Farewell to Toby Hemenway

Toby (4th from the right, top) with us in 2014

Toby (4th from the right, top) with us in 2014

“Permaculture gives us a toolkit for moving from a culture of fear and scarcity to one of love and abundance.” Toby Hemenway

April 23, 1952 – December 20, 2016

 

December brought a sad news: Toby Hemenway, permaculture activist, the author of Gaia’s Garden and The Permaculture City, and a supporter of our permaculture educational efforts in Solano County lost his battle with cancer.

We had the privilege to welcome Toby to Benicia in 2014 when he came to meet with our Benicia Sustainable Backyard team and to deliver a talk on permaculture to the community. We were just embarking on this journey of sustainable landscaping informed by permaculture, and to have this world-renowned author sit down with us and guide us was an important milestone for the organization.

I spoke with Toby for the last time in August, at one of his last public lectures. He was noticeably not feeling well, but still inquired about our progress in Benicia and was glad to hear the program was expanding to the entire county. He promised to recommend a few good speakers (which he did the following week!). It was Toby we always knew: inspiring, kind, attentive, warm and interested in the world…This is how we will remember him.

Toby’s legacy and his life’s work will continue to live in numerous permaculture gardens throughout the world, his books, his students, some of whom live and work in Solano, and through all the people he touched and inspired. Thank you, Toby.

You can view a video of when Toby’s talk with us here.

 

Elena Karoulina and the Sustainable Solano Team

Interested in getting a Laundry-to-Landscape system installed?

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Sustainable Solano is looking for Benicia homes to host public Laundry to Landscape workshops (and install simple “laundry-to-landscape” greywater systems in, as part of our continuing Benicia Sustainable Backyard Program funded by the Community Sustainability Commission).

If your home meets the following requirements and you’re interested in participating in our program, please email to us at info@sustainablesolano.org asap. The workshops are scheduled for February 4 and March 4, 2017.

Requirements:

• Homeowner in Benicia

• Laundry room has an exterior wall or accessible crawlspace

• Landscape is within 50 feet of the washing machine with trees, bushes, or larger perennials to irrigate

You receive:

• Free installation (you pay $400 for materials)

Contact: info@sustainablesolano.org

Awakening the Dreamer: an experience

by Nam Nguyen

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Me on the left

In the middle of the milling exercise, I stopped, as requested, and observed, without speaking, the woman in front of me. She was middle-aged, with black-rimmed glasses, and a smile that appeared hesitantly, disappeared, and then came again, wider this time. She observed me as I observed her. Although we had been introducing ourselves to different people all throughout the symposium, especially seeking out people we didn’t know to form groups with or talk with, I had not met her yet. At the end of the observation time, we were released to walk around again, but this time instead of hurriedly running around as if we were late for a meeting, work, a very important date, we slowed down, walked purposefully, meditatively. And then we stopped in front of another person, and again, without speaking, observed the person—in front of us. We smiled at each other, and then I watched the muscles on his face, a play of emotion that to my children, who cannot naturally read facial expressions, would have been a mystery—but I was able to understand the privilege of watching a stranger—no, a fellow human—feel emotions that must be so similar to mine, as his eyes watered, and tears came as he blinked, deliberately, in the moment. When it came time to move on and end the exercise, we gave each other a hug.

“It sounds like some hippy dippy thing with reading crystals,” my husband had told me, when I first showed him the Awakening the Dreamer Symposium flyer. And try as I might, even though it had been explained to me, and I had talked about it to friends, community members, and even invited the local City Council to attend, I couldn’t shake that impression myself. But I knew that Sustainable Solano was as concrete and active of a group as I’ve ever seen—full of drive and ideas, but also with the planning, organization, and execution. They weren’t about dreams. They made reality.
And yet, when Tracy Apple of Pachamama, who had originally developed the symposium over a decade ago, asked anyone who wasn’t sure what they were getting into to raise their hand, I, and about half the people there raised their hand.

p1150998“We came because after the election, we felt that we just had to do something,” a couple who had recently moved to the county told me when I asked why they had come. “I love Elena, and she asked me to come,” said another woman, “But I have no idea what she’s gotten me into.” “Our friend went to a symposium somewhere else and he said it was life-changing, that we needed to go so when we saw one in Solano County, we came,” said a group of three. “I’m a minister,” yet another attendee said, “I am really interested in interconnectedness and learning about how we can increase that in society.” “I am really into social justice. Have dedicated the last two decades of my career to it,” said another attendee. “I just walked by the street, and I’m a first world person, very concerned about the pipeline, and I wanted to see what this was about.”  “I’m from Vallejo, and I didn’t expect to see anyone else from Vallejo here, but there are a lot!” a woman said. “I’m so excited and hoping to be able to form a community.”

p1160007“We are here,” Tracy and her co-presenter Josh, said, “To give you the facts from experts in their field about the state of the world today, discuss how it got there, where it is going on its current trajectory, and how to change it.” Through a series of film presentations, lectures, guided group discussions, guided personal meditations, and exercises, they did just that. As many attendees said, it wasn’t any information that they didn’t already know about the destruction of the environment, about income inequality and social injustice, but this was different in that they were allowed to sit with their feelings, be guided through the overwhelming information and despair, the inaction and feeling of, “What can one person do?”, and led to examine their own unspoken assumptions of how things worked, explore what were their own passions, how it had informed their lives up until now, and how it might shape their lives in the future—to create small, committed actions—within a community that supported and bolstered them—with the goal of stopping nothing short of changing the world.

People committed to concrete actions long and short term, from recycling, wrapping presents in newspaper, finding a socially conscious holiday gift list, to researching how to start a sustainable elementary school, joining a local non-profit organization, to committing to go home and spending more time with children and grandchildren.

After the milling exercise, which was the final exercise and presentation of the symposium, we stood hand in hand in a very large circle of almost 70 people. In my everyday life, even as my children cling to me every moment of the day, standing there holding another’s hand, I was astounded that the touch of palm to palm in had become so scarce. Everyone was asked to share a single word: energized, thankful, connected, love, alive, hopeful, peaceful, grateful, happy, community, connected.

“The Awakening the Symposium isn’t ending,” said Tracy as everyone broke off, naturally forming into groups by city or interest to prolong the experience.  “It begins now.”

 

This was Nam’s experience. What was yours? Share your stories at info@sustainablesolano.org

Awakening the Dreamer, continued: Game Changer Intensive

Join us in co-creating a world that works for everyone. Whether you were with us for the Awakening the Dreamer Symposium, or you want to learn more about how you, with your own unique values, skills, and concerns, can commit to creating the change you want to see, a good place to start with with the Game Changer Intensive. Offered by Pachamama Alliance, it is a seven-week online course designed to educate, inspire, and equip you to be a pro-activist leader, a game changer in your community.

Sustainable Solano is partnering with Pachamama Alliance and Solano County libraries to offer, in conjunction with the online session, regular meeting spaces for residents of Solano County to meet, build, and support our communities together. If you are interested in registering, please submit your interest here. Pachamama and Sustainable Solano will contact you with more information according to the respective cities that you live in. For any additional information, please contact info@sustainablesolano.org.

Benicia Walk in a Food Forest Series Continues

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We are pleased to announce the speakers for the remaining tours in 2017! All tours begin at 10 am on Saturdays and usually last about 2.5 hours. Each tour includes an indoor talk about permaculture /urban food forests, secondary water and water saving techniques, and an outdoor part where participants explore the existing food forest under the guidance of an experienced professional. Tours go rain or shine, so please plan accordingly and bring your rain gear and warm cloth. The tours are free, but you do have to register to receive the exact address. Registrations are coming soon.

January 28

David Shaw from Santa Cruz Permaculture will lead a tour of the “Barley’s Backyard”

February 28

Lydia Neilsen from the Regenerative Design Institute will lead a tour of the “Greyhawk Grove” 

March 25

Our very own Kathleen Huffman, who is completing her permaculture design certificate with Toby Hemenway at the Permaculture Skills Center will lead a tour of “The Curious Garden”.

April 22

Jessica Bates from the Food Forest Farm West will lead a tour of the “Marina Place Food Forest

May 20

You will have a unique opportunity to see all seven gardens in one day. Stay tuned for more details of this exciting and informative day!

To learn more about the program and seven demonstration food forests in Benicia.

2017 Preview from Executive Director Elena Karoulina

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Dear friends of Sustainable Solano,

As I am looking back at the eventful and transformative year of 2016, I would like to express my deepest gratitude to all people who helped co-create Sustainable Solano: the Board, our volunteer leadership team, our funders and supporters, and all of you who made a personal commitment to make a difference, to participate in something bigger than ourselves, to nurture heart-based initiatives for the good of the whole.

In 2017 we will continue to refine and shape the vision for the organization, to deepen our understanding of our current situation and to develop strategies to help making Solano County more environmentally and economically sustainable, socially just and personally fulfilling place to live and work.

We will continue with meaningful conversations in the community, beginning with a seven-week “Game Changer Intensive” offered by Pachamama Alliance as a follow up to the Awakening the Dreamer Symposium. Everyone can participate in this program! Our goal is to provide opportunities for face-to-face meetings in Solano County allowing us to deepen the connections we felt so profoundly with each other at the Symposium and to engage with each other in new and existing initiatives that facilitate change at the local level and beyond. Learn more and to register.

Our sustainable landscaping efforts will continue with monthly tours of Benicia demonstration permaculture food forests, installation of demonstration gardens in Fairfield and Vallejo, and a series of talks and workshops in Benicia, Fairfield and Vallejo – watch for regular updates on our calendar.

We invited professional landscapers, both established and new, to explore our Land Caretakers Program. Sustainable Landscapers Association of Solano County is forming now – please email info@sustainablesolano.org if you are interested in learning more.

Calling all the players in Solano local food movement to get to know each other and to join our efforts to create a robust, healthy, inclusive local food system in the county. We are planning to have a Solano Local Food Summit in the spring of 2017. If you are interested to learn more, please email info@sustainablesolano.org.

For cooking classes and talks on healthy, local food throughout the county, please check our calendar regularly (and let us know if you would like to promote your efforts of brining wholesome local food to our communities through our website and newsletter).

I am looking forward to see you at these upcoming programs and events. Please let me know if you have suggestions, ideas or questions. I wish you a peaceful and restful holiday season!

In gratitude,
Elena Karoulina
Executive Director
Sustainable Solano