2010 September

Earthen Paints Class, Portland Community College

October 23, 2010

Portland Community College, SE Center

Instructor Scott Howard

http://www.earthenhand.com

Earthen Paints at Portland Community College

- Get Dirty! Create Your Own Earthen Paints
9am-12pm, October 23rd

PCC SE center, Portland, Oregon
Create durable, beautiful, inexpensive earthen paints to enhance your home. Earthen paints are non-toxic, easy to apply, easy to maintain, and are planet friendly. This hands-on class includes global examples of earthen building methods. Snacks provided.
Tuition = $40 payable to Earthen Hand, $29 to PCC

Email us at workshops@earthenhand.com. to begin registration.
AND
Go to www.pcc.edu/schedule for more information and registration.

  By Earthen Hand , September 2010.

Earth Oven Workshop 9/12/10 – Caledonia, IL

September 12, 2010

Angelic Organics Learning Center 1547 Rockton Rd Caledonia, IL 61011

Instructor Randy Mermel

http://www.learngrowconnect.org/node/2473

Come join us as we learn to build with cob, an age-old natural building technique with simple materials such as clay, sand, and straw. The emphasis will be on hands-on learning as we mix cob and earthen plaster, and provide you with the skills to build an oven in your own backyard. Class will meet in two locations (10 miles apart): at the Dome Gathering Space for building a new oven, and at Angelic Organics Learning Center for baking in a completed oven. Participants will be invited to help with work sessions on the oven foundation prior to the class.

To review our registration policies, please visit: http://www.csalearningcenter.org/what/on-farm/public/registration.

Actual costs of workshops are close to double our workshop fees. If you are able, please consider making an additional donation to help cover the full cost of your workshop.
Price: $75.00

  By Randy Mermel , September 2010.

Roscoe, IL – Cob Oven and Bench Workshop

September 12, 2010

Roscoe, IL

Instructor Randy Mermel

http://learngrowconnect.org/blog

Many visitors who have come to the Angelic Organics Learning Center in the past 2 years have enjoyed fresh baked bread and pizza from our unique oven. In addition to learning about the process of artisan baking, they have also had the opportunity to learn about this form of sustainable building. This earth oven is made from cob. Cob is one of the oldest building materials.

It is a mixture of clay, sand, and straw; making it simple to source locally. There is no need to ship in building materials. A variety of groups have utilized the earth oven, from home-school groups to the Waldorf schools, from day camp kids to participants in the bread and cheese-making classes. Visitors from the Colver Center, refugees who hail from around the world, found the process of creating the oven and cooking in it to be healing and a reminder of home.

We have had many inquiries into the process of building the oven that we have decided to create a new workshop on building an earth oven. This earth oven workshop, presented by AOLC, will be held at the workshop instructor’s property, The Dome Education & Gathering Center located in Roscoe, IL, on September 12, 2010. We have been working on building the foundation to the oven with adjoining cob benches and it is ready to have the cob applied at the workshop in September. The foundation is made from reclaimed broken pieces of concrete, or “urbanite”. At the workshop, students will come away with the knowledge of how to build their own oven.

Cob is an extremely fun material to work with and it is a great way to build community. Anyone from young children to their grandparents can work with the material. At the workshop, we will enjoy community through a potluck lunch and will work together to build the oven. Be prepared to get dirty, have a lot of fun, make new friends and learn sustainable building practices!

To register contact The learning Center @ learngrowconnect.org

  By Randy Mermel , August 2010.

Clemson, SC – Natural Building /Straw Bale Apprenticeships

August 16, 2010toSeptember 15, 2010

Start / End Date August 16 – Fall 2010

Clemson, SC

Instructor Matthew Nistico

http://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/event.php?eid=119976998037835

August 16 – Fall 2010: NATURAL BUILDING/STRAW BALE APPRENTICESHIP

Location: Clemson, South Carolina
Instructor: Matthew Nistico
Paid stipend of $200/week

http://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/event.php?eid=119976998037835

I have room for several apprentices who are serious about learning and practicing straw bale, cob, and natural plastering techniques in the context of a real job setting.

The owner-builder, Matthew Nistico, has designed the home and site and thus far seen the project successfully through 2/3 of construction, together with input and occasional consultation from some of the best natural builders in the east. We will be covering all of the techniques associated with bale wall assembly, including basic framing; stacking, retying, shaping, external pinning, and prepping bales for plaster; mixing cob and cob chinking; window and door details; mixing earth plaster, and applying earth plasters by hand over straw and lathe (both wood and metal). Depending on timing, there may be opportunities for experiencing both lime and earthen finish plastering techniques by trowel, concrete staining, insulating, and tile work.

You will be working with the owner-builder and occasionally my framer 40 hours/week on the completion of a lime-plastered, post-&-beam, straw bale homestead. The foundation, exterior walls, and roof are complete and the structure is dried in, yet most phases of construction are still visible, from finished exterior plaster to yet-to-be-framed interior walls. We will be employing an innovative “split-bale” method to create nine-inch-thick, straw bale, interior partition walls, which will then be finished and plastered along with the inside surfaces of the exterior walls. As such, much of the work (but not all) will be indoors.

The design incorporates other green features, such as passive solar orientation and layout, extensive use of salvaged and reclaimed building materials, passive cooling and ventilation strategies (as opposed to air conditioning), extensive daylighting, and rain water harvesting.

There will be semi-primitive accommodations for apprentices to live on site, sleeping in their own tent, and sharing an outdoor shower, portable toilet, and small refrigerator. The owner-builder also lives on site, and apprentices may have occasional access to indoor shower and limited cooking facilities. There is also an option of inexpensive, extended-stay motel accommodations 5 minutes away by car. This is a relatively secluded and private, partially-wooded property located on a quiet country road at the edge of a small university town, set in rural South Carolina in the foothills of the Appalachians. The site is located 45 minutes from the city of Greenville, and 2 hours from both Asheville, NC, and Atlanta, GA.

The apprenticeship includes a $200/week paid stipend. Apprentices are expected to be strong workers committed to learning about natural, innovative, and low-impact building techniques. This will be an on-the-job learning experience, working approximately 40 hours per week for the duration of the apprenticeship. Lengths of apprenticeship are negotiable.

Please contact Matthew Nistico at elessarrex@hotmail.com to set up a telephone interview.

  By Matthew Nistico , August 2010.

Roseburg OR, Amazing cob experience

September 10, 2010toSeptember 14, 2010

Roseburg, OR
Instructor Ishe & Hannah

We worked hard in the hot sun,
Contagious
Smiles were seen and felt and passed freely,
Energized,
We splashed in the cold river,
There were great cooks, awe inspired food and endless salads,
The loving community sang by the campfire,
And
Slept soundly through the calls of coyote,
Were you there?
WILL YOU BE THERE THIS TIME?

This work shop combines the best of hands on experience, lecture/discussion and demonstration to give the participant a full body of knowledge of how to build a cob structure from start to finish.

$395 for 4 days– includes camping and meals. $100 deposit per person due by Sept 3, 2010.
Bring a friend SPECIAL ***bring a friend and take off $120 per couple.****

contact Ishe for more information i7dancer@gmail.com or 541-680-5123

  By ishe scheive , August 2010.

Lexington, Kentucky, Pizza Oven Foundation

September 11, 2010
2:00 pm

Lexington, Kentucky

Instructor Diane Jennings

http://www.disputantacob.com

Tuition

During this workshop we will learn how to build an earth friendly, lime mortared foundation, how to prepare the site, and and ‘learn by doing’ as we build a foundation:

- Gather Stones
- Prep Foundation Stones
- Slake Lime
- Make Lime Mortar
- Build Lime mortar foundation

Plenty of drinking water and a delicious vegan lunch will be provided, and chances are there will be some music in the air.

  By Disputanta Cob , July 2010.

Lexington, Kentucky, Cob pizza/bread oven

September 18, 2010

Lexington, Kentucky

Instructor Diane Jennings

http://www.disputantacob.com

During this workshop we will learn about the way an earthen mass oven works, how to choose the right ingredients for your cob, and ‘learn by doing’ as we build a cob oven:

- Lay firebricks
- Build a form
- Mix fire cob & regular cob
- Build cob layers of oven
- Build the door

  By Disputanta Cob , July 2010.

Central KY- Disputanta Cob: Introduction to Cob & Natural Plasters

September 4, 2010toSeptember 5, 2010

“Introduction to Cob & Natural Plasters”

Learn to Build Load Bearing Cob Walls

Sculpt Niches and Build Furniture

Work with Natural Plasters & Pigments

$189 includes registration, camping & meals. Children

10 & under half price. $118 – 30 days advance pay.

Building cob walls

During this part of the workshop we will learn how to build cob walls strong enough to set your roof on, including building a sleeping loft, setting beams and rafters in cob for a roof, and ‘learn by doing’ as we:

- Choose materials and mix cob

- Build a lintel over the door

- Set plate & floor joists for loft

- Build loft floor

Sculptural cob

During this part of the workshop we will learn how to sculpt and trim, as well as use cob to build furniture, including building a couch, a bench for a breakfast nook, and ‘learn by doing’ as we:

- Mix corbel cob

- Cantilever furniture seats

- Work with niches to create bookshelves

- Create sculptures in the walls

Natural Plaster
Working with natural plasters is perhaps the most rewarding aspect of creating an earthen structure.  It is the dessert after the main course of building with cob. We will be working with natural mineral pigments to create various colors and effects.
  By Disputanta Cob , July 2010.