live local

experiments in local living

Experiments from user: DaveGravina

Bedroom Herb & Vegetable Garden

Inspired by Catherine's awesome herb garden i've gone for a rather more humble experiment. This wee planter set housed tulips for a year or so but try as i might i couldn't inspire them to flower so after they eventually went to the big tulip hot house in the sky i decided edibles would be the way to go ....

My urban farm

So i nipped down to my friend Nick on the corner and grabbed a mint plant and two strawberry plants A great score for $15 and he planted them in fresh soil and away i went with my new urban farm ;)

Strawberries for all my friends!

Well actually just three - thats all that grew. They weren't the biggest or best strawberries ever grown but i grew them and they tasted pretty good to this proud father. I must admit though that after this and a few other smaller strawberries that i didnt quite harvest in time the strawberries were a bit of a flop. Im not sure if its the seasonal variation in temperature (a cold snap cut through October after an unseasonally warm September) or whether i'm just a crap farmer. Also one whole strawberry plant refused to grow any at all (i think it got its back up when i didnt water it one day- sibling rivalry i guess).

So im not sure the strawberries will provide the best return on my investment (to date anyway) - i continue to water them like the ridiculous optimist i am.

I'm minted!

Between the two recalcitrant strawberry plants lives a mint plant that has been dishing me out mint leaves for my tea ever since she arrived. Those fresh mint leaves make for the tastiest (honey infused) tea and i must have saved a wad of tea bags which = less waste and less CO2 in the air. It does take a bit of water to feed but i'm sure i'm ahead on the impact scale.

Love is in the air! (and soil)

The beauty of growing your own food is that its unpredictable and you get such a buzz when your plant friends give you unexpected love. Take this love heart shaped strawberry shown here plucked and happily waiting to fulfill its destiny for instance. i found this one tucked away in the foliage just last night and i can see more coming, could be the warmer weatherweve ben enjoying the past week, or perhaps it runs deeper and my strawberry plants love me back afterall.

Living local, two hours a week

I'm committing 2 hour a week to living local in my quest to break through the main barrier to changing my lifestyle - namely lack of time and old habits. This experiment. See my blog post on the time vs local living issue here .. and here goes ...

You just have to stop and engage

So i'm walking back home from a day at the beach along Victoria street and i clock Jim (above) wheeling a milk crate full of honey. A rather odd sight in inner city Darlinghurst and one sure to grab my honey loving eye! I almost walked past Jim, but then remembered my pledge so i backtracked and approached him to ask about his booty.

As it turns out Jim is a bee keeper from Bathurst in the Sydney Basin! Every fortnight Jim visits the inner city and sells his Bottle brush honey door to door for $10 a tub! (about half the price of the regular stuff).

Luckily i had exactly $20 on me so i grabbed two from him right there and then and after chatting about the state of bee keeping, his sales method and the benefits of honey on your health we went our separate ways.

Saying hello to the arts

I met this lovely actress in the street looking for the Griffin Theatre, so i gave her directions and struck up a fantastic conversation as you do when living local.

Jim returns

On a roll i stopped by to say hello to my barber Maria and the girls at Grand Royal. The conversation quickly turned to my bounty of honey and i ended up giving Jim's honey a bigup to the customers when what do you know - Jim shows up to sell a few more tubs to the punters and staff! After a while i headed back to my apartment, but in true live local style i dropped into my neighbours Simon and Melinda (see Rooftop experiment) and shared the love by dropping a tub of honey off. It's funny but i got home two hours from when i hopped the bus and felt like i'd had another day's worth of experiences.

Happy with my first live local pledge i vowed to do it again next week ..

Take the live local challenge

Ok so the live local challenge is on and together with prominent bloggers Kate Carruthers @kcarruthers and Rebecca Varidel @frombecca i'm going to take the challenge to live extra locally for the week and blog about it.

Day 1 ... First up breakfast!

So i've been eating Brookfarm's macadamia muesli breakfast for some time now. Love the flavour and it's GMfree. It says on the packet they only use Australian ingredients unless there's not one available. Brookfarm is in Bangalow, NSW too so that's not too bad either from a local perspective. I wonder if there's muesli made closer to home though? I poured Bonsoy soy milk from Spiral Foods over the muesli. It's meant to be the best/healthiest soy you can get and i prefer the taste. Plus it's GM Free, no added preservatives, colours or chemicals etc etc. But as luck would have it in terms of local its a big fail as it's a Japanese product.

Stopping to smell the roses

On my way to work I stopped and chewed the fat with plant maestro Nick from Blossom nursery on the corner of my street. Nicks a great guy and has a real sense of the neighborhood as he is almost always open and out the front - but i often cycle past in a hurry to get to work and don't stop to smell the roses and chew the fat with the man. Today i did and i learnt that it was probably the humidity in my bathroom that killed my plant and not me being a crap custodian of other lifeforms.(though that surely helped) - i feel a bit better now.

Coffee time with my friend and client Tara

Had a lovely meeting with Tara at one of my favourite cafes Single Origin today too and while they have a serious commitment to their coffee growers and providence of the food they serve the house blend coffee i had was from five different countries using Bonsoy milk again. So again cool business but with coffee it seems its hard to source local atleast - they do have an Australian coffee bean variety but they were out today so i couldn't specify that. But remembering its about a lot more than food miles - going to Single O is like visiting a friends place, Nick, Gave and the crew there treat you like one of the gang, the smell of warmth and love is stronger than the coffee beans. You get a real sense of the community at the cafe and they are a bit of a hub - holding parties and events & constantly breaking down the social barriers we construct around ourselves when we go to a cafe. 

So i still think this is the live local'est cafe in Surry Hills by far.

FInally Dinner time (at 10pm!)

Ok backfrom gym late (its a local gym in terms of location to my house but its the mutinational Fitness First so not exactly local in that sense! I bump into friends there occasionally, including an old friend recently who ive reconnected with so it has a social component i think that is important - could be better in that respect though, hate the loud adverts & music mostly but its convenient & means i actually make it to the gym) anyway .. so made a pretty simple meal of what i had in my pantry so i doubt its going to rock the live local world.

OK so lets see .. Sirena tuna - Packaged in Thailand, caught and hauled in from some ocean very very far away (i have been teetering on giving up my addiction to tuna for a long while given the imminent collapse of the fisheries but now there's another reason - the distance it travels, what's the carbon footprint of that tuna!?). lettuce was from the local mini mart, no idea where the get it from - will ask next time, same with the tomatoes, vinegar was Isabella from Italy (doh!) with a third of the bottle to go i wont be buying more this challenge - finally some Lebanese bread rounded out the meal ... its baked in Granville from Australian ingredients so thats cool - not a bad finish to the meal audit - though im losing ground on my previous choices i fear!

Day 2: Kicking off with some inspiration..

I took this quick snap at the Sustainable Living Festie in Melbourne a while back. Thought it would give me some inspiration on how to live local this week. The sign's title is How to Build Community at the Cultivating Community stall (sorry about the appalling photography i had a 3 year old tugging at my leg!)

Shot over to Payrmont with max and lawrence today to look at an auction ..

Max drove and this photo shows the pain he felt as we experienced the badly designed car parking system that forced us to drive around and around before we could find a pay station so we could get out.

This reminded me how important Good Design is for our local environment, this poor design created unnecessary pollution and aggro and made me late for my next meeting.

Had a nice chat to the two lads though and hopefully we'll get a few things from auction tomorrow for the studio that will mean a lower footprint overall to achieve the same result so the extra carbon expelled getting to the auction and doing circuits of the car park will be offset and some.

Crossing the Bridge

I did a presentation for Hootville on Social Media strategies and experiences in Nth Sydney with Priscilla from ANTART this afternoon. It was an interesting session as we shared strategies, successes and especially our mistakes and lessons learnt from our campaigning experience over the years. Met a bunch of switched on people from the NFP sector and Brett who puts the event on was cool & very knowledgable.

So that was great from a social/business perspective however we needed to Cross The Bridge (cue sinister music!) and this meant either public transport, taxi or a GoGet. With my buffer time between appointments stolen from me by that bad parking system designer (see above) i opted for a GoGet car share car. They are a great way to get around when you dont need to own a car and i use it whenever i have to use a car unless a taxi makes more sense (say to the airport). In this case it was best to just do that and besides the ridiculous parking fee in Nth Sydney ($38 for 2.5 hours!) it proved as always efficient and cost effective to go with the GoGet.

There is a real sense of sharing with your local community in the car share scheme too - its a shared resource, a great example of product as service and a beacon to others that it is not only possible, but actually beneficial, to share things rather than own them.

Dinner tonight was shared with eskis Soraya & Matt

.. at Iku Wholefood in Darlinghurst which is on my way home from Surry Hills where the studio is. Not a bad eatery to have in the way as you head home. This lovely meal was just $9.50 and is organic, biodaynamic, vegan, macrobiotic and gluten free (!)  and mostly local though the cool chick at Iku couldn't say for sure how local. Will need more investigation i think but who could argue with that smile!?

Day 3 : Paddo Patrol cars & coming unstuck

Ok so Day 3 was a bit busy too blog on the go, had to prep proposals in the morning, then cycled off only to cop a fine from a policeman for not wearing my helmet in Paddington (what was a highway patrol car doing in the mean (back)streets of paddo anyway!?) so $54 later and feeling less community spirited by the second i cycled with my tail between my legs and Natural Born Killer fantasies playing through my brain to meet strategista Dan Cass and Piers for a soothingly calm zen and inspiring live local media session in Paddington.

Racing back to the studio and lunch was provided by our awesome studio co-ordinator (mental note she needs a better title that does her justice!) Catherine using studio ingredients (we keep a fully stocked fridge for the eskis to enjoy) most of which are purchased own at Paddys Market so would be grown in the Sydney basin i imagine (?), inhaling the sandwich we sat down to bid on the auction.

So .. when the dust settled ... we were able to pick up some tihngs we really needed for the studio for a quarter of the cost of buying new. Second hand, v. high quality and a good price = sustainable (if you 'need' the stuff - which we do).

btw the book in the photo was lying around amongst the detritus of excess at The One Centre and I thought it quite poignant. Despite my ideological differences with the agency it is a shame to see someone's hard work & dreams go down the gurgler . Read more about this cationary tale of expansion and growth in this SMH article

Falconer's chef rises to the live local challenge

After a mad afternoon prepping estimates, reviewing designs and generally doing the eskimo soft shoe shuffle around the studio we had a few beers, celebrated the weeks successes and said goodbye for the week as we always do.

I then met Piers who is my partner in live local for a bite and a chat. It as an evening of inspiring conversation about the live local project and the role we both might play in a sustainable future - made all the better for the venue, The Falconer on Oxford st - which is one of my favourite places for a meal or just a cool glass of local Lovells beer. It's cool to see the reaction when you tell people you're doing the live local challenge, the waitress dug it as did the chef, so much so rather than serve me their 'localest' meal he took on my live local challenge and served me a delicious meal made from only local ingredients.

Ben, Andrew and the crew are living the local dream and have a constant stream of friends, regulars and cool cats through the joint. The Falconer is one of those subtle eco-aware places where they dont shout it but lots of consideration has been expended on the minimal fitout and various aspects of the venue and of course the menu.

.. Home now and just writing this and I think a third successful day livin local(ish) ... onto the weekend .. where i'll endeavour to get local with the Darlinghurst crew. out.

Day 4 : Not as local as i'd like but quite social ..

I was in Bondi today looking at apartments and as usual hired a GoGet to get me around. Im keen to return to the suburb in which ive spent most of my life in Sydney and many of my friends still live in - while i dig the Darlo crew i miss the beach and the community vibe of some parts of the area. This was reinforced by the fact that at every opening i bumped into old friends, Olivia at one, Klara at another then Enzo with whom i ended up hanging for coffee. He's italian and i connect with him on a different level to some of my friends though i dont know him that well - perhaps it runs deep (and local?) going back to the old country.

Back from that and off to Petersham for a bbq and catchup with some more friends, i loved the fact that i saw 3 GoGet cars in the traffic - including the one i sat behind - we hooted and acknowledged the GoGet community connection as the rest of the Sydney traffic flew past.

Ok so it's Saturday night and a party in St Peters means ive certainly not been super local this day (though kept inner city!) but made connections with people i care about which is as important as anything when you're living local.

Day 5: Participating at the Sydney Writers Festival

Day 5, woke up late after aforementioned party (it was great btw, Eric the DJ is exceptional and a lot of old friends were there) - i managed to drink only Australian beers (Blue Tongue) so kept the live local challenge alive! Today my friend Gareth and I attended a Sydney Writers Festie talk at Pier 4, Walsh Bay on creating a participation society. The topic is very relevant to live local so i wanted to hear what they had to say. In particular the writer Hugh Mackay who contributed an excellent article to the recent Griffith Review themed around participatory society) .. he states that "Grand visions of society have their place, but its in the neighbourhoods that we join the dots." Sums up live local really.

So we cabbed it there as we were running late (ive come to the realisation lately that lack of time is the enemy of living local) rather than cycling so a bit of carbon released alas. However it was worth it as not only was the talk thought provoking but we bumped into my old friend Sophie Howlett who's just back from OS apparently and Antoinette from the progressive think tank Centre for Policy Development. We were shortly joined by a few more of their mates and we all had an impromptu session chewing the fat and having a really good laugh.

I again asked the bar staff to help me with my localisation preference however this time through some mistake we got Peroni beers instead of Blue Tongue so my efforts were in vain! Gareth's tea was Lipton alas and there was general mirth when i asked where that was from (nobody knew but we were sure it wasnt Australia) - seems tea drinkers may struggle with living completely local.

A few hours later Gareth and i decided to walk home to compensate for our cab ride in and visited two of the old pubs in Darlinghurst on the way, the first at the bottom of Crown Street has a no pokies policy and a really classic old feel. The second, the Old Fitzroy is a lovely pub snuggled in the backstreets of Woolloomoolloo. It has a great village vibe and mainly locals drink there - there's also a cool theatre out back and you can get a decent Laksa if you're hungry. James Squire, brewed just down the road in Camperdown was the beer of choice. Finally we ate Japanese at a little joint on McCleay street Potts Point - i had difficulty communicating the order at all so i didnt bother with the live local request and so ended the weekend a point down.

Day 6: Dinner date at Fu's

Mondays are always hectic so didnt get time to post my daily update until this morning but here goes:

Breaky - usual Brookvale muesli but picked up milk late Sunday night and it was Victorian regular cows milk which was all they had at the quickie mart. Sometimes you just go for the convenience and choice is very limited.

Lunch - Made up for the milk at lunch as i ate from our vegie garden on the roof at our studio, fresh lettuce and a few extras from our Paddys market (Sydney Basin) purchases.

Next local moment was when I had a coffee meeting  with Duncan, our Sustainability, HR and Operations manager. We bumped into our friends Michael & Eva from Toko (cool design agency across the road) at The Wall, our localist of cafes being just opposite the studio in Surry Hills. The Wall is a great place to meet the local community and we often bump into various colourful creative folk and assorted Surry Hills regulars there. (meetings tend to go overtime!)

I got home and knocked on my neighbours (Simon and Melinda from The Falls) who are planning a rooftop party with me for our building this saturday. (more about that next post).

Finally dinner with my girlfriend Vaike at Fu Man Chus which is just down the road. It's run by Annie, an old friend and serves mouth watering healthy Malaysian food. I gave Annie the challenge and received a quite detailed analysis of the state of Australian produce - she imports anything that needs processing as you cant get descent stuff here apparently - while she gets some fresh things from the markets - we found it difficult to settle on a vego plate that was local. In the end (after much commotion in the kitchen!) we settled on the chilli salt eggplant & pumpkin and rice soup - all Sydney basin sourced.

Wine was Logans Pinot Gris from Orange (pictured above with Vaike on her iphone actually responding to a comment on live local instead of talking to me!).

Another nice local/social moment followed as Vaike's auntie Julie & her friend Collette arrived randomly and joined us. I love those serendipitous moments that occur when you eat out a lot. Cafes, restaurants and diners have become defacto social spaces beyond the home (helpful when you live in a single room studio as i do!) and are vital elements of a cohesive community i think.

Day 7 : And on the seventh day he said let us party!

So day 7 (already!) and the live local challenge draws to an end (for me) and so i started the day determined to do more than question where my food came from ... My main activity this morning was organising the roof party for next Saturday which is an effort to kickstart my less than spectacular Rooftop Garden experiment. We're inviting our neighbours onto the roof of our building (which commands sweeping views of the city - aargh you can tell i've been talking to Real Estate agents lately!) and asking them all to bring a plant to contribute to the garden. (I'm suggesting edible varieties but really any greenery up there is appreciated for now)

So i got a poster up in the building (see photo) and  continued to bump into neighbours (around half a dozen today alone!) and asked them to come up and spread the word. Nick from Blossom Nursery on the corner of Darley and Burton has offered to donate some herbs and other plants - Nick you're a legend!

The rest of my day was the same as yesterday (same breaky/same lunch more or less etc) - i stayed back to consult with John Neeme on his band's web site plans as a return favour for teaching me the guitar - more live local magic there too now i think about it!

We had a quick beer at the Darlo (my local), i usually always go tap beer at the pub because the beer bottles alone take 30 litres of water to create! -  so its far far more sustainable to go with tap beer - the localest beer was Hahn Dry which is not my favourite but you gotta sacrifice to live local too sometimes. I bumped into another new neighbour on the way back and invited him to join us, he sounded keen. There was also a guy on our doorstep who'd been kicked out of his home by his wife (!), i would normally not know this but i seem to be engaging with people more this week and so i struck up a conversation, gave the man a carob coated licorice stick i'd just picked up from the quickie mart (source unknown - damn forgot to ask, its so easy to slip isnt it!) and we shared a laugh about how things could be on the way up for him now.

Well i guess thats the end of my challenge, not sure i broke any local living ground here but i certainly feel better than i normally do about my interactions with people and i definitely can see improvements to my local eating habits coming out of this. And I'm particularly excited about the rooftop garden party idea which has, in part atleast, been triggered by myself getting fired up and spending the time needed to live local this week.

A rooftop garden!

So after the (mixed!) success of my noticeboard i've decided to try one of the ideas that was strongly supported on it which was the rooftop garden.

I place the first plant, my friend the succulent

An optimistic but lonely fellow assumes the corner position.

And we wait ...

 

Insane in the Membane

As the comments below suggest my little Garden Party had the body corporate very concerned indeed. The Strata Manager letterboxed everyone saying my party was off and placed signs up - somoene also removed my signs the day before the event.

That was a bit mean i thought - especially when i made it clear i understood the issue regarding the membrane and that i had scaled back our gathering really to be a meeting of neighbours to discuss the issues and perhaps get to know eachother a little in the process. So i placed up a sign to this effect in the morning and found this one promptly torn down also.

At this stage i started to fee like this was becoming a bt ridiculous and given i'd invited people up t the roof in including Terry who can bareluy get out of the apartment anymore I was determined to meet my guests on the roof on Saturday ...

The Goon Squad

Well you can imagine my surprise when i popped up on the roof at midday to find not one but two security guards! Now i've seen enough Matrix movies to know how to handle them but really i didn't want to have to hurt the guys. Bobby and his mate were actually quite nice blokes and understood they were dealing with a dangerous little man who also had a mean looking succulent as backup so were open to a proper chat about things.

So after discussing their orders and my determination to stay on the roof  i decided to call the police just to clarify the fact that if they tried to remove me from the roof that i could call on the police to escort the lovely chaps (who in the end were just doing their job) off the building and into a paddy wagon.

Constable Smith (?) from Kings Cross police was incredibly patient and helpful and across a thirty minute phone convo between all parties concluded (a) Bobby and his mate couldn't (legally) physically touch me even if they wanted too (which they didnt) and (b) it was a civil matter until one of us actually did do something physical to the other.

So what we had was a mexican standoff (but no mexican food!). At that point my neighbour Raza joined us - he's actually on the body corporate and we talked through the issues as the sun broke through the clouds much to Bobby's delight. Raza was apologetic about the outcome and certainly wasnt into having security on the roof - but he also explained the situation from his perspective. It was a very constructive chat and really we ended the conversation better connected than before i think which is a cool outcome.

 

Unfortunately due to the bad weather and bad sportsmanship from the strata people the turn out wasnt quite what i'd hoped for, however my long suffering girlfriend Vaike soon arrived with a plate of food and we chatted for a while with the boys then headed downstairs for ...

A party in my apartment!

As it happened my friends next door Simon and Melinda - aka The Falls - had decided to also have a party to promote their Uncharted competition efforts (they are coming third from a field of thousands apparently). While they were intending to have it on the roof initially (unbeknown to me i swear!) after the kerfuffle i caused just trying to get a few neighbours up for a wee garden party they decided to have it in their apartment - and well the least i could do was open up mine for the party too!

So in the end we enjoyed an extraordinary afternoon listening to some seriously talented people playing live sets in our apartments! It was such a cool vibe and the crew such lovely people i was just a little sad for all the people in the building who missed out - though i was kind of glad we were all nice and warm in the apartments instead of on the roof as the rain bucketed down!

Highlights were many but music maestro Kent's rendition of Bruce Springstein's Dancing in the Dark on my Piano Accordian really made my day. Ohh and i was interviewed for MTV and managed to throw a plug in for live local so that was a nice bonus!

Laundry Noticeboard

I live in a medium sized building (maybe 80 residents) in the inner city Sydney suburb of Darlinghurst and while i see my immediate neighbours regularly and say hello and occasionally run into some of the tennants who have lived their longer in the corridors i still haven't met most of the people in the building after four years.

Making the Noticeboard

I wanted to re-use an existing picture frame i had lying around the place rather than buy a new board so we (thanks Kate!) attached some corkboard to it and placed the (rather quirky) noticeboard in the laundry.

I thought we should start off with a bit of fun and posted a missing sock announcement.

Week 2: The ideas start flowing

It took a little while for poeple to start to use the board but the first person to contribute raised the ongoing question of what to do with our rooftop which is massive and has great views but due to Body Corporate rules is pretty spartan and unused.

i contributed the locavore concept idea which involves a group of innovative ecological designers installing and maintaining a rooftop vegie garden (we have one on our studio roof).

Someone was kind enough to supply extra pins :)

Week 4: Voting commences in earnest

The Rooftop ideas voting proceeds

Week 6: Things get interesting ...

The board starts to take on a life of its own, someone offered a new
pen (after the last one mysteriously dissapeared), a lollipop appeared
out of nowwhere and someone decided to create a vote for the rooftop
usage ideas!

week 8: Clothes reunited!

A neighbour accidentally collected another's washing and what could have become a feud became a chance to connect via the board and after a notice was posted the clothese were safely returned!

I also gave away an old DVD player i wasnt using on the board this week to a grateful neighbour (and new friend!)

The board really feels like its working now.

week 10: The rooftop garden wins!

By far the most popular idea for our rooftop was (surpirse surprise!) a rooftop garden. So i added a note asking people to bring a plant up to the roof rather than try going through the body corporate.

Let's see what happens in my new experiment .. The Rooftop Garden ...

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