QuickBooks set up and Bookkeeping for Small Businesses and Farms - jocelyncampbell.com
A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.
-Robert A. Heinlein
Permies is awesome!!!
"We're all just walking each other home." -Ram Dass
"Be a lamp, or a lifeboat, or a ladder."-Rumi
"It's all one song!" -Neil Young
The wishbone never could replace the backbone.
'Theoretically this level of creeping Orwellian dynamics should ramp up our awareness, but what happens instead is that each alert becomes less and less effective because we're incredibly stupid.' - Jerry Holkins
Nicole Alderman wrote:
Privacy: Some span of the day in which I can go hide somewhere and stare at nature and think and be alone. I get VERY LITTLE of that sort of time as a mom. Maybe set up an hour or two during the day when the introverts can all disperse without any pressure. Like, "This is reflect and recharge time. It's a time for introverts and extroverts to find some non-pressured time to be alone. If you are still itching for social interaction, meet in the _______ for tea and chatting. If you'd like your tea to go, here's a thermos!"
Tereza Okava wrote:
I think cob building or some other productive activity is also a fabulous idea. One thing I have not liked at other "women`s events" I have been to is that there are often specific preassumed ideas of what women are, like, etc. If someone gives me a flower I am almost certain to immediately give it to someone else, and pink things make me stabby. I was at a medical event a few years ago (again, mostly female participants) where all the raffle items were makeovers, hair things, makeup things, and weightloss/tanning stuff. It was exceedingly awkward.
Tereza Okava wrote:In planning my event we have asked people more about the challenges they face in their life roles and what tools they need to meet them, and gone at it that way- I`m pulled in 6 directions as main breadwinner, parent, and farmer, for example, I need help with time management. Or I`m physically not as strong as I need to be for some tasks, what tools can I use. I think it is even more useful in permaculture, as this group tends to add in homeschooling, animal care, independent businesses, and a million other tasks.
Chris Kott wrote:My cousin operates an herbcrafting school off of her property in the Texas hill country, and although I don't think they discriminate against men, they seem to have a largely female membership.
denise ra wrote:I am just starting out on my land and my permaculture adventure so I am not interested in things that are off-topic.
Judith Browning wrote:Yes! a retreat to build a retreat...like some of those quiet spaces Jocelyn started a thread about?
I always wanted a 'Josephine's cabin' ( Frank Duveneck built the cabin in 1940 for his wife, Josephine, who used the cabin for reflection and inspiration) https://www.hiddenvilla.org/programs/catalog/68-josephines-retreat/region-HV/. It is now used as a rental at the hostel at Hidden Villa at Los Altos. It's original intent was so wonderful and inviting. We stayed there once on a train trip and it still has a special feel.
I do like the idea of a 'women only' building workshop (I think I got in trouble for that opinion a few years back ;) ? )
Sonja Draven wrote:I love this idea and would definitely want to attend if my schedule allowed. I would be more apt to attend in the spring or fall when it's lovely but not too hot or snowy and my "feet are itchy" to hit the road. MT isn't too far away either. :)
I like the ideas outlined so far - especially Nicole's. Agree to focus on women energy, not "girly" stuff. (Also not into facials and makeovers - but I kind of can't see that being a focus for permaculture women in general.) I'm also into the kitchen / herb / fermenting / garden crafts. Plant/mushroom ID yay. Not very good at things like cross-stitch and beading but I always plant along if it's what everyone's enjoying. Like the idea of a cob or small RMH build - both things I've learned/heard about intellectually but haven't participated in directly and would love some hands-on instruction with someone experienced.
Sonja Draven wrote:As a female, I would want to know that my needs would be taken care of if I happened to arrive during my "time of the month." Is there bathroom privacy or just the outhouse with no running water to rinse out a cup or dispose of related products? If the retreat was a week is there laundry services we could use to wash same products or clothes if needed? Is there fridge space for those of us who aren't omnis/gf and might need to bring some of our own food? What would the sleeping facilities be like?
QuickBooks set up and Bookkeeping for Small Businesses and Farms - jocelyncampbell.com
Dillon Nichols wrote:I attended a mud girls workshop a couple years ago; they are a group of female cob builders. Their workshops don't generally exclude anyone, but I was the only guy present at this one, and this didn't seem unusual.
I had a great time, the tone was different than many, I do think this was partly a gender thing.
Dillon Nichols wrote:
2) Free child care; they hired a dedicated kid-wrangler. People with kids did not pay extra, this was baked into the price.
The kids came by the building site for an escorted visit I think once on each day, otherwise they were a few hundred metres away, very well supervised.
QuickBooks set up and Bookkeeping for Small Businesses and Farms - jocelyncampbell.com
Jocelyn Campbell wrote:
Dillon Nichols wrote:I attended a mud girls workshop a couple years ago; they are a group of female cob builders. Their workshops don't generally exclude anyone, but I was the only guy present at this one, and this didn't seem unusual.
I had a great time, the tone was different than many, I do think this was partly a gender thing.
I like the idea of gearing an event toward women, yet not having it exclude anyone as you described. That is very cool--thanks for sharing Dillon.
Dillon Nichols wrote:
2) Free child care; they hired a dedicated kid-wrangler. People with kids did not pay extra, this was baked into the price.
The kids came by the building site for an escorted visit I think once on each day, otherwise they were a few hundred metres away, very well supervised.
I've so enjoyed the freedom of being an empty nester that I now tend to forget about childcare needs.
Some times, as a parent, getting away for an event is a welcome break or respite from the demands of parenting. Other times, it is more feasible to go if there is onsite childcare. I'm leaning toward not providing childcare for something like this initial idea (for a multitude of reasons), though I'd love to hear what others think.
'Theoretically this level of creeping Orwellian dynamics should ramp up our awareness, but what happens instead is that each alert becomes less and less effective because we're incredibly stupid.' - Jerry Holkins
Dillon Nichols wrote:
I think perhaps 40% of the women took advantage of the childcare, and it seemed like it was a fairly critical attendance enabling factor for most of those.
But... the mud girls were able to hire a known experienced minder, and I think would have hired more if there were more kids. If I put on a workshop here I have no connections with people with those skills.. I would be nervous arranging for one stranger to look after other stranger's kids on my land!
QuickBooks set up and Bookkeeping for Small Businesses and Farms - jocelyncampbell.com
Jocelyn Campbell wrote:
Nicole Alderman wrote:
Privacy: Some span of the day in which I can go hide somewhere and stare at nature and think and be alone. I get VERY LITTLE of that sort of time as a mom. Maybe set up an hour or two during the day when the introverts can all disperse without any pressure. Like, "This is reflect and recharge time. It's a time for introverts and extroverts to find some non-pressured time to be alone. If you are still itching for social interaction, meet in the _______ for tea and chatting. If you'd like your tea to go, here's a thermos!"
Great idea, Nicole! Some times workshop or retreat schedules are so packed that we forget to leave time to just be.
Tereza Okava wrote:
I think cob building or some other productive activity is also a fabulous idea. One thing I have not liked at other "women`s events" I have been to is that there are often specific preassumed ideas of what women are, like, etc. If someone gives me a flower I am almost certain to immediately give it to someone else, and pink things make me stabby. I was at a medical event a few years ago (again, mostly female participants) where all the raffle items were makeovers, hair things, makeup things, and weightloss/tanning stuff. It was exceedingly awkward.
This. I had a similar reaction to a "women's business" event. It was all makeovers, botox, shopping, and fashion things. Urgh.
Funny, pink things usually make me feel stabby, too, and here I used two pictures of pink flowers for this topic! And you still replied! ;-) Thank you.
Nicole Alderman wrote:I've always liked full length skirts and long hair--they remind me of epic homesteading and medieval women who were strong, skilled, and resilient.
"But if it's true that the only person over whom I have control of actions is myself, then it does matter what I do. It may not matter a jot to the world at large, but it matters to me." - John Seymour
A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.
-Robert A. Heinlein
Chris Kott wrote:It occurred to me to wonder how much the mechanics of the female form affect ergonomics. I mean, and correct me if I am wrong, there are physiological differences, such as the jointing of the elbows, for instance, due to either childbirth-related accomodation or because of the more pronounced difference in musculature between men and women.
I suppose I am wondering how much, and to what extent, these differences could influence not only ergonomic tool design for women, but ergonomic techniques involving normal homesteading and permacultural tasks that might look at female physiology and indicate better, more effective movements for normal labourious tasks.
This could offer support for the decision to focus on female instructors, and offer appeal to a female-centric audience in a solid, brown permaculture sort of way. Who might know better about leveraging the strengths of female body mechanics than actual female instructors who engage in natural building or shovelwork, or any number of things.
-CK
QuickBooks set up and Bookkeeping for Small Businesses and Farms - jocelyncampbell.com
I keep a blog over here: bramblewoodhill.com
Intermountain (Cascades and Coast range) oak savannah, 550 - 600 ft elevation. USDA zone 7a. Arid summers, soggy winters
Just me and my kids, off griddin' it - follow along our shenanigans at our YouTube Uncle Dutch Farms.
QuickBooks set up and Bookkeeping for Small Businesses and Farms - jocelyncampbell.com
Intermountain (Cascades and Coast range) oak savannah, 550 - 600 ft elevation. USDA zone 7a. Arid summers, soggy winters
"Also, just as you want men to do to you, do the same way to them" (Luke 6:31)
Coco Newlon wrote:2019 Events dates for Wheaton Labs are here:
Tours of Wheaton Labs
May 19, Sunday June 15, Saturday September 29, Sunday
PEP1 Certification workshop/gathering/event May/June 2019
--May 20th-June 1st
PDC
--June 16th-29th
ATC
--July 1st-12th
We are working towards having a RMH jamboree in the fall (early October) too. More details will be posted when we have them and more events. :)
QuickBooks set up and Bookkeeping for Small Businesses and Farms - jocelyncampbell.com
Come join me at www.peacockorchard.com
QuickBooks set up and Bookkeeping for Small Businesses and Farms - jocelyncampbell.com
War Garden Farm
Jocelyn Campbell wrote:
I once attended an event where a mom, who was a guest/attendee, was sitting by as her 4-year-old boy jumped up and down on the living room couch as hard as he could. She obviously saw what he was doing but made absolutely no effort to re-direct him to a more gentle or safer activity. He bounced harder, and harder, as high in to the air as he could, and then he launched himself from the couch, on to the coffee table. At that moment, we all learned that the coffee table top, was not attached to the legs, and since he landed on one end, the tabletop worked as a catapult, throwing the pizza that was on the other end of the coffee table, in to the air across the living room.
Thankfully, the boy was fine. Not a scratch. Though I was horrified. I had already been hugely uncomfortable that a guest in someone else's home would let their child jump on someone else's furniture like that. I didn't say anything because it wasn't my home and I didn't know the woman very well. Then to have the end result was just over the top. Sheesh.
So yes, some kids are easier to have around than others. And there are spectrums of what kind of behavior is fine to one person and not fine to another. And some times you really don't know until you try.
Come join me at www.peacockorchard.com
Support Ant Village Lot Efforts On Narrow Pond
Respect your superiors...if you have any. Mark Twain
Orin Raichart wrote:
There are also many young women who are interested in living off grid but have no crowd to feel safe in to try it; I know cause I talk to them....I believe they realize that raising a family without any land or funds in the current USA is a daunting task...market to them on this alone!
There are women who have suffered in our society in many ways including ghettos; maybe a woman or two of this background experience might be acceptable.
Make a female nest for a female to fly into, give them the right excuse to come visit, and with enough volume of females, some are bound to stick if the men are there too.
War Garden Farm
My New Book: Grow a Salad in Your City Apartment - grow urban salad greens, sprout seeds in your kitchen
My MOTHER EARTH NEWS articles
My Website
Nails are sold by the pound, that makes sense.
Soluna Garden Farm -- Flower CSA -- plants, and cut flowers at our Boston Public Market location, Boston, Massachusetts.
Living a life that requires no vacation.
Cats say "meow" because they think that is what people sound like. This tiny ad told me so:
turnkey permaculture paradise for zero monies
https://permies.com/t/267198/turnkey-permaculture-paradise-monies
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