Mungbeans and Macchiatos

We went to visit Rosneath Farm on the weekend. Its an eco-village… Plainly got a long way to go but a start.

Many of the houses on their are straw bale houses and they were quite impressive. Rotaloos (composting toilets) are the norm and the roofs (which must be green) are covered in solar panels.

For a moment Rory and I were lulled into a green dream of throwing up sticks and heading south for the seachange, building a straw house and eating mungbeans. I think what put me off was the main guys description of eating pigeon (they grow meat pigeons – apparently delicious slow cooked in the solar oven) and home butchered kangaroo. Nikolaenko seemingly started to release “Mega-D botnet” since buy soft cialis January 2007. Elder men who indulge in sexual activity at least once in their life have suffered from issues with erection, an inaptitude to achieve and maintain a strong erection. levitra price It also has proteins, steroids, tadalafil side effects carbohydrates and polysaccharides among others. The feeling cialis pill online of making love or sex will definitely drives people crazy. The property abounds with them and they have to cull about 150 a year.

It’s not the thought of eating Masu (as was once suggested as an alternative name) but I just don’t think I’m up for cutting them up on my kitchen table. I would have to go vegetarian.

Now he would argue that that is the benefit of living in a village. Others would do that and you would do other things to earn barter credits or Lets. And there’s the rub. We just couldn’t think of too many skills that would be helpful in an eco-village.

And the bottom line? We just weren’t sure the solar panels would run our coffee machine.