The crumbles
Out here where we are organizing our market, Southern Europe middle of nowhere, many of the original inhabitants have left decades ago and there are many empty houses and abandoned farms. There has been a steady influx of foreigners in the last decades, many of them seeking refuge from something, from unsafe conditions in their countries of origin, rigid school systems and overcontrolling state powers, poverty, high property prices in their home countries, war, disconnect from nature, pollution, persecution.
With the summer heat returns the fear of wildfires - every year some part or another of the landscape catches fire, houses and farms and sometimes animals and people burn. It would help if more people lived here and cared for the land, and if the local authorities didn’t encourage the planting of pine and eucalyptus monocultures. There is an underlying feeling that everyone would rather be left alone by all the rules and regulations that stifle each and every activity, but some facade has to be kept up towards an increasingly absent central power, and lets face it, some rules and regulations keep the more desperate from wrecking the last bit of landscape that is left.
As for absent power, I’m still trying to create an association, but nobody of the places supposedly available seem to want to do it. The only powers always ready to become active are those authorized to collect fines! I’ve spent the last couple of days somewhat enraged about that, which isn’t very healthy. The second edition of our market is coming along nicely however, with a collective spamming of posters on every surface in this and the neighbouring towns, and sharing it on social media. The old plus some new stallholders are eager to arrive, we are growing the number of stalls quite significantly …
In the background, people are coming together and approach us about sharing costs and give advice around cutting costs. I’m not pushing any of it, it’s still mainly our investment and it’s worth it. People will be more comfortable to step in when we get a monthly event going, and we’ll continue as long as we aren’t going hungry - and there seems to be plenty of food everywhere we turn up, so it might be a while.
Which brings me back, again and again, to the idea of value. In the case of people living here, more and especially younger people provide value. So the different refugees and especially their children are quite welcome. There’s language courses to help people fit in, bureaucracy seems to have a somewhat loose interpretation to help people settle around here, and we have heard many times from locals how happy they are that some life returns to the region! The return of life means the necessary work gets done. In our case, we couldn’t get our car repaired. In fact, we were forced to organize the whole first edition of the market with a tiny microcar which is falling in pieces. When it didn’t pass the inspection we realized getting mad at the mechanic wasn’t helping, so we just made a deal and sent our resident young person to go do something useful and help the man in his workshop (or: sacrifice my firstborn to get my car fixed, depends on your perspective). I find that everybody wins, for now. No money involved, but value created. A friend seems to have been helping out in the local cheese factory and I’m considering it as well, as a learning experience and to support the tiny local business.
These developments slot in nicely with some ideas another friend had about a ‘school of volunteers’ where youngsters would be getting to know different eco-projects and businesses of the region. It satisfies a need: the tiny family businesses we have around here can’t always afford permanent staff but often might need some people who can jump in and help. And also, people don’t want to do 8 hours of the same, every day. My coop ideas are very much also connected to these issues. So this working without the formal form of cooperative is maybe even better, more flexible. Make it part of the culture again.
This invites to re-inspect my perception of value and the many ways value does not have to relate to money. To let go, at least for a while, of the idea that money provides safety, and welcome the idea of community providing it instead, and find out together how we would shape this community to be comfortable for the many different people, cultures and ideas that it is made up of. And how to integrate this manifold human community into the larger landscape of non-humans and make this into an abundant circle of life. For this to happen we might have to treat our money in more unconventional ways, to not hold on to it too much and invest in community wherever we can. And invest in handmade stuff, because handmade craft slows down the stream of resources. So it’s important that the market be for crafts and second hand things and locally grown and made food - these being things of real value compared to cheaper, mass-produced stuff.
Happening as well: Yesterday I got myself a mild sunstroke walking way too fast and far through this landscape I love, with a rather tougher-than-me group of elderly locals, but it was worth it because someone explained me how to make a brush from a local plant. The feverish hours spent in a dark room afterwards were invaded by ideas of how to foster the mushroom-growing capabilities of ants for easier mushroom cultivation. Yay for multicultural and interspecies community, and a liveable future for all!
Don’t let the bureaucracy get you down… it takes time like everywhere.
I would be interested in any experience you get with registering a coop in Portugal. Not an immediate plan of mine, but maybe in the longer run 🤔
I’m still quite torn between creating coop, or association, or both, or neither. There’s a mix of different factors at play - the fact of being geared towards being a for-profit (for the member-owners) in case of the coop, and a non-profit (in service of something intangible) in case of the association makes me tend towards the association. Then again, for people running small businesses a coop might be really useful and needed. Then again, running a small business as a independent worker might actually be the solution with less overhang. Then again, everything might crumble so fast we won’t even care anymore in 5 or 7 years from now and we should work on creating community in whatever formless way we can, as quickly as we can.
On that note, how crumbly does it feel where you are?
To create either coop or association, there’s the longer winded option to visit a notary (and other places, and send letters to somewhere, and ???) with even more bureaucracy and costs (and apparently time) involved. I’ll attack this indecision one of these days and sit down with a local friend who knows accounting. I also have to take things slow and rest some, sometimes. 😅
On that note, how crumbly does it feel where you are?
Surprisingly little, but I partially moved here because these remote island communities are somewhat self-sufficient. But the young population is shrinking as well and the economy is to a significant extend dependant on tourism and exports to the main land, so that can crumble rather quickly.
Oh, could we see a picture of the brush? That sounds cool. Also, I didn’t know ants were capable of growing mushrooms?
a picture of the brush
Only in August, when it’s the time for picking the grass. It’s still green, and I as the green brushmaker got verbal instructions about its making while stumbling over a sun-baked plateau, by a person who had walked the path we were on since he was five. So he started with a whole set of memories about him on the path on the way to sell cheese, about which lands around belong to which village, and which village is stupider, and the plants we were wading through. Me and kid just happened to be there and were a happy, interested public for his flashback and geography session. It’s absolutely worth a bit of sunstroke, although I do think there must be healthier ways of getting some etnobotanical and other landscape knowledge from the old folk around. Inviting the to a slower walk at an earlier hour just to talk about plants might be a good idea.
mushroom-growing ants
There’s the famous leaf-cutter ants, those were the first we knew to grow mushrooms. In the meantime there’s been studies about ants also propagating other species, for example Macrolepiota and Leucoagaricus. My garden is full of Leucoagaricus and ants - and I’d like them to rather grow something I would eat, I’m sure we can come to some agreement.