Sunday, 27 January 2008

Dacha

Deep in our hearts we associate green, ecological, reponsible planet-saving behaviour with strict,parsimonious,self-flagellating (metaphorically speaking), severity of life. Going to stay at the newly completed eco house up the hill, I had bought the beds in just this frame of mind. 1930's strength through joy has expressed itself in beds as hard as boards.

Rising woodenly this morning the utter silence was impressive until opening the shutters allowed a rupture in the hermetically sealed indoor environment; if there are layers of glass and insulation to keep in the heat they keep out sound, completely - birdsong, wind, trees, passing fauna, the fountain - being inside looking out is like a silent film, all it needs is a man playing the piano. Listening to the breakfast things being washed-up in the kitchen was not what I'd expected for my first morning's sound track.

It all works: the woodburning boiler for when the solar panels need sunshine; the gravity fed water tanks from springs underground; the ancient Romans would admire the underfloor heating system;the electricity virtually free with an advantageous arrangement with the electricity company; the kitchen garden rampaging with vegetables that can't be eaten fast enough. All that is needed is the collapse of the world as we know it.
'Is this how it will be?'
''Believe in capitalism. In markets and their mechanisms of self-adjustment. It works.'
'What are we doing here then?'
'It's nice for the weekend.'

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

HG: Lucky you! I'm jealous!!

Many years ago I had the good fortune to stay a couple of days in a dacha in winter in the forests just outside Moscow. No such thing as solar (or underfloor or central!) heating in those days, although there was electricity for lights etc, just a big log fire in the stone fireplace in the corner belching out smoke and fumes (which gave me a headache) and rather dangerous sharp-pointed three-feet long icicles dangling from the roof eaves. The snow outside was so dry and powdery it was virtually impossible to make a snowball and it did not stick to clothing when unseen ice underfoot forced an undignified and unintended bottom-first landing on the ground. The best thing was the complete and total silence.

Not saying I want to go back or anything, but like you I thought it was ideal for a weekend!.

hatfield girl said...

I seem to have made a large stew for lunch (stew? for Sunday lunch?)and am now going the whole hog with boiled potatoes, and some dark green leafy stuff also boiled, and dressed in oil. It's amazing there isn't a suet pudding with currants but there isn't any suet.
No snow, Nomad, not even a touch of frost, it must be the beginning of global warmng.

Anonymous said...

Why dont we all live like that I wonder - it would make sense. But if capitalism adjusts etc. what exactly would you do to earn money living in the eco house? I mean without driving a long way and therefore defeating the eco thingey..

Anonymous said...

Boy you know how to milk those EU grants - olive trees and eco houses whatever else?

hatfield girl said...

It's supposed to be a living, M. Sort of park keeping on a grander scale. But it needs lots of subsidies for the plant and for the plants. I'm just determined to get back all the unjust taxes of the last 10 years that Brown took off us when we were vulnerable, with children, and he was stealing almost half our income to give to other people. And with the cheek to say it was being given to the poor. Brown made us poor.

If everyone is to live using renewable energy etc., then we should have started long ago; it's old technology but doesn't really make huge profits for small numbers, in the short term, like nuclear power.

Doesn't turn voters into clients either, so it hasn't a chance.

Elby the Beserk said...

Brown made you poor. Yes, me too, and me and my-ex. Thatcher before Brown as well, with her 15% interest rate on out mortgage, and VAT ratcheted up. The kids still talk of millet balls and fried veg. I just say - look how healthy you all are (DV)!.

But I'm used to being screwed by institutions. I lost my final salary pension, from the company who made me redundant last in 2006. Lost it in 1987. Then we had a company pension. Then a private purchase pension with a company contribution. They fucked up the transfer from the former to the latter, so many of us lost a bucket from our fund in the dot com crash.

Robin Hood, where are you? (Preferably NOT the Richard Greene version, much as I loved it at the time. Nor that Costner chap either)

Electro-Kevin said...

Can't keep away from us though, eh ?

Hope you're having a nice time.

The only truly ecological things to do are to stop breeding, stop living so long and stop being so profligate.

These things are good for the conscience but will make not a jot of difference as people grow richer in emerging economies and rightly demand their hard earned central heating, air conditioning, cars ...

hatfield girl said...

Poor. When did the state start this vile practice of funding the poor out of the wages of the poor? And maligning those poor with half a brain and a decent cultural grip as sharp-elbowed middle class for seeking to avoid thier children's educational downgrading?
And when were the working class persuaded they are middle class and well off enough to be taxed and stoppaged to within 50% of their lowish in the first place incomes?

The poor are us.

Notthewholly-dependent-on-welfare; not the members of the claimants union. Not the damaged, the silly, the lazy, the sly who failed to grasp their educational opportunities, and ruined the education of others The poor are being wholly betrayed by this regime, forced to subsidise and then stomach the destructiveness of the disruptive, unacculturable, ugly object of Labour's concern.
The 15% mortgage rate, the first oil shock - yes we were poor but the government wasn't sneering at us and decrying our efforts to bring up our children (not that we had children then, but sneering wasn't on the menu). It is now.
If people run into a bad time of course they should have support, willingly, but this regime seems to act on the basis that a particular caste generates a particular amount of wealth and that is redistributed by the regime to support them all, regardless of effort,merit, or commitment to self support. Any protests are met with denunciation from unhelpful through racist, classist, discriminatory through to criminal in thought and deed.

hatfield girl said...

Watching things in England nervously is not unreasonable when there are valuable things at stake there, EK. And I don't refer only to personally owned things. Though I am rather keen on them not taking a nose dive.

Consumer demand in the developing world is not what makes me afraid.

Electro-Kevin said...

Well said your 22:27.

My point about environmental issues is that I feel that in this country it is yet another device by which to create purpose for the educated-unemployables and by which to extract and redistribute our cash:

Road charging will be set at exactly the level that the market can bear - I won't be driving less than I do (I can't) but I will be paying more for it.

Recycling is proving to be a nonsense as my broken wheely bin has proven - it lasted 2 years so what was the point of all that recycling if all those plastic milk bottles are now being used to make my new bin ? I've had two recycling boxes replaced as well through mishandling by heavy handed refuse collecters.

Wind turbines are neither efficient nor reliable and no one seems to factor into their economics the costs of wear and tear and that's before their eventual replacement. We are only just becoming aware of the folly of energy saving light bulbs and their hazardous nature ...

Though the eco-households sound appealing and are perhaps a standard for the future, to change everyone over to them would be self-defeating in terms of environmental cost. A recent advert exhorted people in our vicinity to change their windows to double glazing for the sake of heat efficiency. What about the wasted windows that are to be chucked away long before the end of their serviceable life ? The extra financial and ecological costs of producing the new ones before they were needed ? A money making opportunity for double glazing salesmen for sure and work for government box-tickers too.

All of these 'inconvenient truths' are being ignored - as you would expect from people who support the likes of Al Gore unquestionnningly whilst ignoring his personal wastefulness at home and the fact that he's bought a house at sea level (not sensible if you really believe in Global Warming).

The fact is - if the ice caps have started melting (and even if it IS our fault) then it's too late and we may as well forget remedial action and concentrate on how to survive the impending crisis.

One thing I really think we ought to consider is preserving the rain forrests by paying a tax to the South Americans (policing them of course) - oxygen is, after all, a far more important resource than oil or even fresh water.

hatfield girl said...

We are wholly in agreement E_K. The cost of eco-housing is too high for individual owners to bear, and not the object of fiscal encouragement by the false eco-warriors of NuLabour.
There were 40% grants for high insulation levels,triple-glazed windows and solar energy; there were also legal requirements to meet certain building standards that carried penalties. So we rebuilt the eco house minimising costs (that was pretty important) and maximising efficiency.
There are urban projects and prototypes so that when a block of flats redoes the common parts, services, windows and shutters, and the roof there are grants and penalties delivered by the local council; slowly the housing stock is being upgraded. As you point out, it will take a long time and nothing is done until renovation; not just because of eco goals.
Eco needs time, not targets, and lots more money left in earners' hands, not confiscated for worthless policy objectives, and encouragement as well as deterrence. As it is, it's just another stick to beat us with.
Motorways are charged here; it's not a charge that makes you gnash your teeth or pack the car to the gills. But in England the plan is to charge all roads, so no-one can move at all without payment.
Windfarms are just a means to mulct the funds available for alternative energy from the EU. Here it is dominated by the Mafia, as is rubbish collection and disposal. The ecomafia are using the EU to spread across EUrope.