10 First Steps for a Transition Town Initiative #6. Develop Visible Practical Manifestations of the Project.

10 First Steps for a Transition Town Initiative #6. Develop Visible Practical Manifestations of the Project.

Taken from the Transition Culture website.

tpIt
is easy to come up with ideas, harder to get practical things happening
on the ground. It is essential that you avoid any sense that your
project is just a talking shop where people sit around and draw up wish
lists. Your project needs, from an early stage, to begin to create
practical manifestations in the town, high visibility signals that it
means business. The power that doing this has in how it affects both
people’s perceptions of the project and also in people’s willingness to
engage is huge.

These can take a variety of forms. It might be productive tree
plantings, solar panels, or hemp/lime plastering. It could be a
beautiful cob bus-shelter or an alternative currency used for a defined
period. They should, at this point, be both uncontroversial and
photogenic. In Transition Town Totnes, the Food group is planning a
project called ‘Totnes- the Nut Capital of Britain’ which aims to get
as much infrastructure of edible nut bearing trees into the town as
possible. In a month or so we plan to plant some trees in the centre of
town, and make it a high profile event. We hope to get a lot of media
coverage for it, and use that to explain why we are doing it.

treesIn
Permaculture, we talk about the need to observe a plot of land for the
first year before making any interventions or completing any design.
The same goes for a Transition Town project. Your first year is a time
for networking, brainstorming, awareness raising, information
gathering. It is the time where you are gathering the pieces that are
later assembled in an Energy Descent Plan. You don’t want to start
doing projects which, once you have completed your Energy Descent Plan
you realise are in the wrong place and not actually properly thought
out. While it is essential to take your time and plan properly, there
is a balance to be struck here, you need to also carry the community
along with you. Small highly visible projects will allow people to see
that you mean business, that you are here to stay, and gives them a
sense of what you are talking about.

I remember when I lived in Ireland that I spent years telling people
about green building and natural building. It was only when my house
was half-built that those people would say “oh, so *that’s* what you
meant…”. Likewise with Transition Towns. People need to get a sense of
it all, and to see things that they can go home and tell their friends
about. These practical manifestations will also bring into the project
the people who have spent the first few months sitting back saying
“we’ll see. I’ve heard all this before, this is just another of those
flash-in-the-pan projects, I’ll keep an eye on it”. When they start to
see infrastructure going in, it becomes infectious, they want to be a
part of it.

pvIf
you have done the previous steps well, you may well find that the
sub-groups start developing their own practical projects automatically.
As the momentum builds, you will find practical manifestations bursting
out all over the place. Make sure that you get good publicity for all
these initiatives. It will be very helpful in building a widespread
confidence in what you are doing. Another spin-off benefit of these
practical projects is their great team-building potential. A group that
meets regularly to discuss food issues is one thing. If that group
meets and plants an orchard in a day, shares a picnic and leaves with a
sense of great achievement, that is very powerful in terms of building
the dynamic of that group. A Transition Town project with dirt under
its fingernails (a certain amount anyway!) will carry a lot more
credibility.

I agree with all this - all perfectly sound and sensible. What's on the current list of practical stuff that MASTT is up to?

Well we've got our Community Orchard that is going to be planted in early December in Slaithwaite, we are in the process of organising an Ethical Fashion Show to highlight how you can look good and reduce your impact on the environment.

We have set some provisional dates for 2 more community produce swaps and we hope to see everyone at The Big Lunch on Sunday 19th July for our picnic in the street! Outside the Riverhead, Marsden from 11am.

Thanks for this Tiff.
Given the importance of practical action it would be good to see how we can promote these and future projects more effectively on the website. I'll try and find some time to rethink the front page layout and give more prominence to this stuff, on the website at least.

 


 


     Hi


 


Would anyone like to have a stall at the forthcoming Earth Heart Festival - this would be to promte this project for Slaithwaite - we anticipate a good turn out as the Festival has had good exposure. If you have posters and leaflets and someone who could talk to people about the Mastt activities and vision that would be fab as we would like to be a part of what is happening in this area towards the same goals. We have one guy in our gathering who has a degree in natural energy technology for one example and another that is helping reduce harm from elctronic energy on the environment and reduce pollution. We would love to come to one of the meetings. If you are interested in having a stall for free please ring me on 840283


Blessings


Lynda