Eco Villages – The Neighborhoods of the Future

Eco Villages - The Neighborhoods of the Future | Third Monk image 1

Eco Villages offer people socially aware self-sustaining micro-communities.

This is a critical time in human history. Clearly we are destroying the natural environment and we are warming up the globe. We can be sure that our species will not going to be around very long if we don’t get our consumption habits under control. – Liz Walker, co-founder and executive director of Ecovillage at Ithaca (EVI), who also has written two books on sustainable development.

The eco village mission has two aspects: conservation and living in a sustainable way and having people live in harmony together. The eco village and the cohousing movement both started in the early 1990s in Denmark and has since spread across the world.

Unlike self-sufficient communities in the past, EVI members have their own homes and manage their own finances separately, but each pays a monthly fee for maintaining the common buildings, land, and to fund future projects. Eco villagers are actively involved in the governance of the community and make decisions through a consensus process during the board of directors meetings that include members of EVI.

It’s a chance to be with our neighbors, it’s a chance to have friends without having to drive across a big city. – Barbara Pease, EVI member, retired computer scientist

Three Groves EcoVillage (TGE) in West Grove, Pennsylvania, has a similar vision of building an ecologically sustainable neighborhood.

It’s not just the environmental sustainability, it’s social sustainability… you can share your resources, you can come together and accomplish so much more because by sharing resources with my neighbor, I have to consume less. – Janet Hesselberth, co founder of Three Groves Eco Village

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Giant Ant Hill Colony Impresses Scientists (Video)

Giant Ant Hill Colony Impresses Scientists (Video) | Third Monk image 2

Nature is up to its amazing feats once again. The ant colony featured in this video is so big that it would be the equivalent of building the great wall of china.

Now I can’t speak on the method of excavation, concrete dumped into the colony then excavated, but I do hope that the majority of the colony moved on before the concrete came down to freeze this epic structure in time.

I’ve highlighted ant hills that were made into sculptures using aluminum in the past but this behemoth of a structure is a metropolis in comparison.

This giant ant hill is a testament to the complexity of life on this planet, all living things continue to grow and evolve creating things that we have never seen before, there is tons of excitement left in what we don’t know.

Giant Ant Hill Images

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Ashikaga Flower Park: Home to the Most Beautiful Tree in the World (Ashikaga, Japan)

Ashikaga Flower Park: Home to the Most Beautiful Tree in the World (Ashikaga, Japan)  | Third Monk image 2

Travel 50 Miles north of Tokyo and you will find the peaceful city of Ashikaga. Founded in 1921, it is home to Japan’s oldest and largest Wisteria tree found in Ashikaga Flower Park.

This tree is described as the most beautiful tree in the world.

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Relax With Ashikaga Flower Park Wisteria Tree

The tree is huge, an impressive nearly 2,000 square meters (half an acre). The tree’s life began in 1870, and is meticulously cared for. Due to the weight of its vines, they must be held up by steel supports.

This allows visitors of the park to walk beneath its amazing canopy and bathe in the pink and purple light reflected by the beautiful hanging blossoms.

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Ashikaga Flower Park

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> Most Beautiful Tree in the World | Off Grid World

Natural Creations: Artist Arranges Rocks and Leaves into Beautiful Geometric Land Art (Gallery)

Natural Creations: Artist Arranges Rocks and Leaves into Beautiful Geometric Land Art (Gallery) | Third Monk image 2

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Dietmar Voorwold, a German artist based in Scotland, creates beautiful and temporary works of natural land art by arranging rocks, leaves and other natural materials into simple, but beautiful geometric shapes and patterns.

Most of his art is created with materials found on-site, so almost anyone can try their hand at land art.

Voorwold leaves his geometric artworks behind, so all that’s eventually left of them are photographs and his memories.

It is just for the moment. This is a very therapeutic aspect of my way of creating art. – Voorwold

A strong believer in the therapeutic value of art, Voorwold also holds art therapy classes for people, teaching them to create their own land art.

 Beautiful Geometric Land Art

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> Artist Arranges Rocks and Leaves into Beautiful Natural Geometry | Bored Panda