Progress Update

Quick status update:

- We've received all of the actuators we need to make the automatic watering system. I'm in the lab controlling the solenoid valves with Max. 
- Laura and I went shopping today and bought what we thought were the proper adapters so that we can start taking water from the cistern, but we made a mistake in measuring the outlet, so we will need to go back and buy another adapter. The system is roughly this: [Cistern] --> [adapter to 1"] --(black tube)--> [master shut-off valve] --> [flow limiter] --> [adapter to 1/4"]. Once we have the last piece, will be able to fill the cistern and sketch the system with drip valves! Next step is to figure out how to jack water from next door and pipe it through a hose to the cistern (it may require removing the faucet).
- RepRap parts were shipped this week. 

Morgan Sutherland: Quick Stub On the Plants

Hello all,

It's been too long since I gave a report on the plants. Things are going well for some, but bad for others. Pardon my ignorance about terminology and the names of specific plants – I've had time to care for them, but not to do much research.

The piano soundboard holds a nice big bushy tropical plant that's doing fine, though many of the leaves are beginning to yellow just recently. We also have what looks like an aloe plant which is doing fine, one succulent with round leaves who is having a hard time recently, turning a bit brown, a spider plant who is doing quite well and has successfully colonized an adjacent patch of soil, and a stiff little plant who is coming along.

The hanging pod with beans is going through very rough times. A combination of under-watering and some sort of fungus or pest infestation has wreaked havoc. Just 3 of the beans seem finally to be thriving again, sporting nice new green leaves only at the top of the stalks. One is reaching all the way up to the ceiling. All of the new ones are withering and dying and many of those that were once doing well have shriveled up, leaving their twisted, dry remains clinging to the string. It's a wasteland and the soil seems to be harboring iridescent yellow mushrooms that stay around for only a few days at a time as well as small flies. 

The first plant box is doing ok. The nettle reached about 4 feet and, as it was causing me quite a bit of pain and feeding a large population of mealy bugs, I decided to mercilessly chop it down to the roots. Only a month later, its roots had popped up new seedlings in various parts of the box. These were carrying the same old mealy bugs, so I killed them once again. Perhaps when we're ready to harvest its leaves, we can let it grown again and combat the pests in a more nuanced way. Next door, the evergreen is coming along nicely. There's a fern-like plant that is also doing quite well, though not growing so fast. On the far side of the box we have a been and some ivy. The bean climbed all the way to the ceiling up the shades and wrapped itself around the adjacent hanging succulent, but suddenly died recently. All the leaves are now brown except for just a few. I have a feeling that we have some sort of disease killing the beans. The ivy is doing quite well, winding its way through the neighboring box and its own. 

The middle box is another wasteland. Aside from two onions that Laura planted and some grass, it's hard to tell that anything was ever growing there. The surface of the soil is covered in small yellow fungus balls that have been multiplying steadily. They look almost like yellow lichen. I'm not sure if they are harmful to plants are not – Laura and I plan to scoop the top soil and make the box into a 'desert' box for some of the succulents that are getting too much water. 

The last box is full of surprises. A nice thorny tree-like vine with dark leaves (don't know the name) has taken off in the last month and is probably 2 feet tall now. I believe it will need to be supported with something quite soon. Next to it is JS's bonzai-tree like succulent. This poor guy dropped many leaves recently due to over-watering. We would like to move him to a different box. One of the leaves was wired to the plant and is now dangling from the trunk! Sorry JS. The daisy's all died and were disposed of and likewise I killed the nettle in this box, but a number of small-leafed plants have started to fill in the cracks. The box is now really starting to thrive and it's fun to watch!

So it seems that we have some rich plant-fungus-insect competition going on. The weak have been weeded out and the strong are thriving. This coming school year, I would like to take a more careful and educated approach to growing in the lab so that we don't end up with so many dying plants. I would also like to shift toward growing more food. I think it would be very fun to grow some vegetables and have a TML feast. The nice thing about growing plants inside is that we can do it all year and, if we play our crops right, be harvesting continuously.

I've been coming in to water the plants every day that I can, but, especially on the weekend, I really appreciate it if others can do a bit of watering. You don't need to do a whole bucket if you don't have time. Just take a look at the plants, feel around for dry soil, and give them a little love.

Morgan

P.S. Laura's back, so the plants should be getting a bit more (medical) attention soon!

Staging Sustainability @ York Fine Arts

Dear TML folks,

I'd say that this conference at York (Toronto), as well as the residency at Bain St Michel (Montreal) seem like two opportunities to showcase intertwined work by several TML threads :
ecological activism, public ritual, vegetal studies, temporal textures, lighting design. This is especially viable since several of us in these threads are already engaged with those two institutions. Please speak up if you're potentially interested in joining forces :)

Cheers,
Xin Wei ____________________________________________________________
+1-650-815-9962 (m) • skype: shaxinwei
____________________________________________________________

Begin forwarded message
> Hello all,
> > Please see the attached information regarding an April 2011 conference on
> sustainability from the Dean of Fine Arts at York University.
> > I hope you are all enjoying Montreal's fine summer.
> > Best,
> Catherine
>

>

slower, vegetal thought

Of course we would need to populate the term "vegetal" with some specific questions.  This is just a placeholder email.  I'll draw up some themes and references based on your inputs -- keep them coming -- thanks!

My questions are around the interaction dynamics between large animals
(like us) that spend a lot of time/energy fence building, boundary
setting, gatekeeping and territorializing; and plants (with their
symbiotic insects/bacteria etc.) being inherently invasive and
transgressive.

slower, vegetal thought

Going deeper into the vegetal is essential, I think for getting under the surface -- an aikido behind the usual opinions about technology, interaction, action, perception, ethico-aesthetics.

Encouraged by Guattari, Stengers, Whitehead, I'd like to insist that we persist in trying to think in a less bifurcated way, hence ethico-aesthetics rather than ethics.  Another tactic I would like to try with everyone in this circle is to bracket technology, ie to make the epoche' move also with respect to the technological attitude -- analogous to what phenomenologists call the "natural attitude".   One corollary is to suspend belief in notions like open source and replication or duplication.   (I wager the TML that these notions exemplify what Linnaea Tillett and Wittgenstein call "bad questions" or "ungrammatical" questions. :)

In fact, it is to make an aikido move detourning some overly hasty Q&A that I propose inviting some more knowledgable people to come speak with us about the vegetal.  For example, I hope to invite Prof. Natasha Myers back from Toronto (to work with us in plants and human movement) and to somehow teleport Prof. Monika Bakke Poland (plants and non-anthropocentric eco-ethics) this Fall.   And
 to do some field work as necessary together in the TML with our plant platforms this Fall and Winter.  

Of course we would need to populate the term "vegetal" with some specific questions.  This is just a placeholder email.  I'll draw up some themes and references based on your inputs -- keep them coming -- thanks!

Looking forward to it,
Xin Wei

On 2010-07-05, at 12:58 PM, Morgan Sutherland <skiptracer@gmail.com> wrote:

L, XW,

I'm still keen on reading the proposed texts, but it is unclear to me what is intended by "the vegetal". Taken broadly, it could refer to a wide range of concepts. At first the focus was clearly environment politics/ethics/ethico-aesthetics, but I'm a bit burnt out on this aspect of the PLSS project – I feel like I've answered the questions I needed to answer – so I would like to see us drift toward something else specific

Some discernible threads:

- Natasha is working on subjective effects, particularly temporal, that the act of plant care gives rise to. These findings can be richly extended to support interesting questions of long time-scalesensing and/or media.
I am recently more interested in practical/political questions: how can I live off-grid, starting now[1] or how can my own life be an experiment in resilient living. 
- Laura has been engaging deeply with Spinoza, which is a more spiritual pursuit and Bateson. I like the idea of reading Spinoza and Bateson in concert. 
- Diving into Guattari is interesting to me, but I think it should be augmented with supporting texts. Bateson I'm guessing would be useful given how often Guattari refers to him, but I don't see much coming out of mixing Spinoza with Guattari. At least I think engaging with one would compromise the extent to which we could engage with the other (they both require intense concentration, something quite precious and often rare for us undergraduates!)
- I'm also increasingly interested in questions of technology, inspired by Illich[2], Cooley, anarchist writers, and more recently OSE[3]. Xin Wei has suggested that it would be appropriate to touch on Simondon here. Maybe this kind of study should be folded into the FQRC materials research w/ Harry and Patrick. I think that one of the most important questions for "new materials" research is how the materials are made as an ethical, practical, and political question. See for instance the attached PDF, Growth Assembly[4], or SKDB[5].

I think we all need to be wary of spreading ourselves thin, so let's try to keep this focused. I could get into any of the above threads. What do you think?

@natasha, I'd like to hear what you had in mind... what is 'the vegetal' to you?

Morgan

[1] so that I can maintain a comfortable quality of life and continue research in other areas

On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 1:25 PM, Laura Boyd-Clowes <l.boyd.clowes@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Xin Wei et. al.,

Yes, let's put together a short list of readings. This summer I am
working in a beautiful garden, but out here the internet is nearly
impossible to use, so I apologize for being incommunicado. When it
comes time to make decisions, please don't wait on my reply!

Many of the following suggestions have already been put forward. All
of them are intended as _starting points_ for further in-depth
discussion. The gift of an ongoing reading group is that the members
will adopt a common language, build a common conceptual framework, and
nurture a community based on dialogue.

As for Spinoza: I would like to propose a parallel reading group,
since I suspect that "The Ethics" will prove to be more dense and
puzzling than we could manage in just a few weeks. It is well worth an
entire semester of study. I would be glad to start us off by leading
the first sessions, after which we could invite other PhD/grad
students or professors to guide our group discussions. This way we
will approach the text from multiple/multiplying angles; appropriate
for such a rich and enduring work.

Suggested readings:

I strongly recommend that we take a look at some articles from Erin's
"Public" magazine. I've had the pleasure of skimming through a copy
borrowed from Gwynne Basen (Erin, apparently you know each other?) and
found it valuable.

"The Culture of Nature" by Alexander Wilson. Chapter 3 - Nature at
home: A Social Ecology of Postwar Landscape Design

"The Three Ecologies" by Félix Guattari Introduction, 70-80, 140-141

"Ecology of Wisdom" by Arne Naess, ed. by Alan Drengson, Bill Devall - 140-141

"Bioethics in the age of new media" by Joanna Zylinska - Preface, 22-34, 49-53

"Steps to an Ecology of Mind" by Gregory Bateson - 'Form, Substance
and Difference' (this would be best read alongside Pt. V of "The
Ethics")

What else is going through people's minds? Are we still interested in
this kind of stuff, or has the direction shifted? As always, I look
forward to hearing from you!

- L

Singing Plants Reconstruct Memory

Regarding "Singing Plants Reconstruct Memory" http://www.josimalaya.com/singing-plants.html

i think the stimulus response model is naive
there's a deeper issue
To say "memory" is already overcoding with highly anthropocentric interpretations.
And the "interaction" kinesics in the installation as documented in the video
have people moving like people and conventional people movements and tempi
so I would say it's yet more enrolling plants and plant em fields etc into anthropocentric frames of behavior and concept.

It is a very deep problem how could we interact with plants more not just "symmetrically" but more vegetally?

For example this image:
betrays far too much anthropocentric artifice precisely because it is legible.  Indeed I find it lovely, and I mark the world with that  delicate aesthetic, too.

To become vegetal is arguably an impossible demand, but I would prefer to pose this and get some insight rather than re-inscribe banalites, i.e. myself ;)