcing people into debt and desperation. Consumerist dreams and economic dependence often leading to personal chemical dependances in the cities.

Many of the farmers that we visited have started growing organic and become increasingly interested in self-sufficiency because they were increasingly seeing it as a better option than disasterious health effects of chemicals and economic enslavement. These are not intellectual decisions but based on experiential knowledge. It is a difficult decision to detox land. For anyone who has gone through or known someone who has experienced chemical detoxing. The process is analogous, at some point one remembers that there was once vivacity that is no longer experienced. Thai farmers have felt this in the considerable loss of biodiversity and deforestation that has occurred in the last thirty years. This loss of biodiversity has increased the farmer’s dependence on market goods and money, the rice paddies are no longer habitat to various fish, frogs, birds and insects, that were all at one time food staples. With the use of chemicals all of this has been lost, and so they must spend the meager amount that they make from their crop to pay for more chemicals and market food to sustain their lives. When the decision to “go clean” is first made there is a period of barrenness and transition that often causes relapse to old ways. The organic co-ops and farmers groups and aska trainings help through this transition stage which can take up to three years in order build up the quality of soil to sustain organic farming. The farms that we visited had seen amazing gains Biodiveristy and personal health and happiness, and community, which are the truest measurements of wealth.


Building Homes from Earth

“The most difficult thing in earthen building is to change ones attitudes” – Jo Jandai

Our tour leaders, Peggy and Jo are essentially responsible for bringing earthen building to Thailand. Back in the mid Nineties Jo was visiting the Mesa Grande, in Taos NM, Mesa Grande is the oldest known continuely inhabitited structure known. It was built with Adobe, mud brick techniquie. Jo noticed that the climate of his native Isan Province was similar to that of NM, and thought that the technique might be transferable. Having photocopied a book about the process he returned to his farm and started experimenting with the technique. Having found that it was very well suited for the environment he and his amercian wife Peggy started teaching workshops to everyone from interested Americans to Burmese womens groups. Jo has now become a public personality in the media, constantly giving TV and magazine interviews he also travels the country teaching workshops. Jo introduced the technique to the Asoka and now there are thousands of Baan Din (adobe buildings) in Thailand. The phenomena has been growing exponentially not only because the resultant buildings are cheaper, made from local materials, can be raised by communities, but they are more comfortable in the hot days and cool nights because of their thermal mass characteristics. The walls are like batteries, during the day they radiate the cool of the evening and during the night radiating the heat of the day. The buildings are remarkably easy to build and a lot of fun. In our time here I have had the chance to work on a couple of buildings and am looking forward to spreading this incredibly empowering and practical technology with me and teaching others.

What’s Next for Xaaq and Chaa’s "spirit of adventure!"?

We will be seeing some of the north of Thailand on our way to Laos and China. We have few details yet but are meeting travelers that are giving us some interesting tips. And so until the next update check out some of the links
and lots of love
x!



heres peggy and jo's biographies:


Jon Jandai is the most widely know earthen builder in Thailand. In 1997, he began experimenting with earthen building on his family land, where he has been organic farming and seed-saving all his life. When Kleiwerks International was invited to work in Thailand in 2002, Jon was there from day one. He has since been teaching villagers and farmers, activists and architects, and consortiums of NGOs. Jon is one of the main sparks of what is now a widespread earthen building movement throughout his country. He has even become somewhat of a celebrity after appearing in over 20 magazines, on the Oprah-version of Thai TV, in videos, newspapers, and radio-- impressive testimony for a humble farmer. Jon is Co-Founding Director of Pun Pun-- Thailand's leading demonstration and education center for earthen building, sustainable living, organic farming, and seed-saving. He is an avid seed-saver, educator by example, and emperimenter extraordinaire. He is also one of the most selfless and dedicated people one could ever meet. Jon has been Kleiwerks International Southeast Asian Liaison, Affiliate Instructor, and an alumni since 2002.

Peggy Reents is Co-Founding Director of Pun Pun-- Thailand's leading demonstration and education center for earthen building, sustainable living, organic farming, and seed-saving. Before this, Peggy worked in Northeast Thailand with local community development projects, activist organizing, and advocacy for sustainable agriculture. She helped start ENGAGE (Educational Network for Global and Grassroots Exchange)-- a student-based coalition involving people in cross-cultural communication, resulting in grassroots action in support of global social justice. Peggy is deeply dedicated to working with farmers and villagers, activists, and NGO's. She is also mother of the newest member of Pun Pun- her and Jo's baby, Tahn. Peggy is originally from Colorado in the United States. Peggy has been a kleiwerks Affiliate and alumni since 2002.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

change of plans we are on our way west to tour sustainable farming in thailand

Heres some interesting links:


You may ask yourself what this list of links has to do with traveliing through asia?
Well as I am travelling I have much time to dream, for this I am grateful. Having this time and new perspective allows me to synthesize the kaledoscope of experiences and ideas i have been exposed to up to this point. From apprenticing under a madman architect hell bent on building with reused archectectural elements, to working on my own as a steel fabricator and desgner, to moving more into creative facillitation and work with street youth, I have really been feeling these experiences coalese into a vision of what I want to create in the future and explore here in asia.

This past autumn I had the chance to visit the kooteneys and it was there that I felt that some longterm dreams becoming possible. The dream is essentially to create what I am calling a "mystery school". To create a space that transmits knowledge and life skills through practical hands on learning. A space that can host workshops in communication skills, green building techniques, growing food, geek shops that design and create light electric vehicles out of old bicycles, where there may be a yearly gathering work/learning/party, a place where there are elders and children, a space that honours the skills needed to survive as much as skills needed to dream and create......

WOW, .......plans are changing rapidly. I just caught whiff of a very interesting happening going on in the north of the country, at a sustainable farm called PUN PUN. So this may mean that vipassana will wait and chaa and I will be trying to get to a remote farm north of chang-mai in order to meet with sustainality leaders and travel to their farms for the next week...STOKED!!

enjoy the links, more to follow, I hope that they inspire.....


Pun Pun is an organic farm, seed-saving operation, and sustainable living and learning center. We feel that only by living in a sustainable way ourselves, is it possible for us to create a model from which others can learn and live. Through natural cultivation on our organic farm we display ways of transitioning to, and living more sustainably. Through the living and learning center we experiment with appropriate technologies, organic farming, and natural building techniques. We discover the practices that work well for people and are practical. We then spread this knowledge to those individuals and networks that will put it to use. Through our seed-saving operation we seek to bring back indigenous and rare species of all kinds of vegetables, fruits, and medicinal herbs. We propagate them at the farm and then exchange them for greater use amongst farmers and other interested people, thus empowering and improving the health of the general public.
http://www.punpunthailand.org/cfabw/en/index.php?action=home


heres some other interesting links in the constellation

Van Jones,
"promotes alternatives to violence and incarceration".
Jones currently focuses on green economic development for urban America. The City of Oakland is expected to adopt the Ella Baker Center's "Green Jobs Corps" proposal this year, which aims to train youth for eco-friendly "green-collar jobs." Now Jones is pushing to create the first-ever "Green Enterprise Zone" and attract environmentally-sound industry to Oakland.
http://vanjones.net/

The Hollyhock Leadership Institute empowers current and emerging leaders to create high-impact social change. We do this through building alliances in our role as a convener and facilitator, supporting leaders through our skills training, and re-kindling inspiration through programs that nurture creativity and spirit.
http://www.hollyhockleadership.org/


SOLVIVA
Within this website you will find information that proves that it is possible for us to live in ways that are far better than the normal modern standards today. Less polluting ... less wasteful ... less costly ... less risky --- as well as more secure ... more dependable ... more sustainable ... more conducive to local and global health, peace and prosperity.
http://www.solviva.com/index.htm

The City Repair:
The City Repair Project is group of citizen activists creating public gathering places and helping others to creatively transform the places where they live.
http://www.cityrepair.org/wiki.php

Saturday, February 9, 2008

From south Thailand to Silence

OK so Thanks for circulating the blog address around to those who might be interested, my contacts list are in such dissarray that I can only rely on the path finding intellegence of the rhizome.....

Cha CHAA and I are back in bangkok, we are sufficiently goldened from the south beaches, we were staying in krabi province which was so beautiful and hot. As a sid note also where the tsunami touched down, We had the chance to talk with a couple of boatmen who were out on the water when the big one came in... They told us there stories with a smile. The Thais seem to be always smiling, incredibly resilient and resourceful people. The tourist track has some well worn grooves in that part of the world so we, mom, dad donät fill in the blanks...rented a m_ _ _rcycle. This was by far the only way to see the province. The roads were quiet and cut through rubber palm oil and incredible limestone karst formations. We ended up at the mouth of a little mangrove seemingly in the middle of know where and where renting kayaks that didnät look like they had been in the water for some years. See, this is a thing I love about thailand theyäll rent you a boat for a dollar or two give general directions, like paddle that way for a couple of hours and you shoul find the ocean, they neglect to mention the water vipers and shadowy alligator monkeys that seem to scurrying through the mangrove. Mangroves are haunted, for anyone who has been in one you know that feeling and that smell. We passed by a fishing village, we were such a strange site that a gaggle of kids came out to greetr us practising their english, or at least ther HELLOS and then when we responded they would fall into laughng fits. Just passed the village we also encountered a village of monkey about a hudred or so emerged from the woods and let us in on their daily dramas. We really haveät come that far, beside the glaring lack of clothing and cellphones, as the thais say same, same but different.

On our way back form the villages we encountered a MASSIVE water snake, he looked pretty badass and was holding his ground so. we were about ten feet from the eight foot giant which made us about six feet to close. Night started to fall and so we returned to to the kayak rental agency and met a farang french american man named bernard. he greeted us with you dont see to may farangs in this neck of the woods. Farang is thai for foreigner. We sat and had a beer in a bamboo slanty shanty and he told us that he was there volunteering at an school where many where orphans of the tsunami. he was volunteering through an organization called open mind projects which places volunteers around thailand for sure but I think it is global heres the linkÖ


Bernard invited us to come to the school for lunch and to help teach an english class and that is what we did. You want to feel like a rock star, show up at a small muslim village school in south thailand. when all you have yto do to makethe crowd go wild is say HELLO. we have some great pics of this day and our class was a lot of fun. when asked lead the lesson and maybe start with a song after scratching our head s, bah bah black..no, london brid...no alicia startyed sing
earth my body
fire my spirit
air my breath
water my blood
We busted out many rounds of this rainbow hippie classic and worked on pronunciation then jumped at'round like monkeys to english commands...ah the life of the english teacher rockstar, I expressed to bernard that I sometimes feel funny with the concept of going into places like this and teaching english. with images of what has become of many of the beautifull beaches in thailand, falling to the tourist trade provided in english mostly I felt a bit guilty. Seeing with rosy hue the pastoral beauty of the localeof these kids I expressed my anglo guilt, he replied that english is also a great unifier it allows for ideas whethr negative or positive to flow more freely around the globe. This made me feel much better about the situation....

we met another couple from bc, who we share freinds with, more small world syndrome....

and now we are in bangkok. We are going to ayathyaya, the old siam capital and then on to vipassana. I know I have told some of you of vipassana, I went for the first time for my birthday last year, it is a ten day silent meditation. Vipassana teaches that we are constantly responding to sensation that we experience in our bodies, emotions,thoughts, moods are all responses to physical sensations that we exerience in our bodies. The thing is we attach addictions or aversions to these sensations and these attachment start to rule us. Vipassana is an oppurtunity to learn how to master this through experience, we will be waking at 430am d meditating till about 9pm for 10 day starting on the 13th. heres the links and I am going to try to uplad a streamed documentery called doing time doing vipassana, which about how this technique came to be taught in the largest prison in india and is now starting to be taught in prisons in the states.


www.dhamma.org/

vipassan international website

http://www.dailymotion.com/relevance/search/doing%2Btime%2Bdoing%2Bvipassana

the above is where you can find the documentery about vipassana in indian prisons, make sure you watch them in order, it appears in a confusing way on the site... i think it has five parts on the video stream...

ok Ive got to keep moving, going to have breakfast which is a bowl of muesli, fresh pineapple, dragon fruit, watermelon and banana with homemade yoghurt which can be bought off of a street vendor for the equivalent for a buck and a half cdn here in bangkok....

yum

much love to all of you
thanks for taking the time to read this

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

this is HONG-KONG!!!

what is hong-kong? amazing.


The frenetisism, the ordered chaos, the history, the sheer scale of it. Hong-kong streets are a kaledoscope of neon signs, bins of dried seafood, snack vendors foracious shoppers colliding as a spectacle, yet flowing in massive throngs almost effortlessly, a disorienting dream.
Luckily we were met by some big smiling faces as we got off the bus from the airport. Maggie Blue and Hoi Chui are an inspiring couple, who run a burgeoning theater company in the great city. Their work draws on traditional and physical theater as well as dance and puppetry.

While in hong-kong we stayed with them in the once small fishing village of sai kung, about a half an hour outside of the city by light bus. (light bus is kinda like a rocket ship for 16 people) While at their place we had great time made a great crab dinner with local crabs bought right off of the boat.

Aside from creating theater productions that will be touring globally within the next coupla years Maggie-Blue and Hoi Chui are also busy giving workshops to school children in creative intellegence and ecological awareness. Chaa and I were lucky enough to travel deep into HK suburbs to a chinese public school as the official media crew to record a workshop. After the heroic tumult that is traveling through HK at rush hour we arrived at the school on time at nine in the AM…. Very fun.. a puppet show played in a big pop-up book that travels through time to teach the kids a respect for nature and how it sustains us….

www.alltheatreco.com/bio_hoichiu.html

We then toured a teaching eco-garden called Kadoorie Farms. The farm was started by two british men post second world war, mostly to train the many refugees flooding into the area in local farming techniques and giving micro loans in the form of pigs and implements to help start up. The men believed that wealth was a sacred covenent and that they had a duty to enable those more vulnerable.

www.kfbg.org.hk/

The farm is a sprawling mountainside tract of 134 hectares. Incredibly lush and well cultivated. We toured the site on a rainy and cold afternoon. Maggie Blue and Hoi chui often offer their eco-puppet show there for the school children. There is also artist in residence space and considerable garden sculpture built on site. It was really surprising to find such an incredible example of a teaching garden/sustainable living and artistic center in hong kong which is other wise a cluttered and chaotic hyper capitalist utopian/dystopian nightmare/wonderland… if you catch my drift…

We went to the history of hong kong muesuem which I would say is a must in the city…There are many excellent muesuem but this one alone could take a couple of days. What surprised me was that this thriving tireless massive moneied metropolis has sprung up from a small tribal fishing village in the span of 150 yrs. wow… I don’t think this will be the first time on our journey that we will be witness to such rapid development… whoa china!..

www.lcsd.gov.hk/CE/Museum/History/en/aboutus.php

next BANGKOK!

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

here we go...

here we go…

So after a little adjustment period I am ready to start this little story of my travels in asia. I’ve got a bit of a back blog since we’ve been here a couple of weeks, been to few major cities already, there are a number of stories and fotos already….

Here is the scenario, Alicia and I are travelling through southwest asia on our way to visit the great neighborhood dragon, china. By neighborhood I guess I mean earth.

I am as grateful to know all of you and to travel, and so in this blog I hope to record and relay some of my trip.

Part of my greater intrest at this time is exploring the notion of global consciousness, being curious if this is just some urban western concept or are we as individuals and a planet are truely evolving. I am particularly excited to get to china to witness what may be a groundswell change in the consciousness of the population. You may be getting used to reports that china’s economy and infrastructure are expanding exponentially, It is my curiousity to see if the mentality of the youth are experiencing a similar expansion…

While here in southwest asia we are essentially following hints and whiffs, we have no itinery, except we are generally pointed towards china…