Getting Grief for Going Green – the promise and predicament of Cuyama Valley’s 
Quail Springs Permaculture Farm

In the Santa Barbara Independent, Thursday, September 10, 2009

 

http://www.independent.com/news/2009/sep/10/getting-grief-going-green/

There’s a grand experiment in sustainability going on right now in the Cuyama 
Valley, where northeastern Santa Barbara County’s carrot fields, pistachio 
orchards, vineyards, and dusty plains collide into Ventura, Kern, and San Luis 
Obispo counties. In one of the valley’s uppermost canyons, close to where the 
almost-always-dry Cuyama River once flowed freely out of the pine-studded 
mountains, is a 450-acre farm known as Quail Springs, located just within the 
Ventura County border. Home to 14 full-time residents, open to the public for 
occasional tours, and hosting students from all over the world who are 
interested in eco-minded living, Quail Springs is fast emerging as a leading 
showcase for sustainable design and a poster child for permaculture, as both 
residents and visitors work to create a self-sufficient settlement while 
repairing a landscape severely denuded over the past 100-plus years by 
clear-cutting and grazing. “Every year, the Cuyama Valley is basically heading 
out to the sea,” explained founder Warren Brush about the erosion that 
threatens all aspects of life there, as it does in other similarly destroyed 
ecosystems across the planet. “It’s a cycle we’re trying to stop in this 
canyon.”

But according to Brush — who started the “eco-village” about five years ago 
after nearly a decade running the much-acclaimed Wilderness Youth Project in 
Santa Barbara — the nonprofit farm is also simultaneously becoming a 
battleground between green building and government bureaucracy, a war erupting 
in various jurisdictions around the country as environmentally friendly 
innovation outpaces legislation. For Quail Springs, that battle amounts to 
threatened fines of at least $500 per day for violating various county building 
codes. If ever levied, these fines would quickly undermine all the positive 
work being done. Explained Brush during a tour of the property in late May, 
“Innovative thinkers are having to do things illegally just to test them.”

(continued)…Rather than repeatedly fight against the building rules, Brush 
understands that bringing government into the conversation will only help the 
green movement at large. “If we are able to partner with these state and county 
agencies,” said Brush, “that’s when we’re going to see a huge bump and 
evolution in how human settlements move toward sustainability.”

Read more at 
http://www.independent.com/news/2009/sep/10/getting-grief-going-green/

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