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Freeconomist's drive to live on no money

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Published Date: 30 November 2008
A "FREECONOMIST" began his quest to survive for a year without money yesterday – relying on friends, the sun and a second-hand woolly jumper.
Mark Boyle, 29, an economics graduate, aims to defy the credit crunch for 12 months living in a borrowed caravan powered by nature.

Boyle says he is sick of living in a "fundamentally flawed and ecologically destructive" capitalist system and want
s to prove there is another way to exist.

The social experiment is being launched beside a woodland stream in Timsbury, Bristol, to coincide with national Buy Nothing Day.

Free food will be offered in Bristol, with chefs including the BBC's Roadkill chef Fergus "the Forager" Drennan and Dave and Andy Hamilton, the authors of The Self Sufficient-ish Bible on hand.

Freeconomists are a band of individuals who exchange skills with each other without money changing hands.

On his blog Boyle, below, said: "I want to see what life is actually like living without money in Western 'civilisation'. I need to know whether or not the life that I believe to be most harmonious with nature and that has the least amount of blood and oil embodied in it, is a life I would want for my children.

"I am just sick of having to have a bank account, even with an ethical bank, so that they can then simultaneously issue some human with a credit note and Mother Earth with the debit note."

He will use a wood-burning stove to cook and will wash in a solar shower which, although cold in the winter "will be good for self discipline". His toilet will simply be a hole dug outside the van.

For lighting he relies on solar power, along with a wind-up torch, and will get around on his bicycle.

But he adds: "Most essential of all is the woolly jumper."

Earlier this year Boyle tried to get to India relying only on the kindness of strangers, but his mission ended in Calais, when he stepped off the ferry and remembered he could not speak French.





The full article contains 351 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Guga II,

Rockall 30/11/2008 02:15:30
If you allow for the fact that government handouts don't count as earned income, isn't this just what all these dole and welfare bludgers do all the time?
2

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 30/11/2008 13:00:39
I just wonder where he thinks items like
a) caravan
b) torch and batteries
c) bicycle
d) wood-burning stove
e) shovel to dig his "toilet"
f) woolly jumper, sandals, lentils, brown bread etc
g) land

come from? How many people do you know who make wood burning stoves? For nothing?

His pilgrimage to India is a classic example of how much thought is employed on these ventures and philosophies "just remembered he couldn't speak French" - at Calais?! Doh!

3

POSTMARK,-55,

China, 01/12/2008 04:04:57
Just another lazy good for nothing welfare bum, like the world needs more like him.
4

Andy Hamilton ,

Bristol 13/12/2008 11:42:15
Why is it that as soon as someone decides that they are going to live in the most sustainable way possible it stirs up so much vitriol?

"His pilgrimage to India is a classic example of how much thought is employed on these ventures and philosophies "just remembered he couldn't speak French" - at Calais?! Doh!"

Ok so that was a mistake. This time there has been a lot more planning and he would have to have learnt more than just French for that walk. If he had waited until he knew the language of every country he was going through he would still be planning it now. As for those things yes they would have cost money, but how else is he supposed to live? Would you have him living in a hand woven sack, using his bare hands to catch fish? How purest do you want him to be?

"Just another lazy good for nothing welfare bum, like the world needs more like him." - Just another person who can only vent their anger via anonymous comments. He is far from lazy, he cycles everywhere often over 20 miles a day. He works on the farm, he organised a free feast for 100 people and I think to do this is a very imaginative person.

 

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Is having a hotel for dogs a barking idea or not to be sniffed at?
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