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TGoG Podcast 099 – Old Things

January 28, 2015 @ 21:18 By Gavin Webber 3 Comments

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Kim joins me on the show this week where we talk about our recent visit to the Mill Markets at Daylesford, Victoria.

This market had lots of very cool old stuff that we discuss during the show, which inevitably leads to a rant about designed obsolescence.

We finish off with a little bit of our philosophy about buying quality items and repair them if they break.

Some of the cool old things items we talk about are;

  • Cast iron clothes ironsOld Things - Soda Syphon
  • Hand sheep clippers
  • Scythes
  • Jaffle Maker
  • Hand Beater
  • Hand Drill
  • Singer Sewing Machine (hand and foot operated)
  • Tin snips
  • Vinyl Records (Ben had never seen one)
  • 21st Century TV Annual
  • TV chairs
  • Butter moulds
  • Typewriters
  • Soda Syphon

And probably a few things I didn’t list.  I am sure you will enjoy it.

Now for episode 100.  We are asking you all to send in voice mail questions via the speakpipe widget below so that Kim and I can answer them in the episode.

They can be about anything as long as the focus is on sustainable living.  Please record something, even if it is feedback about the show.  We want to make the next episode really special and memorable.


Don’t be shy, we would love to hear from you.  All you need is a PC, laptop, notebook, tablet, or smartphone and record your message.  It is as simple as that!  Don’t forget to play it back before sending to ensure it is audible.

So, until next episode, stay green and keep keen!

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Filed Under: consumerism, Podcast, reduce, repair, Resilience, reuse, Simplicity, TGOG Podcast

TGoG Podcast 079 – Robyn Rosenfeldt from Pip Magazine

August 27, 2014 @ 14:30 By Gavin Webber 2 Comments

Way back at the start of the year I wrote a post about Pip Magazine.  Robyn Rosenfeldt was seeking funding via crowdsourcing to launch Australia’s first permaculture magazine in 10 years.

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I caught up with Robyn during this episode to see how things were progressing with the magazine (now in its second issue), to learn a little bit more about Robyn herself and her lifestyle.

Robyn Rosenfeldt - Pip Magazine

I found Robyn to be very down to earth who practices what she preaches.  Permaculture is imbedded in all things throughout her family’s lifestyle including the conversion of their 2 acre piece of land at Pambula on the south coast of New South Wales.

Robyn also talks about how she started the magazine and how you can submit ideas for articles to her.

You can find her contact details, social media links, and where to buy or how to subscribe to the magazine at www.pipmagazine.com.au

Pip Magazine


If you enjoyed this episode, please take the time to visit iTunes to rate the show and leave a review.

You can also do the same within Stitcher Radio if you use that service.

It would help me out so much, which elevates the shows ratings so that others can find out about the podcast and learn about sustainable living in the ‘burbs.

Until next time, stay green and keep keen!

 

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Filed Under: Chickens, community, Gardening, Permaculture, Podcast, Poultry, Resilience, TGOG Podcast

Positive Visions Give Realistic Hope

May 8, 2012 @ 23:43 By Gavin Webber 4 Comments

As I was searching around for a few examples of positive visions of the future, I happened to visit Dixiebelle’s facebook page as I do on occasion.  She left me two wonderful videos that show the very future that I was talking about.  For those hard of hearing, you can enable closed caption text on both of these videos.

The first is by Charles Eisenstein, author of Sacred Economics.  It is his enlightening vision of the future.

The second video is a vision of what a post-consumer society could look like.  It is title Plenitude: The New Economics of True Wealth.

These are two very good examples of a positive vision of the future.  But it can’t be all beer and skittles.  We are daily bombarded with messages of doom and gloom however,  hope is a more powerful motivator/driver than fear ever is.  It motivates individuals and communities to do and achieve amazing things together.  Sure, fear does have a part to play when initially learning about the two big issues we face, but they must turn into hope, or we wallow in despair and depression.  Let me borrow a few paragraphs from the Transition Handbook to drive the point home on why we need to be realistically hopeful;

“The end of the Oil Age is a confusing time. We are constantly exposed to bewildering mixed messages. The media presents us with headlines such as “Steep decline in oil production brings risk of war and unrest, says new study”, and “Carbon output rising faster than forecast, says study” yet at the same time advertising puts across the conflicting message that business as usual is the only way forward, that globalisation is the only model that can feed the world, and that just buying this next thing will make us happy. Indeed the contrast can sometimes be striking, with an article about the melting of Arctic ice-sheets next to an advert for a new car or cheap flights.
The media to which we are increasingly exposed continually give out double messages,
which can leave one feeling perplexed.”

It is so true.  To overcome this fear, or doom and gloom mixed with a consumerism dichotomy, we   need realistic hope combined with a positive vision.  This is a very powerful tool that can be used to break this confusion.  We need to begin preparing as well as projecting this future.  I personally am totally engaged by the Transition Handbook, and am nearly finished it, and then with look for a copy of the Transition Companion which is a more up to date text.  It has so many brilliant ideas, which have been at the back of my mind.  Our town certainly needs this type of initiative as it is about as resilient as a chicken house surrounded by foxes with the door slightly ajar!  No local food, poor public transport, no local economy, however there are many strong community groups and a sense of community among the older folk.  To quote Bec;

“It can be hard staying positive at times, and things like that keep me going… there are lots of great ideas like that out there. Not about “what have I done”, or “how good am I”, but from the perspective of “look how great humanity can be, look at what we can achieve for a better world”… together!”

She certainly has a way with words.  Worth their weight in gold, if you ask me.

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Filed Under: Resilience, Sustainable Living

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About Gavin Webber

About Gavin Webber

An Ordinary Australian Man Who Has A Green Epiphany Whilst Watching A Documentary, Gets a Hybrid Car, Plants A Large Organic Vegetable Garden, Goes Totally Solar, Lowers Consumption, Feeds Composts Bins and Worms, Harvests Rainwater, Raises Chickens, Makes Cheese and Soap, and Eats Locally. All In The Effort To Reduce Our Family's Carbon Footprint So We Can Start Making A Difference For Our Children & Future Generations To Come.

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