Quail Springs Permaculture https://www.quailsprings.org/ Permaculture, Natural Building, Ancestral Skills & Youth Education in Southern California Tue, 10 Jan 2023 19:51:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 Why Natural Building is Important for Our Future https://www.quailsprings.org/why-natural-building-is-important/ https://www.quailsprings.org/why-natural-building-is-important/#respond Sun, 26 Jun 2022 01:55:33 +0000 https://www.quailsprings.org/?p=15221 Ancient building methods can help solve today's climate crisis, the lack of access to housing, and the dangers we face from wildfires.

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by Sasha Rabin

A wide variety of methods of building with earth are found throughout the world. These variations include the methods of construction and use of different mixtures of earth. The style of earthen buildings and their materials vary greatly from one region to another, and sometimes from one village to another, even within the same region. Most of these structures are some combination of aggregate, clay, fiber and water, but the variations of the materials themselves, as well as the proportions and ratios can produce a multitude of techniques and composite materials for a large variety of uses. For example, the fiber used can range from horsehair to branches, and the aggregate may range from sand to large stone. In all parts of the world earthen architecture reflects the local environment and the spirit of the builders, dwellers, and culture of that region.

What is Natural Building? - Ancient Pueblo earthen building
Taos Pueblo is an ancient Pueblo belonging to a Taos-speaking (Tiwa) Native American tribe, which has been continuously inhabited for over 1000 years.

With the extraction of oil, and therefore the development of modern-day transportation, our ability to transport building materials long distances became common practice. People no longer had to rely on their local environment for materials. As the transportation systems developed and increased, so did the homogenization of our built environment. Today, building materials are transported all over the world, enabling the ability to create identical buildings in many parts of the world. Today’s natural building movement is rooted in re-localizing the buildings we live in.

Modern Day Natural Building Movement

The natural building movement that we experience today is based on our own choices and philosophy, rather than being the only way to build that our ancestors experienced. Today’s natural building is based on a philosophy that places the highest value on environmental sustainability. Natural building is about integrating our built environments into their local ecologies and communities with minimal adverse effects on local and distant environments and societies. The difference between now and then is that building with natural materials is a choice for those of us in more wealthy countries, rather than the only option. In many places around the world earthen building is undesirable because it is seen as the “poor persons building”. Ironically, here in the US, most natural building systems are out of reach for anyone but those of us who have access to land and are privileged enough to be able to seek out these very niche skills, not to mention dedicate the time to building one's own shelter. For the most part, natural building is a movement of the privileged in the US. We deeply hope this can change.

What is Natural Building? - Quail Springs earthen building
One of the structures at Quail Springs, which is built using a combination of earthen building materials and techniques, including cob, light straw clay, earthbag, and adobe.

How do we shelter ourselves?

It was not that long ago that most of us would have had a relationship to the buildings that shelter us, and the ability to fix, expand, repair or rebuild when the need arose. Most of our grandparents, including those of us from the industrialized North, practiced natural building. Before the advent of standardization, mass production, and long-distance transport, people relied on locally available materials to house their families.

Why then, do we have so many people today without shelter?

I believe that the root cause of our houselessness problem in the US is rooted in policy and codes, and how our capitalist system influences the laws of what is legal to build, and what is not.

How does profit shape our building industry?

Here in the US, any citizen can submit proposals or changes to building codes. Although this sounds supportive in theory, it isn’t actually approachable in practice. In order to get most methods incorporated into code you need rigorous testing. Generally testing is done by companies that hope to make a profit on the building material they are testing. How then, do we achieve testing of building materials that no one will ever make a profit on? In order to write, engineer, propose and pass the cob code, it has cost somewhere in the range of $75,000, paid for by a variety of donations and private funders, and this is still with much of the work being done voluntarily. The fire testing that Quail Springs carried out cost roughly $50,000, and again, that cost is with much of the labor being voluntary and unpaid. The structure of the system that dictates our ability to build shelter is deeply flawed, and primarily profit driven.

In addition to regulations on what one is able to build on one’s land, another fundamental obstacle to building one’s own home is access to land itself. And even with access to land, there are regulations that dictate what can and can’t be built on that land. While I don’t want to brush over or diminish the challenges and inequities of land access, I do believe that if we had more freedom and flexibility to build on land once we owned it, there would be a lot more opportunity to build shelter. We could raise the money to purchase empty lots in cities and fill them with several tiny cabins. We could lease land owned by cities to build small housing coops (much like community gardens). People could build more housing units in their own backyards. While I realize that these housing options are not the best option for many people in the long term, they are no doubt better than having no home at all.

A new paradigm of safety

Many of the laws and regulations that dictate what and where we can and cannot build are created in the name of safety. While I understand that we need some guiding bodies regulating what is deemed “safe”, and while some aspects of our built environment have become safer, I don’t feel that the current regulations take enough aspects of safety into account. Current regulations address things like house fires, structural collapse, egress, water and wastewater, electricity, etc.. But regulations entirely ignore the risks of not having a house at all (and all of the danger that comes with being houseless), the climate impact of our building materials, risk to future generations, loss of habitat, pollution and the toxic off gassing from structures burning in wildfires (which continues to be a greater issue as fires increase in number and size), just to mention a few. The risks are changing rapidly, while the regulations are not. If we truly took these newer hazards, as well as the longer-term hazards into account, the materials we build with would look very different.

The benefits of industrial materials

There are many benefits of industrial materials: they are predictable, testable and often relatively fast to build with. Many of these factors make big changes in this industry slow and challenging; the whole system is set up to work with materials that are predictable and testable. As natural builders we are advocating for massive changes to the system that governs our built environment. One thing I want to point out, since I mentioned speed, is that with many natural building materials we are taking the material from its totally raw form and creating building materials from scratch. If we were to go through the same process for a 2x4, by first felling the tree and then milling it, I don’t believe it would be faster to build with. And, if a 2x4 had to go through the same amount of fire testing that ‘new’ building materials are now required to do (including the very ancient methods of earthen building), the 2x4 would not pass today's requirements.

Fire resilient building

Especially here in the western United States (but many other places around the world as well), constructing buildings that are more fire resistant should be a top priority. Every year we are losing entire towns and small cities to fire storms, in ways that only a few years ago were unprecedented. Building a fire resistant structure requires more than just replacing wood with earth: There are many details that need to be taken into account, but the shift is very doable. The importance of building fire safe structures involves taking into account the flammability of the materials and assessing the toxicity of the materials when they burn.

In 2021 we built and tested 2 earthen walls and performed ASTM E119 tests. This test is basically what is required to prove that earth does not burn. The walls performed even better than expected. The test wall was exposed to 1,850°F for two hours, and then rotated and blasted with a 2.5” fire hose for two minutes, while being top loaded with 67,000 lbs. Unlike other assemblies, adobe does not emit toxic fumes or smoke upon heating. And it’s critical to note that the code fire ratings do not take into account the mortality that comes from the toxic fumes that are emitted from conventional buildings being burned down. While working on these walls, there were many times when the facility was testing other materials that were so toxic we had to wear N95 masks and leave the area.

What is Natural Building? - Fire testing cob wall
This is one of the two walls we built at a facility in Texas that was then tested for an ASTM E119 fire rating.
What is Natural Building? - Fire testing cob wall
This is the same wall after being exposed to fire on the back side for 2 hours. You can see that this side of the wall showed no sign of damage, and only changed temperature by a few degrees on the front side!

Housing as a human right

Here in the US we don’t have housing or land shortages, we have systemic housing and land distribution problems. We don’t have a lack of willingness to build homes, we have the lack of adaptive systems that allow us to shelter ourselves. I believe that living in a small cob shelter, even with all the risks and unknowns it might bring, is safer than living on the street in a tent. I believe that housing should be a basic human right. It is long past due to look at the larger picture of safety and adapt to the changing world around us. We don’t have much of a choice. I realize this is no small task, but we can start small.

Want to learn more?

In our Online Natural Building Course you can learn more about natural building advocacy as well as learn how to build your own natural building project at home!


FEATURES

6.5 hours of video lessons

8 live group sessions and Q&A

4 months of online support

6 months of Access to all content

List of resources and books

Companion text to all video lessons

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Cultivating Connection through Quail Springs and the Online PDC https://www.quailsprings.org/cultivating-connection-online-pdc/ https://www.quailsprings.org/cultivating-connection-online-pdc/#comments Sun, 27 Mar 2022 23:16:21 +0000 https://www.quailsprings.org/?p=14844 A former Quail Springs Work Trader and Online PDC participant shares her journey from a Permaculture Student to a Permaculture Teacher!

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Since the pandemic began two years ago, many of us have been seeking deeper levels of connection, purpose, and meaning in our lives. This is part of what drove me to take a leave of absence from my job to become a Work Trader at Quail Springs and participate in the 2021 Online Permaculture Design Certificate (PDC). I knew the experience would change my life, although I didn’t know exactly how things would pan out after taking this leap.

I plunged into the community, the work, and the learning. And as I began the Online PDC, I felt my perspective beginning to shift. From a sense of helplessness at the dire state of the world to one of empowered action. From a feeling of pandemic isolation to a sense of deep connection with self, community and ecosystem. From an anxious overwhelm of needing to “do all the things” to a remembrance of the satisfaction that comes from simple things like growing food and caring for my community.

Morgan Visalli at Quail Springs
Morgan during her stay at Quail Springs.
Perhaps most transformational was the way that the Online PDC shifted my thinking about design—how we design our gardens, homes, and communities. I started seeing all of the ways that we could design systems to be more circular, regenerative, holistic, and connected. My vision opened to all of the ways that I could start shifting those systems right now, in my own home, with my neighbors, and in my wider community.
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As part of the Online PDC, I started working on a permaculture design for my home in Ojai, and included elements like chickens, a food forest, and pollinator habitat, woven together in an integrated design. I also included space for community gathering and workshops, as I knew that I wanted to share this life-affirming worldview and empowering skills with others. Each phase of the design process challenged me to think about how the elements would be connected with each other, creating a mini ecosystem in my backyard.

A year later, I have to pinch myself as ten friends from Quail Springs help me plant the first phase of the food forest and bring to life the permaculture design I developed during the Online PDC. Together we dug a rainwater harvesting basin, and turned what was once a small flooding problem into a valuable resource. We planted a fruit tree surrounded by native flowering plants, edible perennials, and nitrogen-fixing plants. There is a special magic that comes from many hands working together in creation, and I am so grateful to have the Quail Springs energy imbued into our space in Ojai.

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Progress of the rainwater harvesting basin.

In the last year, I’ve also started an edible garden and permaculture design business, Grow With Mo. I host permaculture workshops in my backyard, showing my PDC design in-action and sharing empowering skills in home-scale food production and composting. I also help others design regenerative gardens in their yards and homes. Creating this business was a dream of mine that had been percolating for many years, and the Online PDC taught me a clear design framework to implement with clients, which boosted my confidence to actually jump into this venture. My hope is that I can help create a network of connected permaculture projects in my community, improving our resilience and our sense of connection.

Because for me that’s what it really comes back to: a desire to feel connected and in relationship with land and community, and to live in closer alignment with my values.

Connect with Morgan through instagram or her website.

Inspired? Check out our Online PDC!

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Cob Wall Fire Testing Update https://www.quailsprings.org/cob-wall-fire-testing-update/ Mon, 12 Jul 2021 22:18:59 +0000 https://www.quailsprings.org/?p=14457 In May, our natural building team went to Texas to build a cob wall inside of a fire testing facility!

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Not that many generations ago, our ancestors built houses primarily from materials found on the site they were building, or very close by. The industrial revolution brought transportation of materials all over the world, as well as the manufacturing and processing of materials of all kinds. Many of these developments and manufactured products are incorporated into the buildings we build, but it’s important to remember that buildings can be constructed primarily from local materials that have been very minimally processed. Even today, earth remains the most common building material on the planet. There are many ways of using earthen materials to create wall systems, and a variety of methods can be found in most countries.

In the past few decades, there has been a revival of a method called cob, or monolithic adobe. It is similar to adobe in materials but differs in the building process. Rather than making bricks and then stacking them as in adobe, you build with the material in its wet form, creating one monolithic structure.

In 2019 cob building was accepted by the International Code Council (ICC), but there are still barriers to making these methods more accessible. We have centuries of examples, experience, and practice, but there is little technical modern data. Quail Springs teamed up with students at Cal Poly and performed seismic testing on a variety of cob walls a few years ago, and the next round of data needed is from fire testing.

We know that earth does not burn. It has been used for centuries to build ovens and fireplaces, yet particular situations require a technical ASTM E119 fire rating for the material to be used. After the seismic testing in 2019, we performed an unofficial fire test on one of the cob walls to explore how cob will do in an official fire test. After four hours of burning a 2000 F degree fire against one side of a 12” thick wall, the opposite side never exceeded 72 F degrees!
Cob Wall Fire Testing
Our unofficial fire test of a 1 ft. thick cob wall.

In May, our natural building team went to Texas to build a cob wall inside of a fire testing facility. The wall will need to dry for at least six months before it is tested, so we do not have the results yet.  The process of the test is to blast the wall with high heat on one side, then rotate the wall with a crane, and blast it with a fire hose.  The heat and fire we feel confident about, but the fire hose stream is more unknown.  In an actual wildfire situation, the wall would not actually be on fire to warrant a fire hose blasting it for several minutes.  This is another example of how the modern testing does not always fit, work, or make sense with these materials.  In our unofficial test, we found that the hotter the fire had been against a section of the wall, the better it held up to the fire hose.

Cob Wall Fire Testing
Our cob walls in progress at the testing facility.

These materials are inherently free or very cheap, locally accessible, and these walls can be built by people without a huge amount of expertise. This also makes testing them quite difficult. How do you fund testing a material that no one will profit off of?   How you do streamline a material when the objective is to make it with materials found locally?

We hope one day that housing can once again be recognized as a basic human right, and that building a home for oneself and one’s family will be accessible to all.

Cob Wall Fire Testing
Our building team at the testing facility.

We want to express our utmost gratitude to the whole team who made this project possible:

Thank you to everyone who donated for the building and testing of these walls. Extreme gratitude for our Natural Building team, Sasha Rabin and John Orcutt, for leading the building aspect of this project and holding all the pieces and putting them together for the past two years! And a huge thank you to Daiva Trudeau and Jess Shockley for joining our crew at a moment’s notice. What a dream team of natural builders! We’re all so grateful for our structural engineer Anthony Dente of Verdant Structural Engineers, our fire engineer Nicholas Bartlett and our all around everything else partner Art Ludwig of Oasis Design  (without Art, we wouldn’t even be here!). Big thanks to the crew at the ICC NTA testing facility.

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Lots to Love and Lots to Celebrate https://www.quailsprings.org/lots-to-love-and-lots-to-celebrate/ https://www.quailsprings.org/lots-to-love-and-lots-to-celebrate/#respond Fri, 01 Jan 2021 01:43:32 +0000 https://www.quailsprings.org/?p=14040 Earlier this fall we asked members of our staff, board, and extended community to answer the question "what do you love about Quail Springs?" Hear their responses here!

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Earlier this fall we asked members of our staff, board, and extended community to answer the question "what do you love about Quail Springs?" It's been fun to hear their responses and to remember the many ways in which Quail Springs touches, changes, and inspires. Check out their answers below.

Out here in the Cuyama Valley, it snowed just a few days ago and the highest peaks in view are still blanketed in white.

It feels like a good omen, and a celebration of the year coming to a close. On this last day of 2020, we're celebrating all of the incredible things we've accomplished this year, despite the never-before-seen challenges that arose.

We're celebrating the huge outpouring of support that we've experienced during this difficult year. We've nearly reached our year-end fundraising goal — make a tax-deductible donation and help us close the final gap. Thank you to all who have donated already and helped us get this far!

Give a Tax-Deductible Gift to Quail Springs

We're grateful for the gift of moisture falling from the sky, for the opportunity to teach and be taught, and for our community close in and spread far. We're grateful for the support we've received this year -- for your donations, for your words of encouragement, for your appreciation of the work that we do. We truly couldn't do this work without you.

In Gratitude,
All of us at Quail Springs


WHY DO YOU LOVE QUAIL SPRINGS?

Warren Brush - Quail Springs Permaculture

Warren Brush – Quail Springs Co-Founder and Permaculture Instructor

"I love Quail Springs for they are like a warm, lovingly prepared stew on a cold mid-winter’s day. They are uniquely prepared from a diversity of delicious ingredients, in their unique forms, rich with complex flavors and a depth of substance, combined in an earthly recipe of humor, humus, humility, cultural insparkedness, love and grace.  I am warmed by the integrity of this life-affirming slow simmering feast that continues to feed the land which sustains them, the unseen, and all the people, including myself, who have come to sit close by their kitchen hearth to be nourished. I simply love Quail Springs!"

Sasha Rabin - Quail Springs Permaculture

Sasha Rabin Quail Springs Natural Building & Advocacy Director

“I care about earthen building because I believe it can be part of a solution that addresses our current housing issues, wildfires, and climate crisis. I believe housing should be a human right, and that we need to change the way we build buildings so that the building industry drastically reduces its carbon emissions. Earthen building offers solutions that can be carbon neutral, and even carbon negative from day one.

I love Quail Springs because our team of dedicated individuals are doing the work to remove barriers and helping to make this a reality. Through testing, building, learning and teaching, we are forging a path that will make building a home for yourself or your family out of earth a little bit more accessible.”

Brenton Kelly - Quail Springs Permaculture

Brenton Kelly Quail Springs Watershed Stewardship & Advocacy Director

“I have always endeavored to direct my life energy to actions that have a tangible impact on the most fundamental aspects of living a good life, like planting tree saplings that grow into shade and soil-building forests of food, fodder and fuelwood. Here I spend my days working on such a wide variety of engaging projects that all feed me and those around me. Water, shelter, food and gratitude for all we can share. I love Quail Springs for being that place not only for me and my family, but for all of our visitors and supporters.”

Andrew Clinard Quail Springs former Development Director

“I support Quail Springs because they teach us how to live differently. If 2020 has taught us anything, in this global pandemic, with worsening climate change and growing income inequality, I think it's that it's time to live differently. They teach us how to build homes differently, how to grow food differently, and how to live in community. That's different. That's why I support Quail Springs.”

Natalie Buckley-Medrano - Quail Springs Permaculture

Natalie Buckley-Medrano Quail Springs former Farm Manager (and Sustainable Vocations graduate)

“Being present for my first gratitude circle during a youth program as a young adult was highly vulnerable. My heart was racing, my stomach was queezy, my palms were sweating. But as I know well now, learning and growing happens in that realm of discomfort. I soon found that this shared gratitude practice was a strong catalyst in my journey of building trust with others, learning to lean into my own authenticity, and finding power + inner peace in its subversive nature.

Quail Springs is an epicenter of a powerful ripple effect of community builders, seed sowers, change bringers, land stewards, and peace-makers, and it is an understatement to say their work with youth is unmatched. I love Quail Springs not only because it allowed me to learn deep lessons about myself, but it instilled in me a hope and vision for collectively building a healthier world that continues to fuel my inner fire to this day."

Natalie Bartlett - Quail Springs Permaculture

Natalie Bartlett – Quail Springs Board Director

“I love Quail Springs for the beautiful piñons, red winged blackbirds, western bluebirds, tended desert waters, starry expanses and the smell of rain on sagebrush.”

Dani Mingo - Quail Springs Permaculture

Dani Mingo Quail Springs Hosting Director

“I love Quail Springs because there is so much to learn here. There’s space to explore so many different avenues of land-based living whether that be solar power and life off-grid, using a chainsaw, being in healthy relationship with the watershed, milking goats or growing food in the desert. And it’s a major plus to be accompanied in this learning by open-minded, creative and inspiring humans.”

Jen Schlaich - Quail Springs Permaculture

Jen Schlaich – Quail Springs Board Director

“I love Quail Springs because the folks that I’ve met (both working for QS or attending courses at QS) are a true example of people who are living their lives in alignment with their values and their belief in positive change. I love Quail Springs because, in my opinion, a life well spent is a life living and working on behalf of our food, water, shelter, and people.

I love Quail Springs because of the inspiration I’ve been gifted over the years—an inspiration that has deepened and rooted my work in food systems.

Keep building, growing, protecting, regenerating and sharing! Thank you Quail Springs!”

Susan Cousineau - Quail Springs Permaculture

Susan Cousineau – Quail Springs Board Director

“Quail Springs has been a sort of home and landing place for me here since moving to California from Canada. Over the decade that I have become increasingly closer to their work, I have more and more come to appreciate the deep, abiding commitment that everyone in this organization has to the land on which they live, but also the community, region, and global village of which they are an active and contributing part. 

I have been witness to some big changes at Quail Springs during the last 5 years, including 3 serving as a Board Director. Most notable to me are the purchase of the land, a huge and game-changing milestone; a 'changing of the guard' and transition in leadership to a more equitable, inclusive system that reaches far beyond a traditional hierarchical model of non-profit structure; and a deeply considered, professionally conducted interaction with the county and regional officials to ensure that the efforts and work at Quail Springs can be shared with all. From the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, and now many months in, I have been humbled and impressed by the community and residents' willingness, capacity and efficacy in adopting safe measures, from social distancing and quarantining to pivoting their flagship offerings, workshops and even farm tours to an online model. I have enormous respect and admiration for the many ways in which individuals on the land have stepped into roles not just as 'farm residents' but as dedicated directors and managers of a complex, sometimes challenging, and extremely unique operation that offers a real example of how to live in right relationship with land, community, history and an uncertain future. 

It is with incredible gratitude and joy that I look forward to continuing to witness and participate in the future of Quail Springs, expanding capacity to serve the values and mission of concerted ecological and social regeneration in the Cuyama Valley, in California, and far beyond."

Kate Morgan - Quail Springs Permaculture

Kate Morgan – Quail Springs former Garden Manager

“I love Quail Springs because it was a place for me to re-integrate with the land and reconnect with that which gives me life.

I grew up thinking that the way to help our planet was to reduce my impact, reduce my consumption, reduce myself. This mindset was deeply problematic to me because it meant that the ultimate way to best serve nature was to not exist at all. But through my time at Quail Springs, I learned and experienced firsthand that the extractive economies and endless consumption of our dominant culture are not the only form of relationship humans can have with earth. Us humans are very much a part of nature and our impact is not inherently harmful: we have the gift of nurture and regeneration to return.”

Austin Gallant - Quail Springs Permaculture

Austin Gallant – Quail Springs Farm Intern

“The work at Quail Springs is important because it is empowering people to do better for themselves and the world around them. It's an example of how we can live a radically different life - one that is sustainable not only for the environment but also the humans living within it.”

Want to show some love?

Donate to Quail Springs Today

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2020: Year in Review https://www.quailsprings.org/2020-year-in-review/ Sun, 27 Dec 2020 21:59:20 +0000 https://www.quailsprings.org/?p=13894 Our 2020 Year in Review! We're going to get nostalgic and recap the most notable parts of 2020 here at Quail Springs — what a year!

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It's the season of long, cold nights out here. The animals' water bowls are frozen by morning, people and animals all are cozying up in our respective cob structures, and we're all slowing down a bit.

We're wrapping up our fall fundraiser, just one more week to go! We're so grateful for all of the support we've received so far. If you are able to support our nonprofit and give a tax-deductible gift before the end of the year, you can donate here.

Give a Tax-Deductible Gift to Quail Springs

In this slowing-down time, we've been reflecting on the year behind us. Quite a lot has happened since this time last year.

Way back in January of 2020, we dove into learning about alternative organizational models, and we committed to restructuring our nonprofit to operate with non-hierarchical governance and transparent, participatory decision-making. Later in the year we voted to shift to equal pay for all employees.

Simon Mont Training - Quail Springs
Thanks to Simon Mont for your guidance in the process, to the Santa Barbara Foundation for the grant that made Simon's coaching possible, and to the Sustainable Economies Law Center for being a functioning model of non-hierarchical governance.
In March, the pandemic reached critical levels and it became clear that we needed to move toward online programming for the foreseeable future. We have fortunately been able to continue mentoring aspiring farmers while employing rigorous COVID 19 protocols, and it's been well worth it despite the challenges.
Safe Harvesting - Quail Springs
Devin, one of the first farm interns to arrive during the pandemic, practicing safe (masked) harvesting.
In April, still finding our feet in the new reality of the pandemic and unable to teach most of our in-person courses, we started sharing garden strategies, recipes, and other information on Patreon. Here's a favorite from Sasha's Wild Kitchen series:
Quail Springs Acorn Bread Recipe
Note that we're taking a break from posting on Patreon to focus on producing our upcoming online Permaculture Design Course. Soon we'll be moving the Patreon videos over to our YouTube channel; stay tuned!
Not knowing what the future would hold, but seeing a possible scenario in which we wouldn't be able to host an in-person PDC for a while, we committed to doing something that we'd been considering for a while: developing an online version of our Permaculture Design Course.
Online Permaculture Design Course - Quail Springs
Thanks to onecommune.com for the photo above, and for your partnership in the transition to video courses!
Moving into the heat of the summer (and it was a HOT one), you would've found Jan and Brenton working with local artist Betty Seaman to create the new 17x9 foot mural on the Family Resource Center building that shows the many ways that water moves through our Cuyama Valley landscape. 
Cuyama Valley Map - Quail Springs
Design for the mural above. Thanks to the Department of Water Resources and the Cuyama Valley Community Services District for the grant that made this possible!
In June, Sasha (our Director of Natural Building and Advocacy) was invited to join the board of the Cob Research Institute, an organization dedicated to removing the legal obstacles to building with cob.
Sasha Rabin - Quail Springs
We're excited to be working more closely with the Cob Research Institute!
Also in the summer, we greatly increased our ability to grow food with the construction of two new hoop houses (which kept the rabbits and ground squirrels out), and the first round of experimental wicking beds (a water-saving technique).
Hoop House - Quail Springs
hoop house to keep out rabbits, ground squirrels and quail
Wicking Bed Dryland Farming - Quail Springs
wicking bed, a water-wise growing strategy for drylands farming that uses "upside-down" watering
Later in the summer, we completed the first draft of our Ventura County permit application (which is the next big step in permitting our demonstration site), including architectural drawings of all of our earthen buildings. 
Cob House Design - Quail Springs
Cob House Design - Quail Springs
Drawings of the Farm House, one of our tiny cob structures, above. Thanks to architect Bonnie Sangster for donating her time and talent to make these drawings! And thanks to Ventura County staff for their encouragement and advice in the process.
In the fall, we lost one of the longest term members of our community: our farm cat Sula. She was an elder here, nearly 20 years old, and deeply beloved. We miss her very much.
Sue Blackshear Cat Painting - Quail Springs
Thanks to another of our resident elders, Sue Blackshear, for this portrait of Sula (which hangs in the kitchen).
In December, Quail Springs youth educators Molly and Brendan completed a year-long program with Cuyama youth, encouraging civic engagement and empowerment through mentorship in goal setting and skill building.
Cuyama Youth - Quail Springs
Cuyama youth with Quail Springs mentor, Brendan. (This photo is from a pre-pandemic session; later sessions involved masks and distancing.) Thanks to the FUND for Santa Barbara for providing the grant, and the Family Resource Center for providing the space, that made this work possible!
Also in December, several of our staff members participated in Soul Fire Farm's virtual training "Uprooting Racism in the Food System." We highly recommend this training — check out Soul Fire Farm's for future trainings.
Soul Fire Farm Uprooting Racism - Quail Springs
Credit www.soulfirefarm.org for the image.
And last but not least here at Quail Springs, just a few weeks ago we finished installing a 3-mile waterline to bring spring water down canyon to the grazing grounds of the Cuyama Lamb sheep flock. (The goats seem to enjoy it, too.)
Goat Herd - Quail Springs
Thanks to the Natural Resources Conservation Service for the grant that made this waterline possible!
And here we are, with 2021 just around the corner! Our fall fundraising campaign is coming to a close -- just nine days left to donate and help us reach our goal of raising $100K by December 31st. If you're able, consider making a donation to support our work. Click here to donate and track our progress.
Fall Fundraiser - Quail Springs
Help Us Reach Our Goal

We're grateful for clear skies full of stars, for the smell of the desert after a rain, for mountain lion tracks in the sand reminding us that we are not alone out here, and for all of you who care about this world and this work and share our hope and vision for the future.

With Deep Gratitude,
All of us at Quail Springs

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Summer Harvest https://www.quailsprings.org/summer-harvest/ https://www.quailsprings.org/summer-harvest/#respond Fri, 28 Aug 2020 00:57:07 +0000 https://www.quailsprings.org/?p=13514 Summer harvest is here, along with a little update on what we've been working on this summer — Online PDC, Earthen building code, and more!

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The farm team at Quail Springs has been working hard tending the garden on these 100+ degree days, and the harvest is starting to come in! We're enjoying an abundance of juicy red tomatoes, crisp cucumbers, and lush lettuce, to name just a few. We'd been looking forward to the day when we'd have enough ripe zucchinis, eggplants, and tomatoes to make Ratatouille (a classic French late-summer stew) for the whole crew -- and the day finally came! Let's just say we were not disappointed.
Ratatouille
Are you growing a garden this summer? From what we're hearing, a lot of people are experimenting with growing their own food for the first time during this pandemic. We love to hear garden stories; let us know what you're growing, and what you're doing with it in the kitchen! If you've been wanting to grow a garden but aren't quite sure how to get started, we have a new video on Patreon explaining a simple technique for converting a patch of lawn into a garden using all free materials.
Marta, one of our farm managers, gives a demo of a classic soil building technique

At this time in past years, we'd be gearing up to host our 2-week fall Permaculture Design Course at Quail Springs. This year is, however, not like other years (if you hadn't already noticed.) Instead, we're busy developing an online version of our flagship program. It's different, and we're going to miss having the PDC class out here in November, but we're excited about the potential to reach people we haven't been able to reach in the past, and for the chance to continue offering permaculture education even when it's not possible to gather in person.

We've been filming sessions with our core teachers, and we'll be spending the fall putting the final touches on the course experience. Stay tuned for more details, but the plan is to launch the course in March 2021. Reply to this email if you want to be added to the waiting list and be first to know when it's open for registration.

Online PDC
Brenton Kelly teaching a lesson on compost for our upcoming online PDC

Quail Springs is producing the online PDC in collaboration with the team at Commune. We're so grateful for their generosity in sharing their talent and expertise in online course production with us, and for so gracefully navigating the challenge of filming during a pandemic. Quail Springs also received a Small Capacity Building grant from the Santa Barbara Foundation specifically to help us develop an online version of our PDC -- deep thanks to the Foundation for the ongoing support!

We've been able to expand our watershed education and outreach work in the valley recently, thanks to a grant from the Department of Water Resources, by way of the Cuyama Community Services District. Along with a series of educational videos, infographics, field trips and botanical drawing classes to raise awareness of watershed health and watershed issues, this grant paid for a beautiful public mural on the outside of the Family Resource Center in New Cuyama, based on the infographic below (Water Cycle of the Cuyama Valley). Check it out next time you're in New Cuyama!

Cuyama Valley
This infographic was designed by Brenton Kelly and artist Betty Seaman
Also in New Cuyama, Molly and Brendan continue to meet with the Cuyama Youth Leaders with a focus on encouraging civic engagement. Monthly gatherings have changed a bit since Covid, but the group continues to meet once a month in a socially distanced way. This youth mentorship work is funded by a grant from the FUND for Santa Barbara -- big thanks to the FUND for your support!
Cuyama Youth Leaders
Youth doing an outdoor awareness activity outside with Brendan, a Quail Springs mentor
Back at Quail Springs, we've been working with Ventura County to legally permit our cob buildings. We are blessed with a network of skilled friends and collaborators who have been helping us to navigate complicated codes and make detailed architectural drawings (see drawings of one of our cob houses, The Farmhouse, below).
Cob Farmhouse

The staff at the County office have also been extremely gracious in guiding us as we try to find the best way to fit our square peg into a round hole. Wish us luck!

There have been some very heartening developments in the past year that we hope will act as a tailwind in this effort to permit our earthen buildings, not the least of which being the adoption of the Cob Code Appendix in the International Residential Code for 2021! Read more about this good news, what it means in practice, and the next steps toward making cob building accessible to all in this blog post.

Speaking of cob buildings, have you seen our sweet little Farmhouse (featured in the drawings above)? Check out the virtual tour below, and visit the Quail Springs Patreon for Part Two, where Sasha gives a tour of the house's special features including the rocket stove, earthen floor, and glass bottle details.

Sasha gives us an overview of natural building and how this farm house was built

As summer comes to a close, we're wishing you bountiful harvests, good health, and meaningful connection with people you love. Speaking of connection, we so enjoy hearing from you — please reach out and let us know how you're doing!

In gratitude for water, fruits, vegetables, and each other,
All of us at Quail Springs

summer harvest footer

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Cob Code Approved for the 2021 IRC https://www.quailsprings.org/cob-code-approved/ https://www.quailsprings.org/cob-code-approved/#comments Mon, 27 Jul 2020 02:24:09 +0000 https://www.quailsprings.org/?p=13466 For the first time, a Cob Construction Appendix has been approved for inclusion in the International Residential Code for building codes in the US and other countries.

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Article reposted from Cob Research Institute
For the first time, a Cob Construction Appendix has been approved for inclusion in the International Residential Code for building codes in the United States and a number of other countries.

What is Cob?

Also known as “monolithic adobe,” cob is an ancient method of earthen construction, used for thousands of years around the world in regions including Britain, Northern Europe, the Middle East, West Africa, China, and the Southwestern United States. A stiff mixture of clay-soil, straw, water and usually sand is placed in layers to create walls that can support a roof with no need for structural posts. When properly designed, constructed, and maintained, cob homes have proven to last many centuries. Embraced as environmentally friendly, non-toxic, low cost, easy to learn, and artistically inspirational, cob construction has undergone a revival in the United States and around the world since the mid-1990s. However, because there has been no building code for cob, it has been difficult or impossible to obtain permits for cob buildings in most parts of the United States. With the approval of a model cob code this will change, creating the possibility for legal cob construction throughout the US and beyond.
Cob cottage in Devon, England
Two-Story cob cottage in Devon, England, built in the 1400's
Modern cob home in Devon, England
Modern cob house built in 1990's, Devon, England

What is this new Cob Code?

The new code was developed as a public service by the non-profit Cob Research Institute (CRI), the result of collaboration by dozens of individuals and years of research and testing at several universities and laboratories. The entire cob code and its supporting documents can be found on the CRI website. It will be published in August of 2020 as an appendix to the 2021 International Residential Code. The IRC is revised on a triennial cycle, and anyone can submit proposed modifications. In January 2019, CRI submitted its proposed cob code and in May testified in its support before the IRC Committee. The code was initially disapproved by the committee, citing the lack of testing to support the claim of a one-hour fire rating. The CRI team removed the fire rating and re-submitted the proposal in the Public Comment second phase of this code development cycle.

On October 26, 2019, at the IRC Public Comment Hearings in Las Vegas, CRI’s revised code proposal was voted on by ICC voting members in attendance (mainly building and fire officials). The proposal received an overwhelming 93 votes in favor to 6 against, and later garnered the support of at least two-thirds of participating ICC members in an on-line ballot, leading to its official inclusion in the 2021 IRC as Appendix U: Cob Construction (Monolithic Adobe).

While the IRC is a model building code with no legal standing of its own, it is used in most of the United States as the basis for building codes for one-and two-family dwellings, townhouses, and accessory structures. It becomes enforceable through adoption by a governmental jurisdiction such as a state, county or city. State and local jurisdictions have their own schedules for revising and adopting building regulations, typically requiring at least another year or two before new codes are adopted. For example, the 2019 California Residential Code, based on the 2018 IRC, went into effect on January 1, 2020. Check with your local building department or the agency that oversees code adoption in your state to find out when changes based on the 2021 IRC will be enacted in your location.

Furthermore, appendices to the IRC are expressly optional. Unlike the main body of the code, each appendix must be specifically adopted by a jurisdiction to become a part of its building regulations. The public can influence this process by expressing a need for such a code to their local building department or overseeing state agencies. Other natural building systems, including strawbale and light straw-clay, have undergone the same process, first becoming appendices to the IRC, and then being adopted into state or local building codes. For example, IRC Appendix S: Strawbale Construction was approved as part of the 2015 IRC and has since been adopted by at least six states and nine city or county jurisdictions.

Even before the cob code is adopted for your location, it could still help you obtain a permit for your cob building project. All building codes contain a provision called Alternative Methods and Materials Request (AMMR), which allows approval of building systems not included in the code if it can be demonstrated to the building official’s satisfaction that the alternative is “at least equivalent of that prescribed.” To date most permitted cob buildings in the US have used this approach, but the process of compiling the evidence needed to support the permit application is often arduous. The publication of Appendix U should go a long way towards reassuring officials that cob buildings can be a safe and reasonable alternative. Even before adoption, Appendix U can be proposed to a local building department for use on a project basis.

Cob construction in Berkeley, California
First permitted cob structure in Berkeley, California - under construction in 2017 and completed

How the code effort began

The Cob Research Institute is a non-profit organization started in 2008 with the mission “to make cob legally accessible to all who wish to build with it.” It was founded by Bay Area architect John Fordice, who fell in love with cob after attending a hands-on cob building workshop in 1996. The class was led by by Ianto Evans of the Cob Cottage Company, the first group to reintroduce cob construction to North America in the 20th Century. Frustrated by the difficulty of obtaining legal permission for cob buildings, Fordice passed the hat at a Natural Building Colloquium and raised enough money to file for official non-profit status. He assembled a volunteer Board of Directors and began combing through the international literature on the engineering and regulation of earthen buildings, while outlining the necessary testing and other steps towards approval of a cob code.

In 2013, CRI Board members Massey Burke and Anthony Dente, PE of Verdant Structural Engineers collaborated with engineering faculty and students at the University of San Francisco to determine the physical properties such as compressive strength and modulus of rupture of cob mixes with varying amounts and lengths of straw. This led to a series of other research collaborations. In 2018, CRI worked with Santa Clara University to construct four full-size cob wall panels with varying kinds of internal reinforcement, ranging from straw-only to a rebar grid similar to those used to reinforce concrete walls. The panels were attached to a testing frame that applied force to the tops of the walls in back-and-forth cycles that simulate the effects of earthquakes. The testing of these walls under laboratory conditions, along with other testing, gave civil engineer Dente the data he needed to write the structural sections of Appendix U.

California cob testing
Santa Clara University in-plane reverse cyclic testing (left) and Cal Poly University out-of-plane testing (right)
Another key member of CRI’s team is Bay Area architect Martin Hammer. Hammer is a long-time ecological building advocate who has been involved with code-writing efforts for decades. He was the primary author of IRC Appendix R: Light Straw-Clay Construction and IRC Appendix S: Strawbale Construction, among others. His familiarity with the ICC process and personnel, along with that of colleague David Eisenberg, were critical factors in the success of this endeavor. The team also solicited input from over a dozen experienced cob builders, six civil engineers, and four architects, including Graeme North, chair of the committee that developed the seminal New Zealand Standard for Earth Buildings. The New Zealand Standards are among several earthen building codes and standards that also informed Appendix U.

Further testing is still needed

Although the adoption of Appendix U is a major accomplishment for CRI, the group has its future work cut out for it. The team plans to improve the code in future IRC cycles to make it more useful to designers, builders and homeowners in more diverse geological and climatic areas. The highest priorities for continued testing and research include fire resistance, thermal performance, and additional reinforcement options.

The rising frequency and intensity of wildfires that have devastated Australia and western US states in recent years have brought increasing scrutiny to the fire safety of our homes and communities. Earthen building materials could provide part of the solution. In bushfire-prone Australia, earthen walls have been classified along with masonry and poured concrete as the most fire-resistant building techniques known. Although cob is so fireproof that it is commonly used to build fireplaces and wood-fired ovens, the code approval process requires testing to a national standard by a certified laboratory in order for a building system to receive a fire-resistance rating. CRI is currently collaborating with Quail Springs of Southern California to procure the testing required to demonstrate a one-hour or greater fire rating, which would allow cob to be used close to property lines (where it could help stop the spread of fires) and as a common wall between residential units.

One of the most significant remaining obstacles to the legal construction of cob is complying with the energy conservation requirements of the IRC (or your state’s energy code). A building’s thermal performance depends on both the mass and thermal resistance (insulation value) of its thermal envelope, in the context of the local climate; energy codes take all of these factors into account. Cob walls have high thermal mass, which is very beneficial in warm climates or seasons, but low thermal resistance, which is especially important in cold climates or seasons. Most energy codes consider a cob wall a “mass wall” like concrete block, brick, or rammed earth, which reduces the requirement for thermal resistance. But even in warm climates, it is difficult for cob walls to comply without adding some type of insulation. For example, California’s energy code requires that an exterior mass wall in Los Angeles have a minimum insulation value of R-8. The cob samples CRI had tested by Intertek Laboratories yielded an R-value of just 0.22 per inch. With that R-value, a cob building in L.A. would need walls 36 inches thick in order to pass the energy code. This is about twice as thick as common cob building practice in North America and could cause structural concerns in high seismic zones.

To address this issue, CRI has begun a project to test both the structural and thermal properties of lower density cob mixes made by substituting lightweight aggregate such as crushed pumice for the sand, and by increasing the straw content. Even these measures will be insufficient in colder regions. A research project called CobBauge, based at the University of Plymouth, England, has been devising ways to insulate cob walls by wrapping them with lighter mixes of clay and natural fibers including hemp and straw. Further research and testing in this arena will be critical to enable cob homes to be built both legally and efficiently across North America and other temperate regions.

Cobbauge
The EU-funded CobBauge project aims to develop composite earthen walls with both good insulation and structural qualities.

Further testing is still needed

Another concern is cob’s performance in earthquakes. The IRC divides the United States into Seismic Design Categories (SDC) A through F, based on the likelihood and severity of earthquakes in each locale. Appendix U states that any cob building outside of SDC's A, B and C requires an engineered structural design, typically by a licensed civil engineer. The full-scale testing done with Santa Clara University, along with similar tests in collaboration with California Polytechnic State University, Quail Springs, and Oasis Design, yielded data about the strength of several reinforcement methods that are summarized in tables in the code. The test walls employed a combination of reinforcing strategies which included straw, with and without steel bar and/or steel mesh to strengthen the wall against seismic and wind lateral loads. Other reinforcing combinations, materials and strategies could be tested, including the use of bamboo, fiberglass, basalt fiber and/or plastic mesh and bars, to increase the range of options available to builders and designers. Further testing can also increase our understanding of proper connections between cob walls and foundations and roof assemblies.

Plans to promote the Cob Code

In addition to further testing, CRI plans to advocate for the adoption of Appendix U by as many building jurisdictions as possible. As evidenced by the ICC vote last October, building officials have shown remarkable enthusiasm for the cob code, presumably motivated by their desire for environmentally responsible and fire-safe building methods. Still, the building regulatory community is understandably conservative, as it is charged with ensuring building safety, and a great deal of education and advocacy will be necessary to bring the code into widespread use.

CRI also intends to create an educational guide for builders who wish to use the code. Building codes can be challenging to interpret, and many people who are drawn to natural building methods lack experience deciphering the technical language. Towards that end, the CRI team is currently drafting the official commentary to be published along with Appendix U next year. This commentary will provide useful background information to help designers, builders and building officials alike understand the intent of the code and how to use it correctly. Appendix U: Cob Construction (Monolithic Adobe) will be an evolving resource for promoting best cob building practices, hopefully encouraging ever greater acceptance of this treasured and time-tested building method.

CRI needs your support

The research, testing, and writing of this Cob Construction Appendix, and its submittal to the ICC for approval have been an expensive undertaking. Although our work has been generously supported through crowdfunding and other donations, as well as by an enormous volunteer effort, the expense of CRI’s successful code effort has greatly exceeded fundraising to date. In order to continue our work, CRI needs your support. If you recognize the value of building with cob, please visit CRI and join with them to make cob safe and accessible to everyone.
Visit CRI Today

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Black Lives Matter – A Message of Solidarity https://www.quailsprings.org/black-lives-matter/ https://www.quailsprings.org/black-lives-matter/#respond Thu, 04 Jun 2020 09:35:02 +0000 https://www.quailsprings.org/?p=13250 Quail Springs issues a message of solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement and we recognize our responsibility to act now.

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Quail Springs acknowledges that U.S. structures of governance enable police violence against black and brown people at a disproportionately high rate. We stand in solidarity with the number of Black Lives Matter protests that are happening in large cities across the United States and the world to oppose these systems of oppression and police violence.

We are an environmental organization located on unceded Chumash territory that has reaped advantages from a nationwide history of systematic racism. In particular, as an environmental organization focused on food, housing, and water justice, we recognize the history of black enslavement for industry and agriculture, and the dispossession of indigenous peoples and black folks of land and resources. This is a central part of history in the US that carries forward today and must be addressed in the current context.

We recognize our responsibility to use our platform to bring attention to the injustices that have occurred historically and continue to occur in the United States as well as around the world. No agriculture or society is sustainable without justice. Members of our community, specifically white community members, are pooling funds to donate to black-led movements against racism. We encourage others, specifically white people, to join us in donating what you can. Black Lives Matter.


Resources & Places to Donate

Farming While Black - Black Lives Matter
Some of our most cherished sustainable farming practices have roots in African wisdom. Yet, discrimination and violence against African-American farmers has led to their decline from 14 percent of all growers in 1920 to less than 2 percent today, with a corresponding loss of over 14 million acres of land. Further, Black communities suffer disproportionately from illnesses related to lack of access to fresh food and healthy natural ecosystems.

… Read More

Black Visions Collective - Black Lives Matter
Since 2017, Black Visions Collective, has been putting into practice the lessons learned from organizations before us in order to shape a political home for Black people across Minnesota. We aim to center our work in healing and transformative justice principles, intentionally develop our organizations core “DNA” to ensure sustainability, and develop Minnesota’s emerging Black leadership to lead powerful campaigns.

… Read More

Reclaim The Block - Black Lives Matter
Reclaim the Block began in 2018 and organizes Minneapolis community and city council members to move money from the police department into other areas of the city’s budget that truly promote community health and safety. We believe health, safety and resiliency exist without police of any kind. We organize around policies that strengthen community-led safety initiatives and reduce reliance on police departments.

… Read More

Rachel Cargle - Black Lives Matter
Rachel Cargle is a public academic, writer, and lecturer. Her activism and academic work are rooted in providing intellectual discourse, tools, and resources that explore the intersection of race and womanhood. Her social media platforms boast a community of over 315k where Rachel guides conversations, encourages critical thinking and nurtures meaningful engagement with people all over the world.

… Read More

SURJ - Black Lives Matter
SURJ is a national network of groups and individuals working to undermine white supremacy and to work toward racial justice. Through community organizing, mobilizing, and education, SURJ moves white people to act as part of a multi-racial majority for justice with passion and accountability. We work to connect people across the country while supporting and collaborating with local and national racial justice organizing efforts.

… Read More

Anti-Racist Resource Guide
This document was created to be used as a resource for anyone looking to broaden their understanding of anti-racism and get involved to combat racism, specifically as it relates to anti-Blackness and police violence. Within this guide, please find a variety of resources to explore practical ways to understand, explain, and solve seemingly intractable problems of racial inequity, white supremacy, police violence, and injustice.

… Read More

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Cuyama Groundwater Update https://www.quailsprings.org/cuyama-groundwater-update/ https://www.quailsprings.org/cuyama-groundwater-update/#comments Tue, 05 May 2020 03:56:15 +0000 https://www.quailsprings.org/?p=12884 When electricity was first made available in the Cuyama Valley in the first half of last century, pumps began extracting the seemingly abundant groundwater in this otherwise dry high desert environment. All the formal hydrologic reports that have been researched and published on the basin suggest the imbalance was apparent within a decade. Groundwater extraction has increased

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by Brenton Kelly

When electricity was first made available in the Cuyama Valley in the first half of last century, pumps began extracting the seemingly abundant groundwater in this otherwise dry high desert environment. All the formal hydrologic reports that have been researched and published on the basin suggest the imbalance was apparent within a decade. Groundwater extraction has increased over the years without any self-regulating restrictions and now almost three times as much water is removed than is naturally replenished each year. Today Cuyama is identified as critically over drafted and is a high priority for regulatory oversight

In 2014, the California legislature enacted the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA) in response to the continued overdraft of California’s groundwater resources. SGMA requires preparation of a Groundwater Sustainability Plan (GSP) to address measures necessary to attain sustainability. Sustainability is generally defined as long-term reliability of groundwater supply, and the absence of any undesirable results. In 2017, in response to SGMA, the Cuyama Basin Groundwater Sustainability Agency (CBGSA) was established to develop a GSP. Quail Springs staff Brenton Kelly was appointed to the Standing Advisory Committee to represent local stakeholders and remains deep in the weeds of local hydrogeological regulation.

After more than two years of chapter by chapter review and comments at the local level, the CBGSA adopted and submitted a GSP to the California Department of Water Resources (DWR). The Plan is currently open for an extended public comment period ending May, 15. 2020. The public can view all GSPs and make comments here. The Plan attempts to eliminate all undesirable results associated with groundwater extraction by the year 2040. Some small projects are proposed to augment natural recharge (cloud-seeding & storm water diversion with infiltration ponds), but most of the correction will have to come from pumping reductions in the central part of the valley.

A historical average of 60 Thousand Acre Feet (TAF) of water has been extracted each year, but only 22 TAF is considered the Sustainable Yield from the natural recharge of rain and snow.

If this plan is successfully implemented it will be a major disruption to all major pumpers who have been engaged in the excessive and unregulated extraction that has been dewatering the aquifer for the last half a century. In the next 10 to 20 years, the face of agriculture in the center of this valley will have to change and that will be very challenging for the property owners and their operations. The question remains as to whether the big operations will cooperate with implantation or challenge the GSP in court.
As one of my very first mentors in issues of sustainability once wrote:

Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing’s ever going to change, it’s not!
The Lorax

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We Intend to Be Here After This Storm Passes https://www.quailsprings.org/after-this-storm-passes/ https://www.quailsprings.org/after-this-storm-passes/#comments Sun, 19 Apr 2020 04:17:06 +0000 https://www.quailsprings.org/?p=12759 We hope that this post finds you well today. We're thinking of our extended community out there, sheltering in place in so many different ways. We've been enjoying hearing your stories of how you're spending your days, and look forward to more. Thankfully, all of us on the land at Quail Springs are healthy and well at this time. As an ...

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We hope that this post finds you well today. We're thinking of our extended community out there, sheltering in place in so many different ways. We've been enjoying hearing your stories of how you're spending your days, and look forward to more.

Thankfully, all of us on the land at Quail Springs are healthy and well at this time. As an organization, however, we are facing substantial financial losses as a result of this pandemic. Through the years we have offered powerful programming and we've taken pride in the fact that we relied on this programming as our main source of income. Over the past month, everything has changed. We are asking for your help to meet our basic operational needs to sustain us through this year. We intend to make it through this turbulent time with an ever-stronger resolve to continue our leadership in the fields of ecological education, groundwater advocacy, natural building research and advocacy, and high desert regenerative agriculture.

We need the support of our larger community. We need your support.

We need to raise $230,000  to carry us through this year.  If we are unable to meet our goal, we will have to cut much of our natural building and watershed advocacy work, and will not be able to keep all of our core staff.
If you are in a position to give at this time, it would make all the difference.
Donate Today

We are doing all that we can to ensure that Quail Springs is able to survive through this year and beyond.

We have the reserves to carry us through to the end of June. Our baseline operational capital needs are $30,000 per month. We have applied for the Paycheck Protection Program through our local bank and we are hopeful that this will cover our staffing costs for two months without pay cuts or layoffs. We are also in the process of applying for multiple federal and private grants that would help bridge the gap, and we are pursuing other emergency funding options.

This time calls on all of us to build social and ecological resilience. Our work is needed now more than ever. We need each other now more than ever.

We owe our organizational resilience to you, our extended community. We have made it this far because of your support in the past, and we are forever grateful to all of you. We owe our ecological resilience to this land, the spring water, and the healthy soil we have been building for the past 15 years.

Like so many organizations during this time, we are exploring new and creative ways to deliver our programming. We intend to be here when this storm passes, and we have faith that you will help us if you can. And we recognize that nearly all organizations and individuals are adversely impacted by this pandemic, and we completely understand if you are unable to give. We welcome your ideas and assistance in ways that feel possible for you. Please do not hesitate to reach out; we would love to hear from you.

In Gratitude,
Sarah Brooks & Daniel Aaron Francis
Co-Executive Directors

Support Quail Springs

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