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Transition Town Nomad
A transition town group that searches and manages vagrant urban zones that for some reason have been left to fallow.
We go around by bike and we scrutinize google.earth for local crypto-forests and other potential climax vegetational rejects. see: http://socialfiction.org/?tag=ttnomad
http://www.guerrillagardening.org/ is one inspiration with street-cred and currency but the real motivation for us is the rich field of Amazonian anthropology from classic ethnography to modern ethnobotany to future excavations of the lost garden cities of Xingu.
Our manifesto is called “Fight the Google-Jugend”, which is in art-academic peer-review right now but far from finished.
We will hook-up with the local TT people but the Nomad-principle is applicable everywhere and should appeal to a mindset that is open to less literal more psychogeographically informed vision of what a city can look after the great ecological, population and resource crash.
Nomadic people, contrary to popular misconception, do not roam free. The Yanomami, the Waorani, the Koruba are not surrealists navigators, they are not tossing a coin at every turn to decide where to go next. Trails are not desire paths, they are not deviations. The nomad instead follows cyclic paths. These paths are their 'home' for as long as the their trek reaffirms them as part of their collective heritage. Over time the nomad can create or amplify (actively, accidentally, serendipitously) useful resources along the trail, aka Nomadic Agriculture.
TT Nomad cultivates metaphors not gardens, we add pressure to self-willed ecosystems no matter how small. forest gardening is perhaps a misleading term; gardening is a buzz word, a artistic fashion that underestimates the skill and long term commitment to the land. Gardening is about productivity and yields; these are not the terms on which TT Nomad is facing the rejected: forests are where the whiches live.
The rainforest is the wildest of wildernesses. But of course, being the end-stage of ecological succession, the rainforest is not the most wild but the most ordered and crystallized of ecosystems: it appears wild because there is so much texture to its order that we mistake the trees for the forest. No land is allowed to the time to go from sandy soil to first forest (do-nothingness the antithesis of the western notion of growth - a divine purpose in need of its own form of atheism)textbook knowledge apart one of the most fundamental powers of biology, irrepressible self-generating growth (the weeds prepare the soil for what comes after) is an unexperienced phenomena for most.
The Effects of deforestation (of the Amazon and all other (rain)forests that remain) are of direct consequence to every place on earth. Loss of biodiversity is tragic for many reasons but it is a local event, global warming however is a global event and deforestation is one of it's most important components. Not because the Amazon are the lungs of the world (a persistent myth, the Amazon is carbon neutral) but because deforestation releases a staggering amount of CO2: in 24 hours deforestation will release as much CO2 into the atmosphere as 8 million people flying from London to New York. The most amazing thing is about the speed of deforestation worldwide is that there are still rainforests at all. The rate of deforestation in Brazil has risen for at least the last decade. 2009, due to the economic low is the only exception. We are live, in a sense, in the Amazon, just as we all, in a sense, live on the North-Pole. Rain forest protection is not just about short-term benefits; rainforests are millions of years old, trees are strangers from a different world, and a clear cut area may take 10.000 years to regrow. And that is an optimistic estimate.
We have been reading about Colonel Fawcett's search for the City of Z in what is now Xingu Park. He went looking for a city that could not exist in the rainforest, TT Nomad goes looking for (and create) the forest that cannot exit in the city. An alternative name would be Transition Town -z (negative zee)
Possessions slow the nomad down, anthropologists witnessed tribes slowing down from nomadism to village live in the space of a decade, a process due to the gravitational genus loci of commerce. To be part of a larger economy people need to be able to find you. However, as anthropologists joining tribes on their treks, the nomadic spectacle, the holidays of a former peripatetic people, they have so much more fun while on the road! And not just because it loosens up the relationships between the sexes.