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Tuesday, June 18, 2019
Photos from Housebuilding Camp
This year, the Housebuilding camp lasted for two weeks and included fort building, working with cob, two field trips, and the creation of posters and models for a museum of houses from around the world! Here are the photos:
our shake jar to test the soil (mostly clay)
creating forts in the yard (this one is the rose garden)
carefully covering them with tarp roofs so that
our future cob furniture pieces will stay dry in the rain
weeding to clear a spot for a fort in the
vegetable garden... Zac wants his team
to be by the wild strawberries
setting up our cob mixing tarp
dancing a test batch
cob = clay, sand, straw, water
digging for more clay
we have plenty in my yard
building models with Teifoc brick kits
Jim comes in to explain the design & construction of the
staw bale house and timber frame house at Dayempur Farm
beginning to make batches of cob for furniture
digging more clay!
Becca designs and builds a lighthouse for a display
experimenting with building a table
this cob bench design is built on a framework of sticks
this cob bench is built directly on a concrete paver foundation
painting yourself with clay is also fun
fun at Dayempur Farm
our tour begins in the wood shop
then it's on to the timber frame house
board and batten siding
mortise and tenon joints
next we visited the straw bale cabin
work on forts continues (this is the magnolia tree)
adding another layer of cob
making a model of a Ndele decorated mud house
the Ocean biome exhibit
making mountain cave houses out of self-hardening clay
Zac helps too
Natalie draws a baobab tree for the desert exhibit
creating a brick wall that parents can add to
everyone wet felts a piece of wool for yurt model making
Ms. Sheila puts on some music to dance to
while making batches of cob
Zac helps me make the bone & skin hut model (Inuit)
the diagram for making a geodesic dome
find full instructions at desertdomes.com
after "A Place Mediation" from Morning Altars,
we gather nature materials
everyone works together to create a design
a tiny robin egg shell is nestled inside the heart
of the velvet soft magnolia flower
the design expands outward
we work hard on the geodesic dome but
aren't able to make it come together
baobab granola (to taste) and a bread bowl from Panera
(to hollow out, like the spongy texture of the baobab tree)
the Desert biome exhibit
our shake jar and a cob snowball
the Tropical Forest biome exhibit,
complete with stilt house model, plants, and
musical instruments for sound effects (frogs, rain)
we learned that your home's materials & design
are largely dependent on what biome you live in!
the Biome Jars
(even your backyard is its own little biome)
our Backyard Biome tapestry weaving
yarn and needles so parents can weave too
the Grasslands biome exhibit
our model yurts
the Temperate Forest biome exhibit
the dogtrot log cabin
the Wetlands biome exhibit
the Mountains biome exhibit
the Polar Regions biome exhibit
modern homes
each child's fantasy house
"Home"
group Wordle
the Museum is open!
our culminating field trip: the Cimatron
the geodesic dome at the Missouri Botanical Gardens
this huge dome holds a Tropical Forest biome exhibit
mangrove
rice
pineapple
cacao
arrowroot
sugar cane
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