— Ecogeographer

Imagine an ellipse, and walk (and smell) roughly clockwise

On the steps and windowsills: pots
Creeping Penny Royal Mentha pulegium, Thyme Thymus serpyllum v ar albus, Lavender Old English Lavandula angustifolia, Orange Scented Thyme Thymus fragrantissimus, Wormwood Artemisia absinthium

Around and under the Globe Artichoke: dry bed
Sweet Woodruff Galium odoratum, Chives Allium schoenoprasum, Garlic chives Allium nutans, Bergamot Monarda didyma (potted), Yarrow Achillea millefolium (potted), Compact Marjoram Origanum vulgare ‘Compactum’ (potted), Creeping Rosemary Rosmarinus officinalis, Purple Sage Salvia officinalis, Winter Savoury Satureia montana, Tangerine Sage Salvia elegans, Curry Plant Helichrysum italicum, Cotton Lavender Santolina chamaecyparissus (potted), Thyme Thymus serpyllum, Broad Leaved Sage Salvia officinalis, Hyssop Hyssopus officinalis (potted), Blackcurrant Sage Salvia microphylla, Marjoram Origanum majorana, Pineapple Sage Salvia elegans, Lavender ‘Purple Emperor’ Lavandula pedunculata ‘Sampaiana’, Thyme ‘Foxley’ Thymus pulegioides ‘Foxley’, Blue Jacobs Ladder Polemonium caeruleum

By the Hollyhock and Passion Fruit arch: leafy bed
Flat leaved Parsely Petroselinum crispum, Ginger Mint Mentha x gracilis ‘Variegata’, Curled Parsely Petroselinum crispum, Spearmint Mentha spicata (potted), Good King Henry Chenopodium bonus-henricus, Coriander Coriandrum sativum, Bergamot Monarda panorama mixed

What’s next to pot up
Sweet Cicely Myrrhis odorata, Musk Mallow Malva moschata, Heartsease Viola tricolor, Pot Marigold Calendula officinalis

Read More

I just presented my disposable cup collection to a community in Northern Denmark (Jutland)

You’ll be able to see it soon

Plus, you’ll be able to add your own disposable or travel cups to it

    More later

    Read More

    This is how I have to start assessing my botanical illustration – Anne-Marie Evans style – she just gave us (The Eden Project Florilegium Society) a masterclass

    Botanical veracity
    Includes structure of plant, correct scale, story of plant…

    Technical skill
    Includes perspective, colour, tonal value, light and shade, translucency, clarity…

    Aesthetic judgement
    Includes composition, balance, colour relations …

    Impact
    Includes the ‘wow factor’

      Read More

      I’ve been looking at how I can develop some botanical knowledge outside my botanical illustration classes. Sally Corbet (a biologist and printmaker with a special interest in flowers and pollination) has suggested that I find a really good weeklong field trip to help build up my confidence and knowledge in this area. These courses are expensive and the right one hard to find. “What if you organised it so that a course came to you, to the place you are currently mapping?” Um, what a good idea of hers, how can I work this? I am scheming.

      In the meantime, Dr. Barbara McLean has come to my rescue, thanks to the energetic Mally Francis. I have recently been accepted as a painter for the Eden Project Florilegium Society and so now I can access day courses that Mally has booked. Barbara took us through the best practice principles of dissection and introduced us to the floral diagram. This aerial view of the plant is now my plan. I make myself draw an aerial view of every plant I have to paint and dissect, and I keep drawing the dissections so when I find the field study course of my dreams, I will be adept at something.

      This approach will force me to travel, walk with my fingers and pencil around the plant in different directions and in varying dimensions – something of a psychogeographical approach to drawing. Mr. Will Self would be pleased.

      Read More

      May’s about to arrive. I’m looking forward to it. April’s been fun but I’ve been left with sadness. Three of my favourite people died in March and I’ve been coming to terms with this loss.

      On March 18th Anthony Minghella died. I couldn’t believe my ears. I was eagerly awaiting the screening of his latest film (set in Botswana) so he was already on my mind. Africa was also on my mind. I’ve hitch-hiked through Botswana and so I wanted to see the film and how the land and people were portrayed. Also, the English Patient is one of my favourite book/film duets. Okay, so you can criticise the film, and perhaps the book’s sweeping romanticism, but wow, what rich multi-layered mapping, and what a base map to operate with – desert Africa.

      The desert could not be claimed or owned – it was a piece of cloth carried by winds, never held down by stones, and given a hundred shifting names long before Canterbury existed, long before battles and treaties quilted Europe and the East. Its caravans, those strange rambling feasts and cultures, left nothing behind, not an ember (Michael Ondaatje, The English Patient 1993: 150).

      When I went to sleep on this news, I was thinking about embers and sand, the early death of Minghella and what might have been. What amazing film/book duets I dreamt of. When I awoke on March 19th, I was orbited into star dust. Arthur C. Clarke had died. How I would have liked to dive with him. Whereas Ondaatje and Minghella took me on a temporary visit to Africa, and let me explore it through literacy, love and landscape, Arthur C. Clarke, it felt, was taking me on this never-ending journey – an outer, inner and world space safari. His 90th birthday wishes say it all: ‘for ET to call, for man to kick his oil habit and for peace in Sri Lanka’ ( : March 18, 2008).

      A critical – the adjective is important here – reading of science fiction is essential for anyone wishing to look more than ten years ahead. The facts of the future can hardly be imagined abinito by those who are unfamiliar with the fantasies of the past (Arthur C. Clarke Profiles of the Future 1973: p15).

      Reading science fiction is important to my work, for sustainability is also futurology. You have to read it, you have to project when you set about designing. Looking through my home window on a daily basis is also important. March 22nd saw the death of my grey goose. He was 22, not old for a goose. How I miss him in the garden. He shaped the garden. He had different parts of the garden for different parts of the day and to handle the different weathers. His mapping is one of the home. He shaped where I put the herbs. I had to leave a place for him beneath the window so he could listen to the radio. Watching him and his habits, inspired me as much as the worldly work of Clarke and Minghella.

      Read More

      Twelve months ago, almost to the day, I had great plans. My New Years resolution was to move house to a green hosting company. I fought hard to make it. Like so many others making resolutions, I fell by the wayside. I gave up by the Spring.

      You see I had wanted the real deal. Not, ‘Go on plant a tree for your sins’. Or, ‘Feel better! We have some solar-topped offices and an employee buy-a-bike scheme’. I wanted to see innovation. I wanted energy consumption addressed at all levels. I wanted to see evidence: a real explanation of the insides and workings of the system. I wanted a list of improvements that could be made and an honest rendition of what technical processes were hard to address.

      I am re-visiting the resolution. Can I make it this year? Well, the real deal is around the corner, or rather, across the waters – http://www.cix.ie – a great start-up opening in Cork. Admittedly, Emmet and I have been keeping an eye on CIX’s blog, and we wait in expectation for someone like this (who’s really thinking about energy consumption and monetary debt) to offer hosting packages to people like me. Their set-up is for big boys to buy server space. What I like about this project is that its concept is Open Source at all levels – it’s not just addressing Open Source language hosting, like PHP and MySql. (Open Source issues are paramount in decisions of going digitally green. (Here’s a nice old reference to back this up: Open Source and the Obligation to Recycle.) Aside from the CIX project, I do agree with Treehugger, ‘things have got better’. There are now three categories that are moving towards the idea of green hosting.

      ‘One group buys Renewable Energy Certificates; these insure that the power they use is generated in an ecofriendly manner. This is typically wind or solar, but it could also be biogas or geothermal as well. Dreamhost is in this category. The second group actually generates their own power directly from renewable energy; AISO, for example, is in this category. They are 100 percent powered by solar that they generate themselves’ Treehugger, accessed 2007.

      The third category existed last year, token gesture stuff. They have a solar roof, they ride bikes to work and some of them in this category are hinting at the importance of Open Source. This time last year, I had decided, after whittling it down from a list of fifteen potentials to five maybes, to go for one of three.

      One of them was in the States, one was in Ireland and one was in England. I thought England seemed the most sensible. I mean we still have to think about virtual miles. Emmet had agreed, ‘going local would probably be the best decision if you’re going to disregard price – a similar decision to buying your organic food from the local greengrocer or Tesco’s maybe?’ However, I couldn’t disregard price. It was going to be like shopping at Marks & Spencer. And who says organic food is greener? Unorganic food could be down the road from me, whilst organic shipped miles. So, I went for the Ireland option. It was looking real good but as I said, I realised CIX was only selling to big clients. So, back to the States I went. Oh dear, it had closed down.

      So, I am still here with the three I’ve had for sometime. Pair who I notice are used by Treehugger. They’re cheap. Namehog cos they’re just so damn nice to me and have lots of Cornish clients. They’ll always chat on the phone if I am stuck, which, as a non-programmer is really important to me (and there’s mac knowledge there). theirwork (an open mapping project that Emmet and I have been very slowly developing – it’s not externally launched yet) is on another hoster in Ireland Hosting365 because at the time they offered a good deal and they’re based in Ireland, as is Emmet. I should say, they’re all Linux based and none of them have let the side down.

      This new Spring, I am going to start attempting to carry out a methodical comparison of say five hosters. I will address the social, environmental and economic as overarching categories: the triple bottom line. I do agree with Treehugger, you won’t know how good they are until you’ve actually tried them, and it’s best only to move on recommendation. However, I don’t agree with the idea that any of these in the above three categories will do (see Treehugger). It’s time there was some guidance out there and some standards set. Global Action Plan seem to have been slow to call this, though I am pleased they have. Read about this at Digital Lifestyles.

      Notice that many organisations in this country that sit green continue to function on networked computers using closed systems software in most aspects of their work. One day I will finish and publish theirwork’s digital environmental audit framework. Not that it’ll be a massive and conclusive audit but it might just show the extent to which you have to think to even get some modicum of decent digitally greenness going. In the meantime, I continue to listen to Emmet’s wise responses to my questions. His last was this, which actually was in response to Simon’s post where my idea about Green Hosting was mentioned.

      Interesting that he [Simon] should mention the move of data centers to cold countries, as this seems to be exactly what’s happening: go to Marketwatch.com. Not quite as cold, but I think I’ve heard that Ireland’s low temperatures and high rainfall (water can be used in cooling systems) make it a good stop too. The infrastructure is a lot better too. As far as I know Google, Microsoft, Ebay and Amazon all have their main European data centers here.


      MAIN REFERENCES

      CIX
      Cork Internet Exchange
      CIX Video
      Reducing Information Technologies Ever-increasing Carbon Footprint

      Digital Lifestyles
      UK IT Usage Rivals Airlines In Carbon Emissions
      How To Select a Broadband Provider

      Global Action Plan
      http://www.globalactionplan.org.uk

      Emmet Connolly
      Linutop: less is more
      The environmental impact of thin client systems
      Green Computing

      theirwork
      Audit

      Treehugger
      How to Green Your Work
      More Wind and Solar Powered Web Hosting

      PS Recent news
      O2 (who I belong to) just had a network discussion about this as I was just about to post! Members recommended the following:
      Pair
      Thinkhost
      Deli.cio.us search
      German list

      (I think some of those come from my Deli.cio.us list, which I’ve left abandoned for so long, I am too ashamed to put it here. I will go to it soon…)

      Read More

      This year I’m going to present three projects that map elements of the physical and virtual world. Each project is linked not just by mapping but also by the fact that they ask indirectly for people to take action about the environment in which they live. Harnessing the power of the web, as well as the commercial image, the drawn picture and some people-power; the fields of ethnography, phenomenology, sustainability and open source are going to be explored.

      I’ve started this blog to develop the presentation of these projects, and to help me evolve them, and other future ideas and past work. As a neogeographist, and perhaps some would say a psychogeography  (or the other way round), I hope Ecogeographer goes on some massive journeys.

      Read More

      Ecogeographer’s started!

      Read More