Plaster party and goat love

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Hello friends!  Wanted to update you on dome happenings and baby goats as this is my last week here in Rainier (crazy!).  I’ve been riddled with mixed feelings this week as you can perhaps imagine.  I feel myself growing weary as the proverbial ‘finish line’ approaches, fantasizing about the hammock on my apartment balcony back home and dear friends and family that await my return.  Simultaneously, I have trouble envisioning my days without the now familiar props and people that have become family in my day to day existence.  This is part and parcel of any finale or departure, I’m sure.  But when I look back on these last 3 1/2 months, there has been so much Divinity over the course of the entire dome project between Angel helpers showing up at PIVOTAL moments along the way and having those satisfying moments when you realize that what you thought was going to be a disaster ends up being bang on and awesome, (and occasionally the reverse)!

The latest Angel that came on the scene was Dr. Suzan Sealy who showed up last night to check on Rumi, the little goat that could!  Rumi is Opal’s first born and has had quite a challenging introduction to life on Earth.  He has captured the hearts of everyone in this household with his sweet spirit and vulnerability.  His legs are quite weak, one particularly limp and he has developed a case of pneumonia as of late, poor little guy, so Dr. Sealy who, in addition to detecting the pneumonia and doing some healing energy work and connecting with his spirit to see where he’s at, offered to take him home with her to care for him directly for a few days so she could continue the therapy.

I’ve never been so smitten with a goat before, he really is a special little guy and has blown my heart wide open!

I’ll let you see for yourself, he’s amazing.  Look at him!!  🙂

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Brother Darwin is pretty damned cute too (but a little too frisky for Rumi at this point, which is great that he’s doing so well)!

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And look at them both with their new coats to keep them warm, awwwwwww……………………!!!

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The barn became too cold at night for Rumi so we started bringing him in the house where we’d arranged an area in front of the fire.  I happily volunteered to sleep with him for three nights.  I was in animal bliss with little Rumi at my head and my cat Leroy respectfully sleeping at my feet.  They know when another animal needs care, I’m sure of it.  It was really special to cuddle and bond with this little cutie by the fire!  Here we are getting settled:

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Leroy watched from afar, trying to figure out this interesting new member of the household:

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Meggan and Cyrus had been doing most of the bottle feeding:

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And Lori doing her massage magic on Rumi’s gimpy back leg:

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We took him outside to see his Mama and bro for visits (until adorable Darwin would want to play with his brother and jump on him and wrestle as baby goats do, bless him, but that wasn’t going to help Rumi’s leg heal!) and sometimes out on the deck to warm up:

P1030656We just heard from Dr. Sealy that he’s not out of the woods yet and there could even be more going on than we knew so she will continue to monitor and treat him for a few more days.  As I am leaving on Sunday, I am pretty sure last night was my last time seeing Rumi, whether he ultimately decides to stay on Earth or cross over to other adventures, but I am certain I will never forget him.

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I believe animals are our best teachers…for me they certainly seem to be for many an important life lesson anyways. So this week as I’ve been trying to navigate the final stages of the dome project which is not quite finished (still a large chunk of plastering left to do despite a successful and fun plaster party this past Saturday which I’ll tell you about in a minute, and a coating of milk paint on the top inside coils of the dome)  I would look at this sweet little goat and be reminded of why I came out here to Washington in the first place.  I was following my heart.  Logistically, it made no sense to leave a thriving massage practice of 12 years and a simple, peaceful existence back home, but on the other hand, I couldn’t imagine not having followed this push to come out here.  Rumi reminded me that we’re all vulnerable, especially when we are fully in our heart space, and that is a beautiful place to be.  I have been vulnerable this entire time here in Rainier.  I didn’t have answers to a lot of questions being asked of me.  I was never sure of what the outcome of any/every stage of this project would be.  I couldn’t even give an accurate cost estimation coming into this project or the hurdles we’d come up against.  I couldn’t guarantee I wasn’t going to leave Meggan with a big, ugly, half-finished mess at the end of it all.  I had to rely on others to house and feed me.  But I kept reminding myself to surrender to the process and trust that we will find the help we need or it will find us, more accurately, and answers will come exactly when we need them and everything will work out as it always does.  And it has.  And boy, have we had helpers, and Angels, and answers come to us.   As the old adage says, ‘the Divine works in mysterious ways’, we are seeing that over and over again here and it has yet again humbled me and made me so grateful to be a part of this dance we call life.

And now, I would like to tell you about the plaster party we had last Saturday, speaking of Angel helpers!  The rough plastering is a really fun and simple stage of the dome building process in my opinion, just time consuming which I would be totally fine with were it not for this pesky Visa expiration date.  It’s not overly taxing on the body, extremely satisfying in it’s mud-slinging application, and fairly easy to corral people to gather for a fun, social, no pressure day of sunshine and laughter while getting our hands in some mud.  It certainly paints a more enticing picture for people to want to come and help over the dome building bag-laying pitch, “Hey, wanna swing by and fling mud on the dome in a really satisfying huck/upsweep motion at a relaxed pace while visiting with fun and interesting people?” versus,  “Heyyyyyy, wanna come over and climb up and down a 10-foot ladder over and over again clutching coffee cans of Earth between your fingers until they cramp up?”.  If I were ignorant to the joys of laying bag, I know which request I’d respond to…!

We had started the rough plastering while Blake was here.  He and I would use any leftover Earth from the day’s bag-filling and use it on the dome walls to fill in the grooves.  It requires this ultra-satisfying motion of hucking the plaster in the groove and sweeping up in one fluid motion.  I recall the first time I did this at the Cal-Earth workshop in September…I was instantly certain that I’d done it in a past life because it felt so good and natural!   Katherine, Meggan’s neighbor that was on board for the plaster party said the same thing.  Maybe we both worked together on ancient temples of bygone eras, who knows?

Here are some photos from that fun day with our team of amazing and masterful plasterers, thank you to everyone for your time, energy and cheer!

The first to show up were none other than the famous Giselda and Ariel (they really exist, not just random names associated with cement mixers!)

P1030640They did most of the plastering on the back of the dome.  We heard a lot of giggling coming from back there so I’m not sure what they were up to, but the plastering looked great!

Neighbor Katherine, a natural plasterer like it ain’t no thang.  Remember when we worked on Solomon’s Temple Katherine?  That was fun, but nothing compared to this goat dome, right?

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Diane, an amazing help and a kick ass aromatherapist too.  Keep your eyes peeled for Diane and Lori’s line of therapeutic and decadent Palo Santo body butters coming soon by Higher Healing.  Diane was a sweetheart and stayed late to help me finish and clean up, thank you Diane!

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And I’m sure you all recognize the lovely Meggan rockin’ the plaster!  Neither one of us slept much the night before with Rumi in the house needing some care and lovin’ throughout the night but the plaster party must go on!

P1030638An action shot of Ariel followed by his mucky farewell

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And I took the top of the dome given it’s precarious height sans scaffolding.  We couldn’t very well expect volunteer plasterers to climb 14 feet in the air and hover on a narrow ledge, could we?

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Unfortunately the fearless goat plasterer Lori must have gone to sharpen her golden trowel when the camera came out but she was the other person on our amazing crew that day.  We’ll re-post a photo of her from when she helped us tame barbed wire a couple of months ago, just imagine muck on her gloves.

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And here is what we were able to accomplish with our dream crew, thank you to everyone for a fun day and for helping out!

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P1030642There was one more person who stopped  by to check out the dome that day and that was Brett, the lead drummer for the Crow Drummers from Olympia.  The Crow Drummers are a West African drumming group whom I had the pleasure of joining in the Procession of the Species parade through the streets of downtown Olympia back in April.  Check out the Websites for more info: http://www.oly-wa.us/crowdrummers/   and  http://www.procession.org/  He wanted to see the dome before I left as he is interested in alternative structures like this.  Brett knows a lot about portland cement as he is in the tile and linoleum biz.  I was asking him about weather-proofing and he threw out the idea of waiting until the end of summer to potentially coat over it, or NOT.  I’ve heard from a few people now that it would probably do fine to leave as is like he suggested rather than coat over with a rubberized membrane and risk tearing it and having to redo it.  He then suggested I talk with his buddy Joseph who is an Earth plaster expert who is part of an alliance of dedicated individuals at http://www.ionecobuilding.org/.  Hell yeah I’m going to talk to his buddy….what a gift, thank you Brett!  After talking with Joseph the following day, right before the community ‘repair party’ he organized for people to come and have their tools fixed, so cool!  He mentioned he makes his own milk paint or sells kits for people to make it themselves. This is what we are going to paint the inside, upper coils with (actually now the entire inside, explanation to follow) so I was thrilled to have a source from someone who knows!

We also talked about the possibility of having him come down with a pump to expedite the plaster process as it was Monday morning already and only 5ish days to complete everything.

Meanwhile, we’d also left a message for Meggan’s friend August who used to work with shotcrete and spoke to him about the project asking him for his thoughts on weather-proofing and getting it done.  We were also hoping to find an alternative to hand plastering the inside lower half of the dome as we hadn’t found an appropriate recipe/ratio of Earth plaster to get it to hold on the concave corbels.  He explained what shotcrete was and offered to come out and look at the dome to see if he might be able to help in any way.  He warned us that shotcrete was not inexpensive but also had the pump option that Joseph spoke of as another means.  August is an interesting, friendly guy with a warm smile and the inventor of an amazing cross between a rocket stove and masonry heater, check out his Website:  http://www.zaugstoves.com/

Long story short, we’d arranged to have the remainder of the dome shotcreted on Thursday at a steal of a deal (but not inexpensive, he’s right) however, this morning we got the unfortunate news that it would not work out for various reasons in the end so he reluctantly had to cancel the job.

Of course this was a little disappointing because that’s another two days of plastering we’d lost now but in the same breath, seems about right that I finish this baby off by hand.  No short cuts for me on this maiden mud hut adventure.  Three days to go and we still have plastering to do and the entire inside finish.

I marvelled at my reaction to the news of yet another ‘regrouping’ required at this late and final stage in the project.  After our emotional weekend with dear Rumi and lost plastering days due to that and holding off for the shotcrete job, I felt a deep sense of peace about the whole thing, remembering my reason for being here, thank you Rumi.  I think I’d finally let go of all expectation and pressure of having to have a perfectly completed, finished dome in order to consider this endeavor a success.  I’d finally let go of all concern that Meggan would be displeased with me if I left her in the lurch, so to speak, with a few details left undone.  And I let go of the belief that something done from the heart is anything less than Divine.

So what did I do after hanging up the phone with August?  I got my work clothes on, strapped my fully charged IPod on, and set out for a peaceful day of solo plastering with some good tunes and sunshine and had a blast!  I think I covered some ground too!  Check it out for one days work:

Start of the day:

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End of the day:

P1030673All of the corbels are officially filled in so for all intents and purposes, this dome should be fully leak-proof as of tomorrow.  The goats can technically inhabit this any day now.

Joseph is coming to Rainier with the milk paint for us tomorrow morning and possibly with someone who might want to plaster for a few hours, no guarantees though.  I’m excited to meet him in person and talk more about the work he does.  I also have a helper coming tomorrow, Lori’s friend Lanakila who helped us one day when Blake was here.  He will infuse the plaster with his amazing energy I’m certain.  Also, Lori’s client Gerry may drop by to help for a bit so we will have a mini-plastering crew and inch our way to completion, one handful at a time.  Hopefully we can have the outside plastering done and inside milk paint by the end of the day on Friday (we’ve scrapped the notion of doing any inside plastering for now, milk paint all the way….Joseph said the goats probably won’t mind.  I think he’s right).  This will give me one day of rest and enjoying time spent with my beautiful house mates and comrades before hitting the road home on Sunday.  But if there are final details to take care of, that’s ok too.  I signed up for it and I’ll see it through to the bitter end if need be.  Luckily I really love the work and the product it produces so it’s no real hardship,especially when I’m feeling peaceful about it.

I may be vulnerable, but with the help of so many other generous and beautiful Souls, I’ve built one kick-ass goat mud hut, finished or not.

Thanks for taking the leap with me Meggan!  We did it!

I’ll be sure to let you know how it ends up before I leave, stay tuned!

xoxo

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It’s a BOY! Two, actually!

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They’ve arrived!  Two adorable baby boys delivered this morning around 10 AM and 10:30 AM respectively by Mama Opal, like a pro!

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What an experience it was to witness such a sacred event such as this, I feel very blessed to have been present!

Everyone was on high alert since last night….Meggan noticed some pelvic tilting and sensed the time was nigh.  We had baby monitors going and Meggan had her doula hat on her nightstand.  However, Opal bless her, waited until the reasonable hour of 9:30 AM to start the delivery of her two beautiful and adorable little ones!   She was incredible!  Meggan was there on standby to help once the kids came out and was a dyno-myte goat doula!  I handed doula Meggan a few items as she needed them but mostly I tried to keep a respectful distance, get a few photos, watch Cyrus until the going was good to meet the babies and just soak up the awesome of everyone’s focus.  As an outside observer, I can say the whole scene was a humbling, awe-inspiring performance by all.  Wow.  Here are some pictures of this special moment….any comments I could try to sputter out cannot come close to doing justice to the beauty that clearly speaks for itself here.

What a week!  🙂

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The other goats stayed right near the fence throughout the delivery for support, amazing.

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Wow.  That’s all I can say, is wow.

 

 

 

THE DOME IS CLOSED!!!!!!!!

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WE DID IT, YEAH!!!!  Just plastering to go……!  Oh, what a feeling!

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And this was the dynamic foursome present for this momentous occasion, thank you to Johnathan for your amazing help today, we couldn’t have done it without you!  Thank you Meggan for your fiery awesomeness and mixing expertise!  Thank you Cyrus for your all around amazingness and adorableness!  We rock!

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Now if you’ll excuse me, I think I hear a double gin and tonic calling my name (!).  😉

Nearing completion

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Well folks, this is it, we’re 4 rows from closing the dome.  Hard to believe, really.  And you can imagine how small the rows are at the top of a dome….the top one of course being the ‘capstone’ so to speak so hardly a row at all.  It’s an odd and exhilarating feeling to think we are here, so close to this pivotal moment after all we’ve done, all we’ve been through!  Take a look, take a good long look at this baby….she’s beautiful, isn’t she?

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I want to savour these last moments of laying Earthbag which will complete my very first mud hut and initiate me into the ever-growing Earth builders community at large.  Anxious as I am to finish it yesterday as we’ve been all too aware of the time pressure of the last few weeks with so much work to do yet and a looming June 8th departure date, I know there will be a part of me that will feel wrenched away from such a now familiar and sacred daily routine here in Rainier.  Other than this last power week while Blake was here, I’ve developed a morning ritual of preparatory tasks that have become my daily meditation.  While Meggan would be focused on her morning farming and Motherly chores, I would head out to the dome area and just sit with it, looking at it, thinking about next phases coming up, admiring it, photographing it some days, and then I would slowly and methodically begin to prepare some of the day’s necessities….filling the tractor with Earth from our Earth pile, cutting the next length of bag, chipping the leftover cement off of our shovels that we would continually forget to do the night before, and my all-time favorite, straightening barbed wire….who knew that straightening barbed wire would be such a relaxing and satisfying activity?  Certainly not me!  That first hour in the morning with just me and my thoughts and the birds chirping became part of my everyday reality.

Now as we are so close to closing, I can say it’s a really special feeling to look at something so big and beautiful and solid and say to yourself, “I was a part of this….from the first dig to the moment of placing the capstone on the 15′ high dome, I was there!”  I’m sure I can speak for both Meggan and myself when I say that we will both be forever changed by this experience in our own way.  Check it out….we started with an idea and both decided to go for it, in all of our naive glory, jump in with both feet, and see what happened.

Well, so far, this is what happened:

Here’s the start of the project:

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From that exciting first dig:

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To today, exactly three months and 13 days later:

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I’m proud of us!  And wouldn’t you know it, Opal, one of her current 5 adorable goats and future inhabitants of this dome, is due to give birth tomorrow, Wednesday, May 28th, if all is on schedule!  It wouldn’t surprise me one bit if she gave birth on the same day we actually close the dome.  Here she is with her full belly looking healthy and ready to do her thing!  How excited am I that I get to see adorable baby goats right before I leave!

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The rest of this week will be focusing on these two things….closing the dome and Opal having two (or three?) healthy kids, not necessarily in that order.  I am certain both events will go without a hitch!

So now, some details from the last couple of weeks so you can see more specifics of what we’ve been doing at each phase.  As you know, Blake, the Angel that swooped in for a week fresh out of the 3 month apprentice program at Cal-Earth, was such a huge help on every level while he was here.  He just left Satruday morning and was heading to a Permaculture farm in Montana for a week to help them out and learn some cool things to coincide with a course he’s been taking on the subject before conducting a couple of workshops on Superadobe basics North of here.  It was so great having him here, not only for his invaluable help in getting us in a good position to be able to complete this project in time (we laid 13 rows in the week he was here!) but he certainly provided a solid wealth of knowledge about different aspects of building with Superadobe that were a bit cloudy in my mind.  He was able to quell some fears about the water element that continues to confound me regarding weather-proofing and the construction process.  For one, I learned that it’s not the end of the world if the Superadobe bags get wet, and you can build in the rain after all.  If not for the unpleasant factor, you could technically work right through a downpour, but who wants to do that?  Wouldn’t be the safest workplace being 12 to 14 feet up off the ground with no proper scaffolding and slippery, not-quite-foot-width Earthbags to stand on, but it could be done.  It’s freaky enough being up that high on a sunny day!  In fact, here he is in the rain shortly after arriving, ready to dive right in, bless him!

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The week before his arrival was a power week in itself with great weather, our new cement mixer from Giselda and Ariel in operation and having two awesome helpers on two separate days, Linda and Johnathan, Giselda and Ariel’s son.  The mixer has been life changing!  We had to connect no less than three long outdoor extension cords from the shed in order to get power to it but well worth the stretch…it single-handedly eliminated our having to hand mix Earth from that day forward….a HUGE energy saver!  I have to say though, there is no on/off switch on this mixer so we have to plug and unplug the extension cords whenever we need to use it.  I feel like a mad scientist about to get lit up every time I connect the two ends.

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Here is the blessed mixer doing it’s magic!

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Meggan finishing off a row of bag laying and I laying barbed wire:

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Linda tamping, bless her, as she herself has a tamping machine which does all the hard work for her so I’m sure she was really feeling gratitude for the machine with every effortful hand tamp she did for us on that row.

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We also had a new helper in Johnathan, Giselda and Ariel (of cement mixer fame)’s son.  He’s a great guy, a rapper (we tried to get him to rap about goat mud huts), and an amazing help who was up for anything and everything.  We even had him laying bag the first time he came by!  He helped out the following week when Blake was here too so we were able to maximize our production that day…pretty sure that was the first record ‘3 bag day’ that I posted last blog.

And then of course we had the second power week with Blake.  Blake’s arrival was at a perfect time as we were just coming up to the crown of the door form and the buttress finale.  I had looked back at the photos from the Cal-Earth workshop I’d taken back in September as to how we’d come over the door form and decided I would take the same approach here laying long finger buttresses in an arch over the door, flush with the inside diameter of the dome.  This, despite the fact that I had started the door buttresses with a bit of an outward splay to them for esthetic purposes and to create a wider entry for the goats but then realized halfway up that the force would probably be better absorbed if they were straighter and more parallel to each other as is normally done with the Cal-Earth domes, likely with reason.  I started angling the buttresses ever so slightly to be more parallel with each other every row from then on which was going to have a bit of a ‘double helix’ effect/look.  I thought it would be kind of cool but then worried that I may have created a pseudo ‘pronation’ situation in my door buttresses, oh dear!  But after studying my entry arch and buttress options I’d decided that the way we did it in the workshop would work and all would be well even if perhaps the force was not going to be dissipated in perfect resolution with the laws of physics (I never did do well in high school physics).  So all that to say, Blake arrived just as we were arching over the door form with these ‘buttress fingers’ and it was perfect because I may not have remembered to brick tamp the Earthbags so tight and flush to the door form as he did to make them as solid and contiguous as possible.  I felt very good about the door buttress when all was said and done.  After a few days of building and getting a few rows above the door, we took the door form right out to test it for real, and let me tell you, something happened to me the first time I walked into that dome without having to do the sideways limbo under the wooden form….I don’t know if it was the elation from realizing that the dome didn’t collapse in on itself and was standing solid as a rock all on it’s own or what, but it was a pretty special moment!

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Meggan trying it on for size….perfect, no?

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Some details and an inside view:

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With the door completed and no more buttresses, the last milestone other than closing it was to finish laying all of the PVC and glass window inserts in the walls.  The biggest day for that was the first day Johnathan was helping us just before Blake arrived and we’d cut 5 PVC ventilation windows into the dome, the two lateral points on both the side wall 5-pointed stars and the center point of the back wall 5-pointed star.  .

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It was at this level that I realized we had officially gone above our heads, in a good way, and were really starting our inward corbelling, yes!

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Next inserts were the two huge glass water jugs Meggan found at Sunbirds camping supply store in Yelm…she was Jonesing for some big light windows all along and when she saw these, she bought three of them to replace the mason jars for the remaining points on the back wall….a good choice I’d say.  I decided to do what I had become good and used to and cut them into the dome wall.  In hindsight, I would have just set them on the wall without cutting into the bag and laid bag up to them on the next rows as our Earth was semi-crumbly on one of them which created a bit of a droop below the cut, especially since we didn’t have to worry about maintaining any kind of downward slope with these ones.  Alas, the dome stands strong regardless of it’s many characterful imperfections, as Superadobe domes will.

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This is where we’d gotten to by the time Blake arrived.  He arrived late on Thursday and we started working on Friday and literally worked everyday until the following Friday before he left this past Saturday.  He was even game to come with me to Linda’s one of the days to help work on her pumphouse Earthbag structure.  She was thrilled for the extra help (we got two full rows done for her, a banner day!) and being able to pick his brains about vault construction.  Blake was happy to learn from Linda some ingenious ways to make working by oneself easier and more efficient…one of Linda’s specialities is finding the most efficient way to build with Earthbag, especially if you find yourself building solo.  So it was an amazingly productive week to say the least.  There were a couple of days where it was just he and I when Meggan was working, a couple of days where it was Meggan, Blake and myself and a couple of days we had  helpers with us.  Johnathan one day, Lori’s friend Lana Kila, a beautiful soul and another former New Yorker who has studied architecture in Hawaii (which is where he was given his Hawaiian name meaning ‘victory or to be victorious’), and finally Linda and her friend Peter, a fine and friendly gentleman who has an interest in potentially building an Earthbag structure himself one day.    Additionally, the Weather Gods were gracious the whole week!  Here are some highlights:

Early on in the week, mixing up stabilized Earth to start our day.

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MixMaster Meggan

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Focused barbed wire laying

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Top o’ the door form to ye!

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5-pointed stars COMPLETE!!

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Johnathan and Blake mixing Earth.

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Interior of the dome

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Our opening is getting smaller and smaller….!

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Assembly line production of Blake, myself and Peter, Meggan and Linda keeping the flow of mix coming our way and Cyrus, the tricycle supervisor making his rounds.  You’ll notice Blake got us started on some of the exterior rough plastering too!

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This was the last day of a wonderfully productive week with Blake to whom we will forever be grateful for his generous assistance, thank you Blake!!  😀

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We all took it easy on Saturday to rest our weary bodies.  Yesterday, Sunday, Meggan, Cyrus and I went out and laid one more bag in the morning before the rain came in the afternoon and this is where we stand as you saw in the beginning of the post.

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Today was supposed to be raining all day and dry tomorrow but it appears Accuweather got their days mixed up, not one day after giving a nod to their relative accuracy, classic.  Today has switched to mostly cloudy but dry and tomorrow looks like more of a chance of rain so I am contemplating going out later to lay a bag or two.  At any rate, this is an exciting and monumental week as we will close the dome and most likely bear witness to some fresh new baby goats entering into this Earth realm.

I will look forward to sharing both events with you within the week.

Life is a wild ride of awe and wonder isn’t it?

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