Writings of a would-be smallholder in rural Monmouthshire....

Ancient David Brown Tractor, Ben - Head of Sales!, The Great Oak, Monmouthshire Tymawr Farm

Ancient David Brown Tractor, Ben - Head of Sales!, The Great Oak, Monmouthshire Tymawr Farm

Friday, 30 November 2012

Vision #8 - Some Post-Oil Basics (Draft!!)

Below are some un-ordered thoughts about what might happen when oil runs out - in due course I'd like our little farm to be an exemplar for the 'oil-free' life.

Thoughts on fossil-fuel

Leading estimates are that coal and oil will probably run out in my lifetime, and definately during my children's lifetime.   

Some areas of the world will be unaffected – they never acquired the addiction to oil in the first place; most parts of the world will be devastated.  Politicians know this to be the case, and yet what are their strategies?  Broadly twofold:

1.       Secure a relatively larger amount of the remaining supply for the use of our own particular country than our ‘competitor’ countries.  By doing so we will delay the inevitable for our own country, whilst hastening the demise of others, by a decade, or, optimistically perhaps two.  The recent wars between the ‘west’ (hopeless oil addicts) and the ‘east’ (possessor’s of the oil which is left) evidence this kind of strategy.

2.       Reduce the rate of consumption.  Examples include mandated fuel-efficiency targets for cars and ‘speed limits’ for container ships.  Again, this is a ‘delay the inevitable’ strategy, buying ten or twenty years of continued stability before chaos ensues.

To start to imagine a future without oil and coal it is probably helpful to first think about what the western world was like before those fuels were discovered, or at any rate, before they were widely used.  It would also be helpful to consider societies which never developed the addiction in the first place.

The world will change in our lifetime and the change, albeit hard in the short-term, like many changes will ultimately be for the better.

1.       The cost of oil, and hence ‘logistics’ will continue to rise exponentially.

2.       The people in ‘low cost countries’ will continue to demand higher wages, and no longer be content to produce electronic goods and luxuries whilst not being able to afford them themselves.

3.       1. & 2., above, will mean that the manufacture of products local to the consumption of those products will once again be economically viable.  Intuitively we all know that shipping materials half-way around the globe MUST be wasteful, but hitherto the unimaginative have been able to produce evidence to the contrary.  This will very soon be impossible, short of committing fraud.

4.       This will allow the ‘benefits’ culture to be largely eliminated, except in cases of real want, by replacing ‘benefits’ with ‘local jobs’.

Economists assume several correlations:

1.       (Economic i.e. Paper-Money) Prosperity is in proportion with good health.

2.       (Economic i.e. Paper-Money) Prosperity is in proportion with good education.

3.       (Economic i.e. Paper-Money) Prosperity is in inverse proportion with crime.

Statistics show all of these to be incorrect.  In our hearts we knew.  We knew that Cuba, despite being as poor as the proverbial church-mouse has the highest adult literacy rate in the world.   We knew that the USA, despite having one of the highest GDPs per capita in the world is close to the bottom in terms of health.

Great ships also traversed the globe in the age of sail.  (Compare time taken to sail from India to UK now and then, compare mass / carrying capacity of ships).

“Lean Living” means minimum input food production.  Our tastes may need to change if the human race is going to continue.  In the West we may need to learn to love apples again (in their normal season) instead of bananas.  In the West Indies they will need to learn to love bananas instead of apples.

The “Lean Living” concept could be really useful – the 5 main points of lean:

1.       Define value from the Customer’s point of view

2.       Eliminate waste from each individual process step

3.       Arrange process steps to minimise inventory and promote flow

4.       Blah

5.       Continually re-examine 1-4 to pursue perfection.

Are mostly applicable – the obsession with inventory is sometimes unhelpful with a food-production context, however, necessary minimum levels are also context-specific.

We’ll need to stop our obsession with making logistics more efficient – instead we’ll need to produce everything we need at the place (and if possible point) of consumption, making logistics, however efficient, obsolete.

What % of wool clothing in the UK is produced in the UK?  What happens to the ‘UK clip’?  What % of clothing in the UK is made of wool?  Where do the materials for UK clothing come from?

Extraction of all minerals and ores is dead.  We’re now into re-using or re-cycling what we’ve already got.

Steel will soon be replaced by wood for many structural and decorative applications.  The cost of steel will rise exponentially, related both to the cost of fossil fuel and the increasing scarcity of the ore, meaning that extraction is more difficult and hence more costly.

Local self-abundance will be the future.  Holidays will be dead – people will be born, grow up, live, relax, work, in the same locality. 

Granularity will be key – people will need to start to see the ‘little picture’, intensively managing small areas of land without wasting a thing.

A ‘pre-coal’ world-view will need to be redeveloped, with modern home-comforts.

Prices and priorities will be rebalanced.  More time and money will be spent on sourcing and preparing food and fuel.  Less time will be spent on paid work, partly because there will be less of it to do, and partly because we won’t be able to afford to do it.

By 2050 we will all be cottagers.

Electricity will continue (what % is wasted getting it from a remote, centralised power station to our home?  Compare this with Combined Heating & Power options).

Centralisation is ALWAYS wrong.

The REAL cost of ‘cheap’ furniture, ‘cheap’ fashion etc. will be understood – people will be more economically literate.

In the future, most people will use inherited homes, furniture and belongings.  If someone in the micro-community needs a table, chair or house, one will be made to the pattern of the best one in the community (or if possible, improved using the experience & ingenuity of the community).  Even better, one which is surplus to requirements will be released from the ‘community 5S’ store (the new charity store of the micro-community).

Reflect on how babies / children / old people will be cared for in the future.  Note to self: There were Doctors and Universities before coal!

Watchwords of the future will be:

·         Cooperative

·         Individuality

·         Family

·         Community

·         Self reliance

·         Generosity

·         Abundance

·         Humanity

·         Responsibility

·         Ingenuity

·         Innovation

Ambition will take a different form from that displayed by those who currently pursue ‘big-jobs’ working for others in their acquisitive pursuit of fulfilment.  In the future such people will find their skills surplus to requirements.

Business owners, farmers and x, will step forward to provide leadership when required in the new small communities.

Politicians in the conventional sense (wanton spenders of other people’s money) will find little place.

Globalisation in the form which we currently understand it will end.

Make do, mend, extend and re-use will

Globalization will be limited to the exchange of ideas and not goods or people.

Wood is the answer:

·         Fuel – as wood, as charcoal, as other stuff to be invented in the future….

·         Healing the atmosphere (as a net absorber of CO2).

·         Construction material – houses, machines and things

·         Food – for humans and animals

·         Soil stabilisation

·         Soil improvement – to bring minerals to the surface, mulch etc.

·         Animal habitat – for game – link to “minimum input” food production philosophy

Get passive!

Beware of so called “Green” technologies which require fossil-based fuels to produce.

Check that it’s possible fully reprocess copper, steel and aluminium using electricity, and not ‘raw state’ fossil fuels.  Assuming these things can be reprocessed using electricity, then this can be generated using hydro / wind / solar / CHP / biomass.

1000 examples:

1.       Shoes will be made of leather, wood, cotton, wool and latex.  Not oil.

2.       Blah

1000. Blah

There’s nothing like necessity to bring people together, align their interests, aims, energy and hearts.  Peak oil is the necessity, the imperative.  It should be welcomed, encouraged and embraced instead of deferred and feared.

The Rules:

1.       Immediately stop doing things that you know to be wrong:

a.       Don’t buy food which is produced far away from where you live.  Change your tastes if necessary to follow this rule.

b.      Don’t buy ANYTHING from a ‘logistics’ company (by which I mean a Supermarket or ANY national or multi-national company).

2.       Blah

10. Blah
Vision # 7 - Metrics 

Some numbers which I found interesting below - from http://www.ukagriculture.com/uk_farming.cfm and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Kingdom.


I read the key points as follows:

1.  In order to be completely self-abundant each person in the UK needs to obtain all of their food and drink from 0.67 acres of farmland.
2. To contribute it's 'fair share' Tymawr-Farm should sustain 24 people!

If  you assume that each person eats and drinks say, £20 per week, that means sales of £24960 on our 16 acres.

Scary!  Would be wonderful if it could be possible.  In order for the UK to be 'self-abundant', it MUST be possible!

Friday, 16 November 2012

Tymawr-Farm Events! #1 - Winter Wonderland Walk

In addition to our famous annual 'Lads & Dad's Camping Weekend' (same weekend as the Usk Show), we have now added a 'Winter Wonderland' walk through our woodland to the Tymawr-Farm calendar, which we hope will also become an annual event.

The plan is that people will start arriving at about 3PM and have some home-made cider punch, sloe-gin or hot chocolate for the kids / drivers.  While we have some light we'll go and feed the pigs and collect the eggs, and then go back into the house to have a yummy pork roll by a roaring log fire.

By this time it should be getting dark so we'll then walk up the lane, and into the Woodland.  I've been busy this afternoon laying woodchip on the path which is VERY muddy, and starting to build a bonfire in the clearing near the great, ancient Perry Pear tree which will be the focal point of the walk.  The plan is to light up the paths with some Christmas lights and uplight some of the beautiful trees to make the woodland look really magical.

As we make our way through the Woodland I'll tell people about the current make-up of the woodland (species, management), it's history (some interesting lime quarrying / burning activity), and our plans for the future (see Vision #4, charcoal #1).  That should take us to our first pause, lamps near the pond illuminating some more punch / drinks / nibbles and some goody bags for the kids (TBD).

A few more minutes will take us to the bonfire, where we'll do some more chatting, snacking and punch-drinking, and have a good warm up before making our way back through the Woodland and home!

Loads of work left to do but can't wait!

Thursday, 15 November 2012

Vision #6 - Independence Plan Detail

In a previous post I described a chart I was putting together.  Here it is!

I'd be very interested in anyone's comments!  It's best printed on A0 or used with a microscope!

Monday, 12 November 2012

Pigs #20 - Progress!

Major breakthrough yesterday - I sat down in the pig's barn with some food in a pan, poured it out on the floor next to me and sat quietly until they plucked up enough courage to come and eat it right next to me!  After a minute I was able to scratch behind their ears - only for a few seconds before they backed away, but it was really nice to be able to interact with them like that, its the closest I've got to them so far.  I think if I keep this up each night from now on, and spend a bit more quality time with them on the weekend we should be able to get them to bucket-following stage pretty soon.

James from Morris Free Range Meats & Horticulture (https://www.facebook.com/#!/morrismeats) came over on the weekend and had a look at the pigs' outside enclosure.  I've been a bit nervous (understandably!) about putting them out into their pen, so a second opinion was really helpful.  He thought that with another strand or two of wire here or there we should be able to safely put them out.  I can't wait to see them out there, rooting around and enjoying exploring and ploughing up the area!
Chickens # 10

After losing several of the new Tymawr-Farm flock to the fox after they flapped over the too-low fence, and having several more near-misses as I discovered them roosting in the hedge or even more inappropriate places, I decided it was time to do a proper job on their fence.  6ft high chicken wire (I use 2" mesh which is fine, and much cheaper than 1") is the ideal stuff for the job, although a bit more difficult to track down than the usual 3 or 4ft.  The weather has been wet for several weeks here, which makes the ground ideal for fencing (in the dry it is nearly impossible!) - I use a long, heavy, ancient and rusty iron bar to start the hole, bashing it in and twisting it around to a depth of 18" to 2ft or so.  Once I've done that I use an equally ancient fencing maul (a heavy sledgehammer with an oversized head) to hammer the stakes home (for a light job like this 2-3" round stakes are ideal).  As the posts I had were only 5ft long I then made up the rest of the height (to 6ft) with some of my store of scrap wood.  After cable-tying the wire onto the posts I finished the job with a nice tight single strand of barbed wire about 6" above the ground to hold the chicken wire down.

It doesn't look pretty but it looks effective!  Photos to follow......