those Themida triandra grasslands at the foot of the railway ridge,
a bit more grass, the factory, and behind that a burning house in Maidestone...
At the moment, I'm putting things in boxes and moving them from the kitchen to the hall, outside for the garage sale, back inside into the hall, repacking them into other boxes and putting them into the kitchen...what the heck am i doing?
Cleaning is so slow. But it's a really good feeling to be chucking stuff out. Cleansing or purging. So far I have managed to put out 2 large green bins of almost purely sharp white printer paper from uni work.
and
I'm getting closer to leaving. Just hoping the mechanics can figure out what is wrong with the car. Otherwise it's going to be a bit scary driving over the Nulabor waiting for it to explode. Or to be slightly less dramatic - waiting for it to stop.
At the moment, I'm putting things in boxes and moving them from the kitchen to the hall, outside for the garage sale, back inside into the hall, repacking them into other boxes and putting them into the kitchen...what the heck am i doing?
Cleaning is so slow. But it's a really good feeling to be chucking stuff out. Cleansing or purging. So far I have managed to put out 2 large green bins of almost purely sharp white printer paper from uni work.
For the duration of the course that's about 1 bin per year.
If you calculated that for all the students who went through the landscape architecture course with me at RMIT, with an atrition rate of approximately 20 students per year, that'd about 240 bins per degree/year...I mean for every degree completed, over the four years.
If you counted all the students entering the course while we were going through, that'd be about 360 bins per degree roatation,
ie over 4 years.
Each bin probably weighs half a tonne which gives a rough total of 180 tonnes of paper per design course year, and that's just landscape architecture, just at rmit. That's a fuckofalotof trees being cut down to produce environmentally sensitive
designers for the future!
If we stopped running design courses we'd have a lot less environmental disasters to repair and a lot more old growth forests,
and I'd get a lot more sleep.
In fact, wouldn't the world be a better place if we all slept just a few hours more each day.
Just think about it.
2 comments:
mmm like that freckled horse... and that photo of a decimated forest? Methinks it is Indo and a precursor of a palm oil plantation. Say if I'm wrong...
An excellent mathmatical equation based on wheelie bins. I love it. Well done. xx Sarah
hhaa!
that is tasmania i think, but one scene of devestation looks remarkably like another...
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