Saturday, December 8, 2012

The Game of Life.


I have never laughed harder.   A group of us are sitting around the table after a long week.  The kids are in bed, child care provided by fellow neighbours, and the wine and beer flows freely.  We’re playing the new game that is taking the ecovillage by storm. 

Our usual game repertoire is full of complex and fun board games like Catan, Dominion, and Carcassonne.  You’ll often see a chess board out on a front porch.  This game is not what I would expect to be a competitor to these sophisticated thinking games.  Our new game is a morph between Pictionary and Telephone.  It is a riot… and it has a lesson to teach us all.

The game begins with a group of people, and a stack of paper for each person equal to the number of players.  Everyone either writes a phrase, or draws a picture of something they are thinking of.  We then pass the whole stack to the right.  When you receive the neighbour’s stack, you decipher what you see, turn the page, and either draw what you’ve read, or write what you think you see.  Then you continue to pass to the right.  When the stacks have made it all the way to the original owner, we share the metamorphosis of our original thought…

… and then we laugh.  We don’t just laugh.  We howl.

We laugh as we see the logical progression of “Hit and Run” to “Chicken on a Bench.”  Each picture justifies the writing.  We see where the story goes wrong.  We laugh and we offer our compassion to the poor sucker that had to draw the “franken- bride” that was supposed to be “John Travolta” and the “volcano” that also does look EXACTLY like a “wizard hat”.  We understand when “surf beach” is generic to one is a detailed paragraph describing the “the sun is out, the man is surfing, and the woman is puking her marguerita”.  Some people are just far more descriptive than others.

People don’t always see me as a deep person.  Especially not when I’m drawing “cars running over eggs” and “vampires licking cherries”.  But I had to sit back for a minute as we all sat there howling with laughter at the simple and understandable miscommunications between us.  Sure I saw a “corn dog with a bite out of it”.  But I also can see how it could look like “a man stealing a bite from a corn dog”.  And I get how that can morph so quickly to a “a man running from an angry carnie”.  I get it. 

And I actually think it is the best game to call the official game of the ecovillage.  It certainly reflects the nature of our life here sometimes.  Life in Community can sometimes look like a big game of Telephone Pictionary.  Something you hear or see can be interpreted so quickly to be different than it was intended.  We turn the paper in the stack and react to what we “think” came first.  One reaction so easily causes another.

I suppose it is human of us to interpret what we see to the best of our ability.  To me, the game is a simple reminder of just how human it is to interpret differently from one person to another.  If we could only hold up each stack of paper to see the progression of some of our interactions at the village, we’d remember far more easily that important part is not how we’ve drawn, or written… but how we choose to play the game.  When someone misinterprets your hamburger to be a UFO… Do you get upset?  Or do you choose to howl with laughter? 

Thanks to Tam and Joel for a nice night out.  And welcome to buck and Sonya who draw as well as any of the rest of us.  See you at breakfast with Santa at the Yarrow Community Hall tomorrow.

If there aren't pictures yet-  check back.  I think I'll dig through the garbage and try and find some of our art to share!


Thursday, October 18, 2012

The Village Anthropologist

I arrived in the Yarrow Ecovillage two months ago, unsure what to expect.  I'd spent about three years reading about ecovillages and intentional communities, for both personal interest and as preparation for a PhD in Social Anthropology.  I'd read books on communities all over the world and from various points in history.  I'd visited the website countless times, written research proposals, and spoken with community members over email and on Skype.  Yet, when I arrived in Yarrow after a 4400km drive out from Toronto, I felt like I had a pretty limited idea of what an ecovillage was.  I'd read about them, but I'd never lived in one.

I'm in the midst of what anthropologists call ethnographic fieldwork.  The idea behind ethnography is both comfortingly simple and dauntingly complex: learn about a different way of life by living it.  Anthropologists do this all over the world.  Classmates of mine are - at this moment - scattered across the globe, studying a wide range of topics from goat herding in Inner Mongolia to debt consulting practices in Southern England.  I chose to live in an ecovillage, in a community that practices cohousing, not only out of an academic interest, but also because the more I read, the more the idea appealed to me on a personal level.  What would it be like to live in a place where people are 'determined to live as neighbours'?  What does it mean to put the idea of 'community' so central in day-to-day life?  What does it feel like to know everyone on your street, to eat dinner with them, to work with them, to build something with them?  These were questions I wanted to explore in my own life.  

I had countless hypotheses.  I'm a social scientist, after all.  In social science, though, I've learned that some of the most plausible hypotheses fall by the wayside when confronted with experience.  Thinking about people is no substitute for spending time with people.  So I'm here.  Exploring.  Experiencing.  Living.  It may take a long time to get a good grasp of life here, but I've already learned that people at the Yarrow Ecovillage are a welcoming bunch.  In mid-August, they welcomed me.  In late September, they welcomed my partner Carolyn.  Perhaps we'll all be welcoming you soon!
   

Monday, October 1, 2012

November 2nd we start the next step!

Wow.  That is all I have to say.

Wow.

Words can not explain to you how amazed I am at the quality of the people that are coming to the Ecovillage.  We only have six units left in the multigenerational homes.  Any ONE, or all of them, would make my neighbourhood a fantastic place to live.  We don't have long to wait until we'll know who all our neighbours are.  The coordinating committee is well at work of the exact timeline for how we'll build out the final phase of our neighbourhood.

Orange you glad to join us!
Where I'm feeling most excited is in the people coming to the big day on November 2nd for the Adult only Cohousing.

Chuck calls this "Seniors" cohousing.  but thats just because he doesn't have to live in it.  I have noticed a cringe in the people considering building "seniors" that I completely understand.

Who wants to build themselves an old folks home?  Certainly not me!  i don't feel old.  I want to build a "young folks home" and never feel like the old fart I will one day look in the mirror and see staring back.

But really?  I want to stay active.  I want to continue to learn and grow.  I never want to loose a whole day sitting in front of the TV waiting for my kids to call.

Never.

Before Paul and I moved to Groundswell, back when we still weren't "sure" about this cohousing business I remember driving back to Alberta in silence.  After a long while I said, "Well at the very least I know where I want to live after the kids leave."

Its true that cohousing is amazing for kids but I think it is possibly even better for empty nesters.  Think about it.  Now days many grown children live miles away from their parents.  Children don't have a problem making new friends.  I think every kids Sophie has ever played with is her new best friend... but as adults?  How do we meet new people?  Really?

Elderberry cohousing is still just a dream.  I am lucky enough to know so many of the people that will be coming to the meeting on Novemeber 2nd that I can't help be excited about the community they could have.  Will there be enough of them?  Will they feel enough synergy to go for it?

I hope so.  They are all amazing.

Please do me a favour.  If you've read this and you know any cool 50-65 year olds interested in community invite them to the November 2nd Focus Group.  Wouldn't it be amazing if the room was full of smiling faces?  Woudn't it be cool to see them build their amazing new home together?

As we near the end of the push to build Groundswell we are all ready for something new.  The wetland has been dug, the last of the Groundswell units will sell quickly this fall... I think we're ready for the next step.  Don't you?

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Please Join Us!



This Sunday we're taking the village to the school gym.  We'll show off some of our favorite things about the village, and introduce people to who we've managed to attain our amazingly high quality of life.

Join us for about an hour in the gym, and then a free tour to follow.  We're looking for our last few neighbours.  Maybe its you!

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Nutshells and Niblets Community Bulletin #3231


The dry, gravelly voiced construction edition - with a frog in its throat

Ann's very personal, highly biased and incomplete guide to the ecovillage ... in a nutshell.
With this endless-summer weather, I’ve been disinclined to come in from playing outside, to get my bum on a seat in front of my computer and write some Niblets.  But I thought I’d better jump to it, to stay ahead of the progress being achieved here particularly by trucks, diggers and jackhammers.  My desire is to make some sense of all the change I feel happening around me; I had forgotten how much can happen rapidly, with a few men in machines.
 Dairy farm career change
The dairy farm that once was, is rapidly being disassembled and repurposed.  Starting in the early days of Yarrow, this farm raised cattle.  The buildings we’ve been making good use of for storage, carpentry and common house activities, once served those cows- for milking, storing feed, providing winter shelter,  ‘loafing’, and collecting manure.  And now they’re on the move to serve our vegetable farmers .
A Barn for our farmers
The bunker silo is gone . The ‘loafing barn’ has mostly gone.  Timbers and boards piled into stacks.
 As Krishna reported recently, one of its internal incarnations--- perhaps the most ancient of the rectangular barn shelters--- the “Flying Phoenix’  is sitting on wheels, ready for its trip down the farm runway to become a ‘new’ barn the back pasture.
(It’s not too late to contribute to the barn-raising fund --- speak to Tam or click on  http://yecfarm.blogspot.ca/2012/08/help-us-raise-barn-for-our-community.html?spref=fb)
Farm lane and bridge
The first completed task is a graveled surface down the farm road, replacing the previous parallel–linear-mud-ponds that constituted a pseudo-road.  And there’s a safer duck-along route for kids beside the parked cars, so they’re not in the line of the trucks on their way to school.  
Coco (Coordinating Committee) is justly proud of a recent accomplishment. By being confident of the structural integrity of our heritage bridge over our creek, they have saved us from paying an extra $20,000 accidently-falling-in-the-creek contingency fund to George the martian wetland contractor.
       
Wetland marsh
Last week at the back, the stake engineers had laid out patterns of fluorescent orange sticks in a ballet of lines and shapes. I don’t know why they bothered.  The back hoes have completely obliterated them by digging giant  holes.  I believe they are taking a certain glee in the largeness of their endeavors. 
Because the actual viewing of the holes is an adult-only activity after 5pm, I have posted a little film that you and your kids are guaranteed to enjoy,  to save you the trip down there--

Note-  We’ve received a security warning  related to the ponds.   Apparently there’s a thief nearby ( in our midst??) who brazenly cuts bulrush heads and makes flower arrangements with them.  My coco spy won’t reveal her identify, but also suggests that Coco could save the $20,000  cost of a security fence or closed circuit camera system around the pond, if we simply plant extra bulrushes.  If you’re in favour of the second option, please show up for the work party to be announced for about three weeks time.  And let’s show that thief that there’s more than one way to skin a cattail.
Synopsis --- How to a construct a wetland marsh 

1.     Dig up all stakes, making a big hole ( or four holes + two trenches)
Throw in some pipes
2.      Fill with gravel and sand ( or vice versa - ask George) 
3.     Line with rubber sheets, just like those in a real ( constructed)  pond
 ( or, put the pipes in second, with the gravel first, then sliding the rubber underneath the whole works) 
4.     Fill with water and frogs
5.     Plant the edges
6.     Keep an eye on Maureen --- floral designer.
Efficiency and synchronicity  department
Next to the old loafing barn was a large underground pit/tank---still filled with ancient manure.  That 'liquid gold" - quote by Nevin-  was trucked to the fields at the back and distributed over the soil to grow our carrots( solid gold), which we'll eat next year.   The pit - with its thick, reinforced concrete walls- itself needed to be removed - and so it was,  by the” jack hammer on steroids”( quote from Cheryl ) --- leaving a very large hole.  When gravel trucks drop their loads at the new marsh, they bring back loads of fill and drop those into the pit.   If we weren’t digging everywhere, all at the same time,  we wouldn’t have this awesome human, cow, truck, carrot and soil cycle.  

Here and there, then and now, back and forth.  We're becoming at one.  
Haiku finale
Freshly dug wetland
An old frog tries his new jump
Frog-water sound.  Our song!

The best-known Japanese haiku[18] is Bashō's "old pond":
古池や蛙飛込む水の音
ふるいけやかわずとびこむみずのおと (transliterated into 17 hiragana)
furuike ya kawazu tobikomu mizu no oto (transliterated into romaji)
This separates into on as:
fu-ru-i-ke ya (5)
ka-wa-zu to-bi-ko-mu (7)
mi-zu no o-to (5)
Translated:[19]
Into the ancient pond

A frog jumps

Water’s sound!
cheerily,

Ann
***************************************************************

Play is the exaltation of the possible.... Martin Buber

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Message from Ann

About nine months ago I, Vivian Vaillant, kidnapped the Nutshell Niblets Newsletter from Ann.

I refused to return the Nutshells to her until I received one freshly baked apple pie.

And from Ann?  There was silence.  No pie.  No ....

Well. I suppose perhaps she was tired.  Or busy.  I know around here so many of us are tired and busy. There is so much living to do here you see?  So many ways to overwhelm yourself with projects.  I kidnapped the Niblets- but I could see Ann was happy to have them off her plate for a while.

Secretly I have missed Ann's version of the Niblets.  It is so much more gratifying to READ about living here than it is to have to be the one to WRITE about living here.  When I lived out of town I remember my delight in seeing a nutshells come in to my inbox.  Like a letter from home when you are overseas!  I would save the Niblets until I could make a cup of tea and curl up with a soft blanket to read it.  It felt like home.

Writing the Niblets feels like a tremendous responsibility.  So much changes so quickly here, and yet so slowly at the same time.  Some news is charged with emotion.  Often there is more to a story than I can possibly include and still be brief.  The truth is I would rather have had the pie!

And then today- I saw this in my inbox!


Dear Villagers,

I've been known to write little village newsletters called 
"Nutshell Niblets" Ann's very personal, highly biased and incomplete guide to the ecovillage ... in a nutshell.
I have one in the works, as a matter of fact. 

But I have a little advance teaser that's news too exciting not to share immediately .  It's not my news... it's Coco's .. and the more complete details will be revealed after Coco's regular meeting --- Thursday am-  I believe (check with Beverly and/or the google calendar.)

  • If you've been following the saga...  you'll know this has significance... Yarrow Waterworks has written the required letter to the City.  It slapped resoundingly onto their desk.  

  • We have received PLA - Preliminary Layout Approval. ( What's that you ask?  It's good news ... more details to follow) 

  • We are only inches away from completing  changes to our zoning.

  • YES Coop members agreed to the new boundary adjustment that puts the farm with Groundswell Cohousing. (Yarrow Central Enterprises ( the commercial front two acres ) doesn't need the farm acres to assist their financing, after all) 

All this is bringing strata  close.
Hmmm...  can you smell its breath?  :>)

Ann 

I might just get my pie yet!





Saturday, September 8, 2012

Canadian Cohousing Video!

Trying to explain cohousing is tough at the best of times.  This is a little video sponsored by the Canadian Cohousing Network.  Enjoy!  (Pass it on!)


Saturday, August 25, 2012

Yarrow Ecovillage Community Farm: Photos from around the Farm

Yarrow Ecovillage Community Farm: Photos from around the Farm: Well its been awhile since I posted some pictures of the farm, so here are some great shots of the current state of the farm. Enjoy :) T...

Nutshells and Niblets Community bulletin #36

Nutshells and Niblets
(The highjacked, completely biased, news and whimsy from Yarrow Ecovillage)
Testing.... Testing....

We want you to read all about us!

Do I have your attention?  We are going to try something new with this newsletter.  This is a Newsletter system that promises to make my life easier- and reading about the village more fun.  Let me know what you think!

Okay... Ready... Set...

GO!



(first things first!)  A BIG Welcome to Camille and Alex with their three children Gabe, Chloe, and Claire  and a BIG Welcome to Kirsten and Rob with their two children Mimi and Orwin.  You'll get to know these fine families as they blog about their experiences at the village.  We are very lucky to have them in our midst.  (Yay!)

10th Anniversary Camping Weekend is coming August 4-6

Are you considering moving here?  Have you been a part of our history in a small, or maybe large way?  Come and help us celebrate ten years of hard work, joy, learning growing and great food!  Ann has the planing boards out.  We're looking for people to help with the details.  Soon well know exactly what we'll be up to!  For now I can tell you that saturday night will be the big night.  We'll be singing and dancing... and of course there will be great food.  Want to join us?  Come camping?  Or just come saturday night.  An RSVP as soon as possible would really help.  Email us!

Maureen sports a bright orange demolition permit!

Only Maureen could smile in a colour this... well... orange!  Okay.  I'm lying.  We were all smiling when Maureen found us hanging out on the Quad porch.  We were already having a lovely afternoon and seeing here parade about with our demolition permit for the barns made our day even better!  Yes, it is true we'll miss the barns.  But we have our eye on the prize now.  We see more and more of the village we are aiming to be everyday and those barns coming down are a mile stone.  So Yip Yippee!
Groundswell Cohousing Represented at US Cohousing Conference

Nat and Viv headed down to California mid June for the National-gone International cohousing conference.  The biggest take away?  A deep sense of pride and awe at how much international attention our project has received.  Our project is still learning and growing, and others are learning from us!  People are impressed by the wholistic approach to community in our project.  They love the farming combined with walkability.  We were also the only project at the conference that is combining a seniors and intergenerational cohousing in close proximity.  Something that we take for granted here was a huge inspriation for the project builders of the future.  The other thing?  People already living in built out communities tip their hat at our three community dinners a week despite not yet having our common house.  Eating together is a pillar of community building and we take it very seriously around here.
One Mile Ale brews first batch!
Paul and Joel have bottled their first batch of test brew.  The barley is in the feild.  The Hops is... well the hops is the next big hurtle.  The guys are determined to brew a one mile organic ecovillage ale.  Want to try some?  Email me with "beer tester" in the subject line and I'll see if I can get you a personal invitation to the guys testing party!

Kids and Slides

David and Denali are the proud owners of the ecovillage kids!  Well- not all the kids- just the funny little white ones that like to slide down their wooden ramp.  As you can see they are an ecovillage treasure and are enjoyed by all the kids onsite!  Imagine the breakfast when the chickens start laying eggs and the goats are giving milk!  mmmmmmmmm!

How Food should taste!

My CSA basket brings me so much joy!  This week's pick up meant garlic scape pesto on pasta for supper last night. (Same as normal pesto but scapes replace basil)  This pretty picture is of a swiss chard, young garlic, and roasted almond stir fry that made up my lunch last week.  Why is this important?  Because we're here!  I remember when I first started reading the newsletters myself.  Before I had even visited the village.  I remember Ann wistfully discussing her hopes for the day when she could pick up her veggies from the neighbour farmers.  Now we have that.  And a farm stand.  And amazing neighbours.  And more amazing neighbours to come.  We're almost there!  Amazing!
Thanks to our amazing musicians at the bye bye bunker silo party!
When I counted- there were 8 different people playing instruments that night!  What a rockin place we're going to be!

Nutshells and Niblets Community Bulletin number 37


Nutshells and Niblets (by Ann!)... maybe... 

Ann has been writing about the village again.  It seems fair to call this a Nutshells and Niblets and share it with you all.  Even if I did officially highjack the Nutshells... I can share!

Our wetland marsh 
The last phase of our waste water treatment system is due to be installed in the next couple of months. It'll look like some duck ponds in not very many years, but has to go through a moon-scape phase right at first, because of the heavy-equipment-operators-on-bulldozer--gone-a-muck, but-not-amok,  in a careful plan of constructed wetland installation.    
Peter has trimmed back the Red Osier Dogwood, that wades in the creek on the left of the bridge,  to make the bridge crossing safer for the large gravel trucks that are expected.  Dogwood grows with vigour--- it'll either spring back in the spring, or its replacement will.   Nevin has mowed a couple of acres on the east side of the bridge,  in preparation for engineers to come fairly soon, and place random   sticks in the ground with sophisticated flagging tape on them.  
Yonas tells me that George, a marshian installer, will be working with the flag engineers to dig a series of four holes with two accompanying very long trenches that will look like crop circles from outer space....( how appropriate that we hired a martian to install them)  and will take our waste water in a 'last ditch' effort of cleansing.  Cleaner than clean!
Upon request, I will undertake a drawing of the marsh flow system on a poster.  :>)

Many loads of gravel will be delivered down the farm lane.  It'll be graded and gravelled first, so the trucks don't get stuck .  An improved road will make the farmers happier too, won't it? 

Fire up the barbie! A corndog planting party may be required in the near future.  Punk music will be played.  Cimbungis optional, but do wear boots.  

Typha

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Typha"
"Typha latifolia"
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Plantae
(unranked):Angiosperms
(unranked):Monocots
(unranked):Commelinids
Order:Poales
Family:Typhaceae
Genus:Typha
L.
Species
See text
Cattail, narrow leaf shoots
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy106 kJ (25 kcal)
Carbohydrates5.14 g
Sugars0.22 g
Dietary fiber4.5 g
Fat0.00 g
Protein1.18 g
Water92.65 g
Vitamin A equiv.1 μg (0%)
beta-carotene6 μg (0%)
Thiamine (vit. B1)0.023 mg (2%)
Riboflavin (vit. B2)0.025 mg (2%)
Niacin (vit. B3)0.440 mg (3%)
Pantothenic acid (B5)0.234 mg (5%)
Vitamin B60.123 mg (9%)
Folate (vit. B9)3 μg (1%)
Choline23.7 mg (5%)
Vitamin C0.7 mg (1%)
Vitamin K22.8 μg (22%)
Calcium54 mg (5%)
Iron0.91 mg (7%)
Magnesium63 mg (18%)
Manganese0.760 mg (36%)
Phosphorus45 mg (6%)
Potassium309 mg (7%)
Sodium109 mg (7%)
Zinc0.24 mg (3%)
Percentages are relative to
US recommendations for adults.
Source: USDA Nutrient Database
Typha (play /ˈtfə/) is a genus of about eleven species of monocotyledonous flowering plants in the family Typhaceae. The genus has a largely Northern Hemisphere distribution, but is essentially cosmopolitan, being found in a variety of wetland habitats.
These plants are conspicuous and hence have many common names. They may be known in British English as bulrush, orreedmace,[1] in American English as cattailcatninetailpunks, or corn dog grass, in Australia as cumbungi or bulrush, and in New Zealand as raupoTypha should not be confused with other plants known as bulrush, such as some sedges (mostly in Scirpus and related genera).
Their rhizomes are edible. Evidence of preserved starch grains on grinding stones suggests they were eaten in Europe 30,000 years ago.[2]

The right hand farm on the other side of the bridge--- Ohm 

Nevin tells me that they've been planting the last of the fall crops---turnips.  And that the farm will still be producing vegetables right through to Christmas.  And it looks like we'll have some  opportunities to buy them past the end of our CSA season, which is due to finish at the end of October.  Nevin said something about having grown some watermelons, but I didn't really believe him.  Water melons come from Mexico, we all know that.  Not Chilliwack.

Nevin and Tammy, Shauna's mum, have been going to an extra Abbotsford market  on Wednesday nights.  It's in its first year and isn't in full flow yet.  They expect it''ll be much better next year.  In the meantime, Ohm's regular customer base for the Saturday market there, is ever expanding and becoming more solid.  Sales have been gratifyingly big.  Sort of like a zucchini on the vine.     
    
The left hand farm- Osprey 
Joel reports that vegetative life is great on the left side.

Demolishing
Krishna the finishing carpenter is finishing off the bunker silo.  He and his crew of sweating teenaged slaves ( who look like they're having fun ) have made large holes all over it by peeling off and  throwing down large metal sheets onto the ground.  Very soon, there won't anything left
Julia is hoping that Krishna's plan to sell the structure to a neighbouring farmer will come true, so that she can schedule a commemorative community dinner in its new location on the wettest, nastiest night of the winter.  It'll be awesome to still be friends with our beloved bunker silo plastic dining room wherever it goes. .  Oh nostalgia!  It's beautiful! 

Do you remember the crowded silo dinners, the kids running around the tables, the heaters turned up as  high as they'd go,  with the adults ---wool-socked, toqued  and huddled--- yelling and laughing because the wind was making the plastic roof heave in great noisy billows above the range of the human voice? Food has never tasted better. 

And there are other hopes and plans for another wooden structure in demo-land --- very likely there will be exciting news announcements soon,  when the plans land.  And there will be ways that you'll be able to help the farmers with a new barn.  When's there's news, believe me, they'll be sharing it with you... they are that excited!!!    Is this intriguingly cryptic and confusing news??  Good!  Keeps you on your toes! 

The second half of our village - the new units to be constructed 
We have wonderful news from our other half.  Friends of the village and neighbours-in-waiting have been investing their hard-earned resources into the finances of the next phase of development in a big way.  I'm looking forward to sharing more details with you soon, but in the meantime, please know how many pledges of confidence in our good development work and its management are coming to us --- bringing our longed-for new neighbours and commonhouse that much closer to reality.  ( Yay!)


Farmhouse
Our friends, Dave, Denali, Claudia and Sophie - with Mimsy the pooch- have moved out of the farmhouse now, and into their new home in Garrison. Congratulations to the Mosses,  in finding a good place that suits their family!  Luckily, it's not far away, so friendships and connection can maintain.  Much happiness to them in their new adventure!
The Farmhouse awaits its new inmates.  Hmmmm....  :>)  there are indications of lovely  interested new tenants... hmmm!  Fingers crossed!   

Other random news
Drinking straw birds have been coming to sip Beverly's nasturtiums.  

Paul-Julia-and-gang's chickens are now laying eggs - in two decorator colours -brown and green.  
Apparently, they've been inspired by the trampoline that's next door to them and have been vaulting out of their pen.  So Paul has extended their safety net to six feet.  Wouldn't it have been easier, Paul, to have moved the tramp farther away so the chickens did't get so many bad ideas from watching the kids? 

And in the pen, there is  one fancy bird with a fluffy pillow-thing  on its head ... it crows and don't lay eggs.  I wonder what it's useful for?