When the BioMass Hits the Wind Turbine
Society & Culture
Early settlers of America found the most comfortable homes were often similar to those inhabited by the Native Americans who had survived in this climate for thousands of years.
Early residents of Philadelphia built cave homes along the Delaware River - but where forced to abandon them when William Penn decided they were not "British" enough.
Homes made of sod, grass, mud, and yes - even log cabins dotted the landscape. So what did the early pioneers build and why? And why did it all change?
Join Annie and Jay Warmke of Blue Rock Station for a discussion of dead white scientists and their continuing impact on the realities of sustainable living.
081 - Becoming an Annoying Consumer
020 - Sustaining Optimism
018 - Is the World Sustainable?
015 - Why We Built an Earthship
012 - Making a Solar Generator
011 - Politics of Sustainability
010 - Straw Bale Construction
006 - Solar Energy (harvesting the Sun)
007 - Philosophy of Enough (Voluntary Simplicity)
008 - Living with Zero Utilities
009 - Living in an Age of Instability (You Will be Green)
001 - Living in an Earthship (Greatest Hits Rebroadcast)
005 - The End of the Age of Fossil Fuels (Greatest Hits Rebroadcast)
080 - The Business of Solar
003 - The Economics of Happiness (Greatest Hits Rebroadcast)
079 - Early Solar Pioneers
078 - Fake Meat
077 - Who Revived the Electric Car?
076 - Changing our Relationship with the Land
075 - Where have all the Birds Gone?
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Dairyland Frights
The Passionistas Project Podcast
Just Dumb Enough Podcast
Stuff You Should Know
Timcast IRL