How to find Community inspired me to more clearly reveal my current actions and plans. In particular, Dave's comment, "...that I would not be prepared to spend a lot of money or invest a lot of sweat equity because I don't think life should be or needs to be that much work, or that expensive," needs to be addressed.
So Dave, you're right, sort-of. Unfortunately, there will always be an initial inertial cost to get things moving in the direction you want to move. After it's moving, if it takes much energy, then you know you're on the wrong path.
A permaculture forest garden, for instance, will need planning, soil prep, planting, and adjustment to learned lessons. Once you have it growing, it will only take small bursts of energy to manage successions. My own personal experience, which began this spring, has shown me that startup cost and effort are substantial. I've only achieved 1/10 of my goals -- just in soil prep! Yet, I can see the systems coming together. That 1/10th of soil that has been prepared only needs a few minutes a week to maintain now. The composting bins will soon start contributing organic matter which will displace the purchase of mulch, manure and top soil. The garden of annual vegetables is displacing some of my need to buy vegetables from half way across the world. The greenhouse (which has taken about a day to build so far and needs a couple more yet to finish) will allow me to grow food year-round and plants that can't survive harsh winters. I plan on putting a rocket stove mass heater in the greenhouse. Rocket stoves are very efficient, simple to make, and can burn carbon sources other than wood such as (dry) grass! Besides heating the greenhouse, the stove will serve three other purposes: creating biochar (Terra Preta de Indio), creating steam and creating ash. The char will further (significantly) increase organic matter and soil fertility while sequestering large amounts of carbon, and, some will cover and absorb nutrients from my future humanure toilet. The steam will efficiently create electricity and perform some of the hard work I don't want to. The small amounts of ash will be used to make soap, and possibly, biodiesel. Although I've only just started looking into it, the char generation also puts off wood gas which can be used as a gasoline replacement. Grey water collection and distribution systems will provide shower water and a buffer for the plants against short dry periods.
All of these complex plans serve the purpose of moving to closed, interconnected and redundant systems. In areas where humans live like this, we will be stewards living in harmony with earth/gaia rather than voracious, greedy, wasteful, destructive consumers.
The only thing missing from my plans? Community. Frankly, I think it will come. Very few people are at a point where they will accept the challenges facing us. If I can provide a real, successful example, others will come, where they, too, will overcome inertia to steward their small part of gaia. We will create an oasis of smart, balanced, natural living as civilization winds down.
Will this create a trackback?