Real Dirt: How I Beat My Grid-Life Crisis

Front Cover
Text Publishing, Sep 29, 2008 - Biography & Autobiography - 272 pages
Real Dirt is the true story of a sea-change, the life that led there, and what you have to go through to get where you want to be.

It took James Woodford a while to realise that the greasy pole of big-city ambition was not for him. To rediscover the environmentalist he'd aspired to be when he was young, and to get his family out of the city.

But eventually they made it: to the wildly beautiful south coast of New South Wales and a sustainable, self-sufficient, solar-powered lifestyle on 120 acres. No house? They'd build one. Land grazed down and eroding into the lake? Fix it up with some love and hard work...coax it to yield home-grown vegies...plant orchards, raise chooks...a humungous worm farm...How hard could it be?

'Tree changers might be a growing breed, but you'll be hard pressed to find one who describes in more poetic terms the first time he set eyes on what would become his very own patch of rural paradise...a candid and enlightening account.' Notebook

 

Contents

Section 1
13
Section 2
30
Section 3
42
Section 4
58
Section 5
65
Section 6
109
Section 7
136
Section 8
143
Section 9
167
Section 10
176
Section 11
194
Section 12
216
Section 13
220
Copyright

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About the author (2008)

James Woodford is a science and environment writer for the Sydney Morning Herald. In 1996 he won the Eureka Prize for environmental journalism, and was awarded the prestigious Michael Daley prize for science journalism in 1996 and 1997. His hugely entertaining book on wombats, The Secret Life of Wombats, won the Royal Zoological Society of NSW Whitley Award for Best Natural History Book. He lives with his family on the south coast of NSW.

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