Nicole Foss comes to Guildford!

We’re co-hosting a special event on the 9th of March, with an international guest speaker!

Transition Town Guildford in partnership with Permaculturewest & Ecoburbia are pleased to host Nicole Foss, as part of her Australia and New Zealand tour, “Making Sense of Economic Decline in an Age of Peak Oil”.

After years of writing about peak oil and finance as editor of The Oil Drum, Ms Foss is now co-editor of The Automatic Earth. Ms Foss is academically well qualified, with multiple degrees in biology, neuroscience, psychology, international law, and air and water pollution.

On this tour Nicole will be talking about what’s coming, why it’s coming, what we can do about it and why it’s so vital to act now. Most importantly though, she will prepare people to work with their communities to create a brighter (though lower energy) future.

Nicole has been energizing audiences over East and was interviewed for Life Matters on Radio National

Please come along for an evening of topical information and lively discussion with Nicole at:

St Matthew’s hall, Stirling Square, Guildford 

Friday 9th March

Time: 5:45 for 6 pm start, finishes at 8 pm

Cost: $10 (to cover Nicole’s tour & venue hire)

RSVP: kristylee@permaculturewest.org.au

Nicole is also speaking in Perth, Fremantle and down south, see the Facebook page for further details of her tour

Put it in your diary, we hope you can make it!

Nicole Foss Flyer PDF

Clean Up Aus Day

TTG are doing Clean Up Australia Day again this year

Please come down and help us tidy up the foreshore around the Helena river bridge.

When: Sunday 4th March

Where: Meet at Guildford Primary school, corner of Johnson and Helena

Time: 9 – 11 am

Don’t forget to wear old clothes and bring a hat and water. We’ll have some gloves, but please bring your own if you have some.

You can sign up on the Aus Day site 

See you there!

The Transition Companion

The publication of The Transition Handbook in 2008 facilitated the explosion of transition initiatives all around the World. Indeed, TT Guildford was born out of Rod and I reading the handbook.

Now Rob Hopkins has published a new book “The Transition Companion: making your community more resilient in uncertain times”.

As Rob says, the book aims to address the question:

“What would it look like if the best responses to peak oil and climate change came not from committees and Acts of Parliament, but from you and me and the people around us?”

The book is split into three parts. The first is a shortened and updated version from the previous book outlining the challenges we are facing (Peak Oil and Climate Change). The second part is a quick look at what the Transition response can look like, told through four Transition town examples.

While the handbook was more prescriptive, outlining the series of steps involved in setting up the first succesful transition towns, for others to follow. This book, as the title says, is a Companion. It recognises that transition initiatives will develop differently in every place, so instead aims to provide ‘tools’ and ‘ingredients’ to facilitate this. Therefore, the final part, which constitutes the majority of the book, is a list of ‘ingredients’ and ‘tools’ for success. There are entries on topics from Awareness raising to running meetings, to visioning, and council policies. What’s great is that these are succinct, 2-3 pages, and grouped into broad themes. There’s also lots of links and suggestions between topics, so it’s easy to jump in and out.

I especially love the “Cheerful Disclaimer” at the start of the book:

“Transition is not a known quantity. We truly don’t know if Transition will work. It is a social experiment on a massive scale. What we are convinced of is this:

  • If we wait for the governments, it’ll be too little, too late.
  • If we act as individuals, it’ll be too little
  • But if we act as communities, it might just be enough, just in time.”

I think this captures the part of the essence of Transition perfectly; that it is grounded in the challenging reality we face, but also hopeful and optimistic for what we can d0!

The first book was fantastic, and the second looks even better, so I highly recommend a look. A copy should be in the Guildford library soon…..

Rob has a blog post introducing the book here