Showing posts with label Brad Lancaster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brad Lancaster. Show all posts

Monday, March 29, 2021

"The Forest Man" - Real Green Men for the 21st Century

"The Green Man" from 1997 Rites of Spring ritual 

The Green Man is an almost universal archetype of the renewal of life in the spring, and it is, of course, beloved by contemporary neo-Pagans as well, symbolizing manhood as re-newer and re-generator instead of as "warrior", which so often becomes authoritarian  destroyer in a patriarchal, dominator, "alpha male"  based culture (and this includes "dominating" nature, instead of working with nature).  

The Green Man, by whatever name, is so very important for our time, and in considering this, I went looking for "living Green Men".  And boy (excuse the pun) did I find them!  What I learned gave me extraordinary hope, and a vision of the power of the Green Man (and Green Women as well) to bring rebirth to the land and  to the future, if we, as a global humanity,  can only listen to what these contemporary Green Men have dedicated their lives to.

Below is a wonderful documentary that I ran across almost by accident, about a man in India who single handedly, and with extraordinary dedication, planted a thriving forest, beginning his work in 1979.  His story began my search for other "Forest Men".   To watch and listen is to be not only inspired, but to feel hope.  Because I believe that this is what the future civilization will have to look like, these technologies of love, sustainability, Earth based science and spirituality, along with new and old ways for human beings to cooperate and get along with each other.  I believe, instead of vast space stations and digital robots and endless wars, the future will have to look more like a forest, or a garden, if there is to be a future civilization at all.  

And the message Jadav Payeng (and the others I have, through the grace of UTube, been able to share here) carries is that renewal can happen when humans become stewards of the land, and let Nature do what nature does, assisting in simple ways, like planting trees, or allowing environmental diversity to be protected enough to return. These regenerated forests and deserts truly offer us hope.

I am reminded of a book by Alan Weisman called THE WORLD WITHOUT US, in which the author researched areas around the world that had become abandoned or off limits to people, like the neutral or demilitarized zone between North and South Korea - and the extraordinary renewal that took place in such environments. There was also a 2008 television documentary called "Life After People" that explored the same theme.

Since, as I mentioned in the previous post, I can't think of what to say of late, I will let these people speak on this Blog instead. They are true Green Men.

Jadav Payeng, Majuli Island, India

 https://youtu.be/HkZDSqyE1do

Hugh Wilson, Hinewai Nature Reserve, New Zealand



David Bamberger, Selah Preserve, Texas



David Milarch, Redwood Forests of California and Oregon



John D. Liu*,  Re-greening the desert



(for a documentary by John D. Liu, see also




 


 And, of course, Tucson's own 
Brad Lancaster:  Water Harvesting in Arizona


Thursday, April 4, 2013

Water Harvesting in Tucson and Other Ways to Save the World

I've been doing some permaculture around my house, and have become excited by the work of  Brad Lancaster  who has developed many ways for people to harvest and conserve water in arid lands (I live in Arid Zona).    I'm excited to explore some of the options, and to that end have also signed up as a potential host with Workaway (http://www.workaway.info/), a wonderful site that connects travellers who wish to help out in exchange for room and board.  Check out the site .

Below is a fascinating TED talk by Allan Savory about desertification, and surprising ways to combat and restore desert areas. What he speaks about, and demonstrates, is both hopeful and absolutely surprising, going against the common ideas we have about the desertification process.  He shows the relationship between soil erosion, and the loss of very large, moving herds, such as the buffalo in our great Mid-Western grasslands.  Well worth watching!   And two videos with Tucson's Brad Lancaster.

I will not have any large herds of buffalo, or wolves, in my own backyard any time soon, so I must resort to a whole lot of digging.  Ok........now let's see if any travellers want to take me up on my offer and help me "green" my own backyard!

http://www.ted.com/talks/allan_savory_how_to_green_the_world_s_deserts


 http://youtu.be/WymWRDd1OOg



http://youtu.be/4aQrZtG-LVg