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Practical Solarpunk

@practicalsolarpunk

Living solarpunk right the fuck now. There are other great blogs for theory and aesthetic. This blog is all about the practical. What can we do now and in the near future to live and make the world more solarpunk?

Citizen science is a powerful tool for involving more people in research. By influencing policy, it is transforming conservation at global, national and local levels.

Citizen science actively encourages non-scientists to be a part of the scientific research process. Sometimes the terminology gets confusing. We say “non-scientists” but through taking part in citizen science projects, people become scientists – they’re just not professionally involved in the research.

It’s also worth noting that the “citizen” in citizen science is completely unrelated to ideas of national citizenship.

Put simply, it’s science by the people for the people.

Citizen scientists can take part in every stage of the research process. Depending on the project, participants can write the research questions, choose the methods, collect the data, analyse and interpret the results, and share the research as widely as possible. By broadening people’s understanding of scientific problems and solutions, citizen science can act as a powerful catalyst for change.

It is already making an impact across lots of disciplines, including conservation, by addressing barriers to policy change such as lack of evidence and low levels of public engagement and input. While it’s not yet common for citizen science to directly influence policy, in our research we’ve seen how citizen science can shape policy at every scale: through promoting policy, monitoring progress towards policy or advocating for policy enforcement.

At a local level, citizen science can influence policy and transform conservation science. The clean air coalition of western New York is a group of citizens concerned about smells and smoke, and their connection to chronic health problems in the community. The group collected samples in 2004 to determine what was in the air and presented this data to the New York Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) and the US Environmental Protection Agency.

The City Nature Challenge 2025 is due to kick off in a few weeks, April 25-28, a one-weekend challenge to go out and observe and record as many living, wild things as possible. As a researcher recently pointed out to me, we are creating data points. We are providing hard evidence that this species was right there, on this day. There literally aren't enough scientists in the world to do this kind of research, let alone the funding. And who knows, maybe you'll discover a new species!

All you need is an iNaturalist account accessible through an app or browser, a camera, and access to the world we live in.

I challenge each of you to check your own cities to see if they are participating, or join the global challenge in the link. Take your camera and go outside - look at bugs and plants and animals and mold and fungus. Look at the lichen growing on the fence you pass everyday - what kind is it? What kind of ants are carrying the crumbs away at the picnic? What kind of squirrel is making that racket up in the tree? Pick a plant you walk past everyday, a weed or grass, something you've dismissed a thousand times - what is it?

Get curious. Get involved.

Book Club

What is a book related to solarpunk that has made you feel like a different person after reading it? That changed the way you looked at an issue, that made you reevaluate everything you knew about a topic, that made you walk around in a daze as thoughts swirled around your head too fast to make sense of? (That last one might just be me)

Let's talk about them! I'll go first. Walkable Cities: How downtown can save America, one step at a time, by Jeff Speck.

I'm actually not even all the way through it yet, but it's making me want to pack up and move to a city, when I have always been rather adamant that I never want to live in that populated of an area, after having lived rural for so much of my life. The idea of not having to own a car or drive one is incredibly appealing, but the evidence provided about the impacts of so many of us having personal vehicles is damning. The fact that so many cities are intentionally designed for cars, at the literal monetary expense of pedestrians, is absurd. The amount of pollution that is produced, the dependence on gas, the fact that most of the money spent on cars and fuel goes straight out of the community and to line the pockets of the rich is infuriating. Electric and hybrid cars don't solve these problems.

So this book is changing my life. What book should I read next that will change it more?

@trextoebeans: Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer actually changed the course of my life. I can also highly recommend Archepelago of Hope by Gleb Raygorodetsky, A World Without Soil by Jo Handelsman, Entangled Life by Merlin Sheldrake, and Wilder by Millie Kerr

Archipelago of Hope, A World Without Soil, and Wilder are all ones I haven't heard of, adding them to my list!

@magicalstrangerbread: This doesn't answer your question, but one huge advantage of living somewhere that most cities have centuries-old origins is that they were built to be walkable because that was the only option. The US's great tragedy is that so much of it was built in an era of cheap gasoline before the downsides of car-dependency were understood. Not sure what the solution is, but 'business as usual' ain't it

Yeah, it's gonna be complicated to fix cities to make them more livable and walkable. From what I've read, though, it was less because of cheap gas and more because of a bunch of companies (GM, Ford, Firestone, to name a few) were really pushing for everyone to buy their products. They bought up public transportation and then shut it down, basically forcing the general population to buy cars. That combined with zoning laws and plenty of discrimination results in the mess we have today.

@speltcake: For fiction: Always Coming Home by Ursula K. Le Guin, one of the very rare true envisionings of solarpunk imho. A Deadly Education by Naomi Novik, which is both fun to read and provides the extremely useful concept of mana vs. malia, applicable to nearly every facet of human endeavor. And for nonfiction: What Your Food Ate, which is for if you've ever thought to yourself, "yeah, farming and food is cool and all, but I'd like to know more about it at the biochemical flows level."

I haven't read Always Coming Home yet, I'll have to get on that! Ursula K. Le Guin is an amazing writer, I really enjoy her stuff. Naomi Novik sounds familiar, but I haven't read A Deadly Education. I'm not sure which What Your Food Ate you're referring to - the one by Jay Rayner, or the one by David Montgomery? Both look interesting and they're both going on my list lol

Book Club

What is a book related to solarpunk that has made you feel like a different person after reading it? That changed the way you looked at an issue, that made you reevaluate everything you knew about a topic, that made you walk around in a daze as thoughts swirled around your head too fast to make sense of? (That last one might just be me)

Let's talk about them! I'll go first. Walkable Cities: How downtown can save America, one step at a time, by Jeff Speck.

I'm actually not even all the way through it yet, but it's making me want to pack up and move to a city, when I have always been rather adamant that I never want to live in that populated of an area, after having lived rural for so much of my life. The idea of not having to own a car or drive one is incredibly appealing, but the evidence provided about the impacts of so many of us having personal vehicles is damning. The fact that so many cities are intentionally designed for cars, at the literal monetary expense of pedestrians, is absurd. The amount of pollution that is produced, the dependence on gas, the fact that most of the money spent on cars and fuel goes straight out of the community and to line the pockets of the rich is infuriating. Electric and hybrid cars don't solve these problems.

So this book is changing my life. What book should I read next that will change it more?

@plainsborn: becky chambers! a psalm for the wild build a prayer for the crown-shy

Yes!! This blog, as well as many of the posts I see, are dedicated solarpunk in the here in now. It's so important to dream though, of what the world could be like, and A Psalm for the Wildbuilt really changed how I did that. Our lives could be so good, couldn't they?

@spoiledmilk2012: braiding sweet grass

Another good one! I borrowed the audiobook from the library a few years ago, finished it, and promptly bought a copy for me and another for my mom. What stuck with me is how hopeful it is. So many books about the environment and Indigenous people in the US are -rightfully and understandably - bleak, to say the least. Wall-Kimmerer didn't shy away from the facts of the matter, but where other books can feel defeated and immobilizing, I walked away from that book ready to fix things.

Everything for Everyone: An Oral History of the New York Commune, 2052–2072 by M.E. O'Brien and Eman Abdelhadi

I haven't heard of this one before, I'm adding it to my to-read list right now. Thanks for the recc!

I've got a few recommendations that kinda fit? They give me hope for the future and show me what might be possible.

Dark Emu - Bruce Pascoe

Dark Emu looks a lot more to the past than the future, but a lot of what it talks about is highly relevant to the future of farming, food production, and life in an Australian future. It's a really good overview of a lot of things, and I think that it's interesting information no matter where you are in the world.

This is my number one recommendation for anyone who works in healthcare. It presents a beautiful view of what healthcare could look like for LGBTQ+ people, but so many of the ideas are just solid, patient-centred care.

Sometimes changing how we approach the future and implementing change means we need to look after ourselves, and remembering why we fight. This is a book that helped give me a lot of hope when I needed it.

There are parts of this book I don't agree with (we can't all just buy vintage garments and refuse to engage with modern clothes), but some of the ideas about mending, and clothing repair are really solid. It's also a practical book with a lot of tips and teaching people how to mend. If anyone has better books on the topic I'd love to hear about them!

The Last Girl Scout - Natalie Ironside

I joke that this book is political debate wrapped in a compelling story, but I've put it on this list for the world-building. The ways Ironside thinks about food production, building community and caring for each other are fantastic. There is a lot in this book that I think can serve people when it comes to thinking about community, and working together for shared goals, despite our differences. Trigger warnings for like absolutely everything though.

And one more that isn't a book (yet) but is an amazing webcomic - Runaway to the Stars. If you like Becky Chambers I reckon you'll love it!

The only one of these I've heard of is The Last Girl Scout, which is already on my to-read list, but I'm adding the rest! The Care We Dream Of sounds really interesting, I already put in a request for my library to acquire it.

@aspiringwarriorlibrarian: Locklands. It’s an odd one but it’s world of radical empathy sure made an impact

Added to the list!

@tam--lin Rutger Bregman's Humankind, and Solnit's A Hope In The Dark. Also Sheldrakes Entangled Life, in a way.

I've had my eye on Humankind for a while, I'll bump it up my list! Haven't heard of Hope in the Dark, but it sounds really good.

I've read Entangled Life, it's a fascinating read. If fungi are of interest to you, I read the intro to In Search of Mycotopia: Citizen Science, Fungi Fanatics, and the Untapped Potential of Mushrooms this morning and it sounds amazing - criticizing capitalism and the patriarchy before we've even made it to chapter one!

@fandom-and-random: ok this one might seem a little morbid, but The Smoke Gets In Your Eyes - Lessons From The Crematorium, by Caitlin Doughty (ask a mortician on youtube). an incredible memoir that asks questions about why our culture interacts with death so strangely, and answers with alternately sad, gross, and heartwarming stories from a career in the death industry

I've heard of Caitlin Doughty, but I didn't know she wrote a book! Adding that to my list.

@southernsolarpunk: #robin wall kimmerer's The Serviceberry!!! #as soon as I read it it shot it's way to the top of my solarpunk book recs #she talks a lot about the gift economy and the alienation of labor under capitalism #very good book please read it I will recommend it forever

Funny story, this has been sitting in my home, on my to-read pile, since January. My dad loaned me his copy to read and I just. Have not done that yet! It sounds really good, and Wall Kimmerer is a fantastic writer and storyteller.

Things to Do that Aren't Related to Growing Plants

This is my second post in a series I’ll be making on how to increase biodiversity on a budget! I’m not an expert--just an enthusiast--but I hope something you find here helps! 

Some of us just don’t have much luck when it comes to growing plants. Some of us simply want to aim for other ways to help that don’t involve putting on gardening gloves. Maybe you've already got a garden, but you want to do more. No problem! There’s a couple of options you can look into that’ll help attract wildlife in your area without even having to bring out any shovels!

Provide a Water Source

Oftentimes when I see ‘add a water source’ in informational articles about improving your backyard for wildlife, it’s almost always followed by an image of a gorgeous backyard pond with a waterfall and rock lining that looks expensive to set up, difficult to maintain, and overall just… not feasible for me. Arguably, not feasible for a lot of people. And that’s okay! There’s still ways to add water in your garden for all kinds of creatures to enjoy!

There’s tons of ways to create watering stations for insects like bees and butterflies. A self refilling dog bowl can work wonders! Add some stones into the receiving tray for insects to land on or use to climb out, and you’ve got a wonderful drinking spot for all kinds of insects! You can also fill a saucer or other dish with small stones and fill it, though it’ll likely need refilling daily or even several times a day during hot times. 

I've seen people online use all kinds of things to make water features. Some go with terra-cotta pots, pebbles, and a cheap pump to get a small and simple fountain. Others use old tires, clay, and a hole in the ground to create an in-ground mini pond system. If all else fails, even a bucket or watertight box with a few plants in it can do the trick--though do be wary of mosquitoes if the water isn’t moving. In situations like these, a solar-powered fountain pump or bubbler are great for keeping the water moving while still making it a drinking option for wildlife (it not even more appealing for some)--and these items can be obtained fairly cheap online!

Bird baths are an option as well--a classic way to provide for birds in your area, they can be easy to find online or in a gardening store! The only downside is that a good, quality bird bath can be pricey up-front. However, a nice stone bird bath should last a long time, be easy to clean and refill, and be enjoyed by many birds! I’ve also seen tutorials on how to make your own with quickcrete! Bird baths will be a welcome sight to birds, as they provide a space for them to drink and bathe to regulate the oils in their feathers for flight and insulation. Putting a stone in the middle will also help insects to escape if they fall in, and provide a place to perch so they can get their own drink. You’ll want to change the water and clean the baths regularly--as often as once a week, if you can manage it.

If possible, it’s highly encouraged to fill and refill water features with rainwater instead of tap water. Tap water is often treated, so instead of using hoses or indoor kitchen water, collecting some rainwater is a great alternative. Collecting rainwater can be as simple as leaving cups, bins, or pots outside for awhile.

Butterflies and other creatures will also drink from mud puddles. If you can maintain an area of damp soil mixed with a small amount of salt or wood ash, this can be fantastic for them! Some plants also excel at storing water within their leaves and flowers (bromeliads come to mind), making them an excellent habitat for amphibians as well as a drinking spot for insects and birds.

Bird Feeders and Bird Houses

Some of the fancy, decorated bird feeders are expensive, but others can be pretty low-cost--I got my bird feeder from Lowe’s for around 10 dollars, and a big bag of birdseed was around another 10 dollars and has lasted several refills! If you don’t mind occasionally buying more birdseed, a single birdfeeder can do a lot to attract and support local birds! If you’re handy, have some spare wood, and have or can borrow some tools, you may even be able to find instructions online to make your own feeder. You may not even need wood to do so! Even hummingbird feeders, I’ve found, are quick to attract them, as long as you keep them stocked up on fresh sugar water in the spring and summer!

An important note with bird feeders is that you have to make sure you can clean them regularly. Otherwise, they may become a vector for disease, and we want to avoid causing harm whenever possible. Also keep an ear out and track if there’s known outbreaks of bird diseases in your area. If local birding societies and scientists are advising you take your birdfeeders down for awhile, by all means, do it!

Bird houses are naturally paired with bird feeders as biodiversity promoters for backyard spaces, and it makes sense. Having bird houses suited to birds in your area promotes them to breed, raise their young, disperse seeds, and generally engage in your surrounding environment. Setting them up takes careful selection or construction, preparation, and some patience, but sooner or later you might get some little homemakers! Keep in mind, you will need to clean your birdhouses at least once a year (if not once per brood) to make sure they’re ready and safe for birds year after year--you wouldn’t want to promote disease and parasites, after all. But they could be a valuable option for your landscape, whether you purchase one or construct your own! 

Again, do make sure you're putting up the right kind of boxes for the right kinds of birds. Bluebird boxes are some I see sold most commonly, but in my area I believe they're not even all that common--a nesting box for cardinals or chickadees would be far more likely to see success here! And some birds don't even nest in boxes--robins and some other birds are more likely to use a nesting shelf, instead! Research what birds live in your area, take note of any you see around already, and pick a few target species to make homes for!

Solitary Bee Houses

A bee house or bee hotel is a fantastic way to support the solitary bees in your area! For a few dollars and some annual cleaning, you can buy a solitary bee house from most big box nurseries. Alternatively, you can make one at home, with an array of materials you may already have lying around! You can even make them so that they’ll benefit all kinds of insects, and not necessarily just bees.

Though you don’t even necessarily have to break out the hammer and nails, buy a ton of bricks, or borrow a staple gun. Making homes for tunneling bees can be as simple as drilling holes in a log and erecting it, or drilling holes in stumps and dead trees on your property. You might even attract some woodpeckers by doing this!

Providing Nesting Area

There are tons of different kinds of bees, and they all make different kinds of homes for themselves. Not all of them make big cavity hives like honey bees, or will utilize a solitary bee house. Bumblebees live in social hives underground, particularly in abandoned holes made by rodents--some others nest in abandoned bird nests, or cavities like hollow logs, spaces between rocks, compost piles, or unoccupied birdhouses. Borer, Ground, and Miner bees dig into bare, dry soil to create their nests. Sparsely-vegetated patches of soil in well-drained areas are great places to find them making their nests, so providing a similar habitat somewhere in the garden can encourage them to come! I do talk later in this document about mulching bare soil in a garden--however, leaving soil in sunny areas and south-facing slopes bare provides optimal ground nesting habitat. Some species prefer to nest at the base of plants, or loose sandy soil, or smooth-packed and flat bare ground. They’ve also been known to take advantage of soil piles, knocked over tree roots, wheel ruts in farm roads, baseball diamonds and golf course sand traps. You can create nesting ground by digging ditches or creating nesting mounds in well-drained, open, sunny areas with sandy or silty soil. However, artificially constructed ground nests may only have limited success. 

Providing Alternative Pollinator Foods

Nectar and pollen aren’t the only foods sought out by some pollinators! Some species of butterflies are known to flock to overripe fruit or honey water, so setting these out can be an excellent way to provide food to wildlife. You may want to be cautious about how you set these out, otherwise it can help other wildlife, like ants or raccoons. Butterflies may also drop by to visit a sponge in a dish of lightly salted water. 

Bat Houses and Boxes

Big or small, whether they support five bats or five hundred, making bat boxes and supporting local bats is a great way to boost biodiversity! Not only will they eat mosquitoes and other pest species, but you may also be able to use the guano (bat droppings) as fertilizer! Do be careful if you choose to do that though--I’ve never had the opportunity to, so do some research into how strong it is and use it accordingly.

Provide Passageway Points

If you want your area to be more accessible for creatures that can’t fly or climb fences, allowing or creating access points can be an excellent way to give them a way in and out. Holes in the bottom of walls or fences can be sheltered with plants to allow animals through. 

In a somewhat similar manner, if you’re adding a water fixture, it’s important to provide animals a way to get into and out of the pond--no way in, and they can’t use the water. No way out, and they may drown. Creating a naturalistic ramp out of wood beams or sticks, or stepped platforms out of bricks, stones, or logs can do the trick. 

Get or Keep Logs and Brush Piles

I’ve already mentioned logs a good handful of times so far in this post. To be used as access ramps, or as nesting areas for solitary bees. But they have value as much more than that! Logs on the ground provide shelter for all kinds of animals, especially depending on size--anything from mice, reptiles, and amphibians to things like turkey vultures and bears will use fallen logs as shelter. Inside of a decaying log, there’s a lot of humidity, so amphibians are big fans of them--meanwhile, the upper sides of them can be used as sunning platforms by things like lizards. Other animals can also use the insides of logs as nest sites and hiding places from predators too big to fit inside. Fungi, spiders, beetles, termites, ants, grubs, worms, snails, slugs, and likely much more can be found inside rotting logs, using the rotting wood as food sources or nesting places. They can then provide food for mammals, amphibians, reptiles, and birds. They can also be regarded as a landmark or territory marker as wildlife get more familiar with your space.

So how do you get logs for cheap? Try Chip Drop! I talk about them more in a future post, but you can mark saying that you’d like logs in your drop, so they’ll give you any they have! In fact, you may even get a drop faster if you're willing to accept some logs. You may also be able to approach arborists you see working in your area and ask for logs. There may also be local online listings for people selling logs for cheap, or just trying to get rid of them. If there’s land development going on near you, you may be able to snag logs from trees they cut down to make space. Do keep in mind, you don’t need to have huge gigantic logs laying around your property to make an impact--even small logs can help a lot.

If possible, creating and leaving brush piles on the edge of your property can be a great boost to biodiversity--even if you may not see the wildlife using it. They’ll provide shelter from weather and predators, and lower portions are cool and shady for creatures to avoid the hot sun. The upper layers can be used as perch sites and nest sites for song birds, while lower layers are resting sites for amphibians and reptiles, and escape sites for many mammals. As the material decays, they also attract insects, and as such they’ll attract insect-eating animals too. As more small animals find refuse in your brush pile, their predators will be attracted to them as well. Owls, hawks, foxes, and coyotes are known to visit brush piles to hunt. Making a brush pile can be as simple as piling branches and leaves into a mound, as big or as small as you want. You can even use tree stumps or old fence posts near the base, and keep stacking on plant trimmings and fallen branches. Do note that you don’t want to do this near anything like a fire pit.

Don't forget, with all of these, your mileage may vary for any variation of reasons, so don't worry if you can't take all of even any of these actions! Even just talking about them with other people may inspire someone else to put out a bat box, or leave a few logs out for wildlife!

That's the end of this post! My next post is gonna be about ways to get seeds and plants as cheaply as possible. For now, I hope this advice helps! Feel free to reply with any questions, success stories, or anything you think I may have forgotten to add in!

Book Club

What is a book related to solarpunk that has made you feel like a different person after reading it? That changed the way you looked at an issue, that made you reevaluate everything you knew about a topic, that made you walk around in a daze as thoughts swirled around your head too fast to make sense of? (That last one might just be me)

Let's talk about them! I'll go first. Walkable Cities: How downtown can save America, one step at a time, by Jeff Speck.

I'm actually not even all the way through it yet, but it's making me want to pack up and move to a city, when I have always been rather adamant that I never want to live in that populated of an area, after having lived rural for so much of my life. The idea of not having to own a car or drive one is incredibly appealing, but the evidence provided about the impacts of so many of us having personal vehicles is damning. The fact that so many cities are intentionally designed for cars, at the literal monetary expense of pedestrians, is absurd. The amount of pollution that is produced, the dependence on gas, the fact that most of the money spent on cars and fuel goes straight out of the community and to line the pockets of the rich is infuriating. Electric and hybrid cars don't solve these problems.

So this book is changing my life. What book should I read next that will change it more?

@plainsborn: becky chambers! a psalm for the wild build a prayer for the crown-shy

Yes!! This blog, as well as many of the posts I see, are dedicated solarpunk in the here in now. It's so important to dream though, of what the world could be like, and A Psalm for the Wildbuilt really changed how I did that. Our lives could be so good, couldn't they?

@spoiledmilk2012: braiding sweet grass

Another good one! I borrowed the audiobook from the library a few years ago, finished it, and promptly bought a copy for me and another for my mom. What stuck with me is how hopeful it is. So many books about the environment and Indigenous people in the US are -rightfully and understandably - bleak, to say the least. Wall-Kimmerer didn't shy away from the facts of the matter, but where other books can feel defeated and immobilizing, I walked away from that book ready to fix things.

Everything for Everyone: An Oral History of the New York Commune, 2052–2072 by M.E. O'Brien and Eman Abdelhadi

I haven't heard of this one before, I'm adding it to my to-read list right now. Thanks for the recc!

I've got a few recommendations that kinda fit? They give me hope for the future and show me what might be possible.

Dark Emu - Bruce Pascoe

Dark Emu looks a lot more to the past than the future, but a lot of what it talks about is highly relevant to the future of farming, food production, and life in an Australian future. It's a really good overview of a lot of things, and I think that it's interesting information no matter where you are in the world.

This is my number one recommendation for anyone who works in healthcare. It presents a beautiful view of what healthcare could look like for LGBTQ+ people, but so many of the ideas are just solid, patient-centred care.

Sometimes changing how we approach the future and implementing change means we need to look after ourselves, and remembering why we fight. This is a book that helped give me a lot of hope when I needed it.

There are parts of this book I don't agree with (we can't all just buy vintage garments and refuse to engage with modern clothes), but some of the ideas about mending, and clothing repair are really solid. It's also a practical book with a lot of tips and teaching people how to mend. If anyone has better books on the topic I'd love to hear about them!

The Last Girl Scout - Natalie Ironside

I joke that this book is political debate wrapped in a compelling story, but I've put it on this list for the world-building. The ways Ironside thinks about food production, building community and caring for each other are fantastic. There is a lot in this book that I think can serve people when it comes to thinking about community, and working together for shared goals, despite our differences. Trigger warnings for like absolutely everything though.

And one more that isn't a book (yet) but is an amazing webcomic - Runaway to the Stars. If you like Becky Chambers I reckon you'll love it!

The only one of these I've heard of is The Last Girl Scout, which is already on my to-read list, but I'm adding the rest! The Care We Dream Of sounds really interesting, I already put in a request for my library to acquire it.

@aspiringwarriorlibrarian: Locklands. It’s an odd one but it’s world of radical empathy sure made an impact

Added to the list!

@tam--lin Rutger Bregman's Humankind, and Solnit's A Hope In The Dark. Also Sheldrakes Entangled Life, in a way.

I've had my eye on Humankind for a while, I'll bump it up my list! Haven't heard of Hope in the Dark, but it sounds really good.

I've read Entangled Life, it's a fascinating read. If fungi are of interest to you, I read the intro to In Search of Mycotopia: Citizen Science, Fungi Fanatics, and the Untapped Potential of Mushrooms this morning and it sounds amazing - criticizing capitalism and the patriarchy before we've even made it to chapter one!

Book Club

What is a book related to solarpunk that has made you feel like a different person after reading it? That changed the way you looked at an issue, that made you reevaluate everything you knew about a topic, that made you walk around in a daze as thoughts swirled around your head too fast to make sense of? (That last one might just be me)

Let's talk about them! I'll go first. Walkable Cities: How downtown can save America, one step at a time, by Jeff Speck.

I'm actually not even all the way through it yet, but it's making me want to pack up and move to a city, when I have always been rather adamant that I never want to live in that populated of an area, after having lived rural for so much of my life. The idea of not having to own a car or drive one is incredibly appealing, but the evidence provided about the impacts of so many of us having personal vehicles is damning. The fact that so many cities are intentionally designed for cars, at the literal monetary expense of pedestrians, is absurd. The amount of pollution that is produced, the dependence on gas, the fact that most of the money spent on cars and fuel goes straight out of the community and to line the pockets of the rich is infuriating. Electric and hybrid cars don't solve these problems.

So this book is changing my life. What book should I read next that will change it more?

@plainsborn: becky chambers! a psalm for the wild build a prayer for the crown-shy

Yes!! This blog, as well as many of the posts I see, are dedicated solarpunk in the here in now. It's so important to dream though, of what the world could be like, and A Psalm for the Wildbuilt really changed how I did that. Our lives could be so good, couldn't they?

@spoiledmilk2012: braiding sweet grass

Another good one! I borrowed the audiobook from the library a few years ago, finished it, and promptly bought a copy for me and another for my mom. What stuck with me is how hopeful it is. So many books about the environment and Indigenous people in the US are -rightfully and understandably - bleak, to say the least. Wall-Kimmerer didn't shy away from the facts of the matter, but where other books can feel defeated and immobilizing, I walked away from that book ready to fix things.

Everything for Everyone: An Oral History of the New York Commune, 2052–2072 by M.E. O'Brien and Eman Abdelhadi

I haven't heard of this one before, I'm adding it to my to-read list right now. Thanks for the recc!

I've got a few recommendations that kinda fit? They give me hope for the future and show me what might be possible.

Dark Emu - Bruce Pascoe

Dark Emu looks a lot more to the past than the future, but a lot of what it talks about is highly relevant to the future of farming, food production, and life in an Australian future. It's a really good overview of a lot of things, and I think that it's interesting information no matter where you are in the world.

This is my number one recommendation for anyone who works in healthcare. It presents a beautiful view of what healthcare could look like for LGBTQ+ people, but so many of the ideas are just solid, patient-centred care.

Sometimes changing how we approach the future and implementing change means we need to look after ourselves, and remembering why we fight. This is a book that helped give me a lot of hope when I needed it.

There are parts of this book I don't agree with (we can't all just buy vintage garments and refuse to engage with modern clothes), but some of the ideas about mending, and clothing repair are really solid. It's also a practical book with a lot of tips and teaching people how to mend. If anyone has better books on the topic I'd love to hear about them!

The Last Girl Scout - Natalie Ironside

I joke that this book is political debate wrapped in a compelling story, but I've put it on this list for the world-building. The ways Ironside thinks about food production, building community and caring for each other are fantastic. There is a lot in this book that I think can serve people when it comes to thinking about community, and working together for shared goals, despite our differences. Trigger warnings for like absolutely everything though.

And one more that isn't a book (yet) but is an amazing webcomic - Runaway to the Stars. If you like Becky Chambers I reckon you'll love it!

The only one of these I've heard of is The Last Girl Scout, which is already on my to-read list, but I'm adding the rest! The Care We Dream Of sounds really interesting, I already put in a request for my library to acquire it.

Book Club

What is a book related to solarpunk that has made you feel like a different person after reading it? That changed the way you looked at an issue, that made you reevaluate everything you knew about a topic, that made you walk around in a daze as thoughts swirled around your head too fast to make sense of? (That last one might just be me)

Let's talk about them! I'll go first. Walkable Cities: How downtown can save America, one step at a time, by Jeff Speck.

I'm actually not even all the way through it yet, but it's making me want to pack up and move to a city, when I have always been rather adamant that I never want to live in that populated of an area, after having lived rural for so much of my life. The idea of not having to own a car or drive one is incredibly appealing, but the evidence provided about the impacts of so many of us having personal vehicles is damning. The fact that so many cities are intentionally designed for cars, at the literal monetary expense of pedestrians, is absurd. The amount of pollution that is produced, the dependence on gas, the fact that most of the money spent on cars and fuel goes straight out of the community and to line the pockets of the rich is infuriating. Electric and hybrid cars don't solve these problems.

So this book is changing my life. What book should I read next that will change it more?

@plainsborn: becky chambers! a psalm for the wild build a prayer for the crown-shy

Yes!! This blog, as well as many of the posts I see, are dedicated solarpunk in the here in now. It's so important to dream though, of what the world could be like, and A Psalm for the Wildbuilt really changed how I did that. Our lives could be so good, couldn't they?

@spoiledmilk2012: braiding sweet grass

Another good one! I borrowed the audiobook from the library a few years ago, finished it, and promptly bought a copy for me and another for my mom. What stuck with me is how hopeful it is. So many books about the environment and Indigenous people in the US are -rightfully and understandably - bleak, to say the least. Wall-Kimmerer didn't shy away from the facts of the matter, but where other books can feel defeated and immobilizing, I walked away from that book ready to fix things.

Everything for Everyone: An Oral History of the New York Commune, 2052–2072 by M.E. O'Brien and Eman Abdelhadi

I haven't heard of this one before, I'm adding it to my to-read list right now. Thanks for the recc!

Book Club

What is a book related to solarpunk that has made you feel like a different person after reading it? That changed the way you looked at an issue, that made you reevaluate everything you knew about a topic, that made you walk around in a daze as thoughts swirled around your head too fast to make sense of? (That last one might just be me)

Let's talk about them! I'll go first. Walkable Cities: How downtown can save America, one step at a time, by Jeff Speck.

I'm actually not even all the way through it yet, but it's making me want to pack up and move to a city, when I have always been rather adamant that I never want to live in that populated of an area, after having lived rural for so much of my life. The idea of not having to own a car or drive one is incredibly appealing, but the evidence provided about the impacts of so many of us having personal vehicles is damning. The fact that so many cities are intentionally designed for cars, at the literal monetary expense of pedestrians, is absurd. The amount of pollution that is produced, the dependence on gas, the fact that most of the money spent on cars and fuel goes straight out of the community and to line the pockets of the rich is infuriating. Electric and hybrid cars don't solve these problems.

So this book is changing my life. What book should I read next that will change it more?

Hello! I’m making this post to share an open call for Solarpunk Artists! I’m not the one to make this form, nor am I the who who’s going to make a book about Solarpunk Farming. However this person is and is looking for artists to add artwork to said book!

The deadline is May 5th '25. More details in the form. Check it out!

Soil solarization for weed control

Here’s an interesting idea for reducing weeds.  I think it would be useful for areas with a significant density of out-of-control weeds, to give the area a restart.  It’s an alternative to using chemical weed killers, but as the article states, the downside is that sheets of plastic are used.  Heavier plastic sheets that can be reused for several years would help offset the use of the plastic. 

A few years ago, I was recovering from an illness that left me very fatigued for a few months.  The weeds in my raspberry patch were proliferating, and I didn’t have the energy to pull them.  I cut the flowers off the weeds before they could produce seeds, and the next year there were almost none of that kind of weed in my raspberry patch.  So, with an annual weed that relies on yearly reseeding, one way to control it is to prevent seed formation by mowing or clipping the flowers. 

Solarpunk Aesthetic Week Three is quickly approaching!

The hosts for this event are @fennopunk, @solarpunkani, and @modern-solarpunk! We'll be reblogging and chatting from those blogs about the event as well, so feel free to drop a follow!

What's Solarpunk Aesthetic Week? Simply put, its a week to celebrate the aesthetics around the Solarpunk genre and movement! As Solarpunks, we look forward to a hopeful future, and this event is meant for all of us to take part in visualizing that future, and working towards making it step by step!

While Solarpunk is often strongly associated with bright greenery and summertime scenes, it's possible to be Solarpunk at all times of the year! Those of you in the Southern Hemisphere, show us how you Solarpunk it up in the winter! All of us, all across the globe, can take part by creating art, taking action, and launching ourselves towards the Solarpunk future we all want to see!

Solarpunk Aesthetic Week Three will be taking place on the 25th week of the year, so June 17th - 23rd! Feel free to share anything you do to the tag #solarpunk aesthetic week, or submit to the blog!

Any questions? Ask away! Our inbox is open!

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