Mud Mavens: Mud Girls Founder Jen Gobby
Just off Canada's west coast near Vancouver is a paradise for self-sufficiency seekers. Approximately five miles wide and thirteen-and-a-half miles long, Lasqueti Island is home to poets, artists, designers, musicians, and people from all walks of life trying to live off the land responsibly. There are no paved roads or public utilities—just ingenuity and elbow grease.
Here's an example of a cob house. Photo courtesy of Jen Gobby.
It was here that Mud Girls, an all-woman natural building collective, got their start in 2004. Founded by Lasqueti Island-resident Jen Gobby, the collective specializes in building compact energy-efficient homes, cabins, and sheds using cob - a clay mixture of sand, clay, straw, and water - and whatever materials are readily available.
Over the years, the Mud Girls have built affordable, artful structures (often with feminine curves) all over western British Columbia. As part of their practice, the collective also preaches what it practices by sharing their expertise with those interested and spreading their brand of eco-conscious design through community workshops.
Dwell caught up with Gobby, who has been studying environmental studies and anthropology at McGill University in Montreal for the last year, to ask what about she hopes Mud Girls can achieve and how this collective not only empowers women, but helps build a better society.
The MudGirls Collective (circa 2005) on Jen Gobby's living roof. Photo courtesy of Jen Gobby.
Here's the interior of the cob house. Photo courtesy of Jen Gobby.
[Mud Girls] offers women a way to learn to build in a very supportive and non-competitive environment. Many of the women who have come to our workshops to learn to build never would have thought of themselves as builders.
A fern design is emblazoned on a client's home. Photo courtesy of Jen Gobby.
Buy less stuff! Most houses are filled with stuff we don't really need.
Build the smallest home you think you can live in, but design with the option to build-on if you feel the need to later.
Mud Girl Clare shows off her muscles!
You don't need to be a professional builder in order to build your own home. Throughout most of human history, and in many parts of the world today, both men and women build their own shelters. It's not rocket science. It is important to choose professionals to help you (engineers, architects, laborers) based on how empowered and excited they make you feel about your project. If you walk away from a meeting feeling disempowered—like your power to choose has been taken away from you—you are not working with the right people.
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