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Masanobu Fukuoka died in August

Sunday, September 14th, 2008

For me Masanobu Fukuoka was a poet. He is known as one of the pioneers of natural farming and was an inspiration for the originators of the permaculture concept.

“If a single new bud is snipped off a fruit tree with a pair of scissors, that may bring about a disorder which cannot be undone…. Human beings with their tampering do something wrong, leave the damage unrepaired, and when the adverse results accumulate, work with all their might to correct them.”

“To become one with nature — agriculture is an occupation in which a farmer adapts himself to nature. To do that, you have to gaze at a rice plant and listen to the words from the plant. If you understand what the rice says, you just adjust your heart to that of the rice plants and raise them. In reality, we do not have to raise them. They will grow. We just serve nature. A piece of advice I need to give you here. When I say gaze at a rice plant or stare at its true form, it does not mean to make an observation or to contemplate the rice plant, which makes it an object different from yourself. It is very difficult to explain in words. In a sense, it is important that you become the rice plant. Just as you, as the subject of gazing, have to disappear. If you do not understand what you should do or what I am talking about, you should be absorbed in taking care of the rice without looking aside. If you could work wholeheartedly without yourself, that is enough. Giving up your ego is the shortest way to unification with nature.”

One Straw Revolution is maybe one of his best known books (’Der Grosse Weg Hat Kein Tor‘ auf deutsch) and even if you are not particularily interested in gardening, I recommend to read it, and if it’s just for a few paragraphs.

The Fukuoka Farming Website:
www.fukuokafarmingol.info

The Plowboy Interview: Masanobu Fukuoka


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Trash Mandala

Thursday, February 21st, 2008

The very detailed graphics are part of an art/graphic-design project from C-Lab - Columbia Laboratory for Architectural Broadcasting. “It’s meant to rethink waste management infrastructure, complete with ironic and colorfully alluring designs for private trash cans.”

trash mandala 001

trash mandala 003
Residents of Minneapolis gaze at it at Walker’s - the rest of us visits C-Lab online and/or reads the interview with Jeffrey Inaba (founding director of C-Lab) at BLDG.

All pictures in hi-res and more details (huge 3 but worthy MB):

Trash Images

via: BLDG-Blog


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