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Posts from the ‘Lifestyle’ Category

7
Feb

LOB Lessons – 5

5. Before starting the fire, open the damper for a few minutes to get the air flowing up, especially on a still day.

Otherwise, you can have a room quickly filling with smoke.


2
Feb

LOB Lessons – 4

4. Just because you call it a compost, it doesn’t mean it does. 

A pitchfork is a great tool for aerating.

28
Jan

LOB Lessons – 3

3. Some of the best ingredients are free, such as vodka infused over a few months with local plums, blackberries, and so on.

22
Jan

LOB Lessons – 2

2. When the wind starts gusting to 40 knots (75 km/hr), charge the batteries on your laptop, iPad and iPhone.

20
Jan

LOB Lessons – 1

I have started to realize that I can glean meaningful – to me – metaphorical lessons from living out beyond. I think I’ll impart this great wisdom in short little posts, just for you.

1. Cut your kindling before you need it.

Whatever can it mean?

3
Sep

Video of where we live – Hornby Island

We came across this video by someone who recently visited Hornby Island. I think he captured it very beautifully and elegantly.

130 Seconds of Hornby Island B.C from Grant Baldwin Videography on Vimeo.

7
May

Hunters or Farmers

Lambert Channel

I’m bucking the trend (as well as the trees) when it comes to where I call home. At least that’s how it feels when I read posts on the Net about people who have a “location independent lifestyle.”

It’s perhaps somewhat a little trendy to be moving about the world with no place to call home, living here for a month or two and then somewhere else and then somewhere else. This is not travel in the traditional sense, but a deeper desire to spend time in various places.

More power to them. To each his own.

For me, moving and building on Hornby Island makes me feel like I’m going in the opposite direction. I’m choosing to make my physical world smaller, not bigger. I feel like I’m going back in time to how most people lived for thousands of years, since humans started becoming farmers instead of hunters (or nomads).

 

25
Aug

It Has Always Felt “Right” To Do This

Title: It Has Always Felt "Right" To Do This

By John McLachlan

In my post Ten Romantic Reasons For Living Out Beyond the tenth reason I gave was that it has always just felt right to do.

I have always felt a connection to Hornby Island. I’ve been going there for 48 years and that past does have a hold on me which I wrote about in my song “There is a Star.” This sums it up:

I hear a voice calling
I see my spirit falling
Through time and space endlessly

I feel my soul revealing
I taste this hidden feeling
Oh Hornby you got your hold again on me

This reason is totally romantic and irrational, but if you are at all into “listening to your gut” then if I listen to mine, it’s saying loud and clear that it’s a good idea to start living out beyond.

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Image above is of John McLachlan in about 1971 near Phipps Point on Hornby Island, British Columbia.

23
Aug

I Want To Have More Silence In My Life

Title: More Silence In My Life

By John McLachlan

In my post Ten Romantic Reasons For Living Out Beyond the ninth reason I gave was that I’d like more silence in my life.

Perhaps it’s not silence I crave, but rather quietness. I’m not sure.

I’ve had very few experiences with silence in my life to know what it’s really like. Silence brings me face-to-face with myself and I suspect that’s why people often avoid silence at all costs, even if they don’t know they are avoiding it. It’s probably why we turn to music, TVs and radios to avoid being alone with ourselves.

I like the climate of Vancouver’s summer except for one aspect of it: noise. Because windows need to be left open, the sound from the street is very obvious and prevalent on summer afternoons and evenings. These sounds include general traffic, sirens, loud truck engines, motorcycles (of which I truly wish could be eliminated from the face of the planet for their incredible noise) and just the general din of the city. It’s fine for a while, but after a day of it, I find it exhausts me.

I wonder about what constant noise does to our brains. It’s almost as if we need “noise screen” like we need “sun screen.” There’s the obvious issue of hearing damage but it’s more than just that. It’s the toll it takes on our nerves. No wonder everyone got in a fight in Spike Lee’s movie Do The Right Thing.

Is silence just absence of noise?

To think about silence, I would suggest that it first needs to be looked at in relation to noise. I think of silence as falling into two categories.

Small Silence (in that there isn’t much of it).

This is the whole environment that includes both audible noise which comes from the obvious things (sounds you hear) and, for lack of a better term, “non-audible” noise.

That non-audible noise could be thought of as the “energy” of a place such as an active city. It’s a place with lots of stimulation. Most cities would fall into this category. A city such as New York is a good example. It’s noisy to the ears, but it’s also noisy from the frenetic energy that exists from all the people, ideas, activities and tension.

Big Silence.

In the audible sense, it would be places that have few sounds and the sounds that do exist are not loud. This would include nature or a quiet building that has little or no mechanical devices running (fridge, washing machine, dish washer, coffee maker, kettle). In the non-audible sense, it would include places that have a feeling of being silent. Ever stood in a forest on a windless day, stared at the stars on a calm night or sat in an abandoned building? That’s Big Silence!

In these places, some of what makes them seem so silent is what meaning we bring to them but whatever the reason, the feeling can be quite overbearing and significant and depending on our outlook or emotional state, can affect us deeply.

Many people can’t stand to be in this kind of silence. It scares them. I think it may be because we come face to face with ourselves and that’s something we rarely do in the din of a city or with our two ears stuffed with little speakers blaring into our brains.

Silence can scare me. When I’ve spent time on my own at my family’s summer house on Hornby Island, I’ve had some very soul-searching experiences because of the silence. The silence doesn’t let you fool yourself or divert from the thoughts in your head. As scary as this was, I’m very glad that I’ve had these experiences because they’ve moved me along and helped me see things differently.

Building silence in.

One of the requirements for me in the house that we build is that it be well-insulated to ensure it can be a very quiet environment when we want it to be. I suspect having a green roof will help in this respect (especially with rain) and I know our architect also designs houses with roofs that have curves and different shapes to them versus blocky square corners that get hit by wind and react noisily.

I know one thing, there will be a lot more silence living out beyond.

20
Aug

I Want To Be More Self-sufficient

Title Image: I Want To Be More Self-sufficient

By John McLachlan

In my post Ten Romantic Reasons For Living Out Beyond the eighth reason I gave was that I wanted be more self-sufficient.

It is our plan to have a garden and few fruit trees to at least do some “looking after ourselves” even if it’s more fun than serious.

It’s not that many years ago when the vast majority of the population lived on farms or at the very least, had gardens in and around their homes. Though this is coming back to some urban areas, it’s still in its early days and it’s just not that feasible.

Where we will be living, it’s very desirable to have a small garden. Provided we have enough water, the climate is very suitable for growing vegetables as well as possibilities for fruit trees. In fact, Hornby Island was once home to many acres of orchards before BC’s Okanagan region got irrigation.

The self-sufficiency issue goes beyond just food. It stretches into being able to live modestly and be without debt. Building a house and living on the island will allow this much sooner than it would by staying in the city.

I’m not an alarmist who wants to build a compound and barricade myself in with two years of supplies, but I do feel it doesn’t hurt to be more self-sufficient in the world we live in. I’m able to achieve this just a little more living out beyond.