BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//Cob Workshops - ECPv5.14.0.4//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-WR-CALNAME:Cob Workshops
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://cobworkshops.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Cob Workshops
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/Denver
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0600
TZNAME:MDT
DTSTART:20250309T090000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0600
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:MST
DTSTART:20251102T080000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20250209T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20250316T160000
DTSTAMP:20260406T040837
CREATED:20240918T233737Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250120T164419Z
UID:9493-1739116800-1742140800@cobworkshops.org
SUMMARY:Build a Cob Community Roundhouse at Mlango Farm in Ngecha\, Kenya in February/March 2025!
DESCRIPTION:A PERSONAL WORD FROM CLAUDINE…. \n  \nI am so excited that CruzinCobGlobal will be back on the vibrant and diverse continent of Africa after an 8-year hiatus. We led several multicultural Cob workshops in Senegal and Morocco between 2015 & 2016\, building bungalows and ovens\, and half a dozen full-builds between 2016 and 2022 in Cabo Verde\, the African islands off the coast of Senegal. Now we have a long-awaited opportunity to be hosted in East Africa\, in the Limuru region of Kenya\, just outside of Nairobi\, by Els Breet and her Mlango (door to a better world) Organic Farm crew. We are wanting to create a workshop consisting of students coming from Kenya\, other parts of Africa\, and of course from the immediate local community. \n  \nOUR HOST \n  \n  \n \nOur Host Els with her beloved Kamande \n\n  \nMlango Farm was started in 2007 on the Mundia family land in Ngecha by Els Breet Kamande and her late husband\, Kamande Njenga (1960-2023). Kamande’s broad business experience\, sense of hospitality\, his knowledge of Kenya and its people together with Els’ work experience in international diplomatic\, environmental and educational institutions proved a good base to start a farm together. Over the years a neglected farmland was turned into a heaven on earth\, a beautiful organic farm with over 50 different types of crops growing\, providing a livelihood for people from the Ngecha community. The passion and love for the project can be seen and felt when guests are visiting the family home at Mlango Farm. \n  \n \nOur source of veggies for the workshop! Lucky us! \n\n  \nWe are developing a natural playground in the forest. For over 17 years\, we’ve been pioneers in Kenya\, growing organic vegetables with love and care. We’ve welcomed over 10\,000 children\, mostly from the bustling city of Nairobi\, and shown them how we work in harmony with nature—because we believe their future depends on it. \nBut we’re dreaming even bigger. Our new goal? We want to give far more than 10\,000 children the chance to experience nature\, to taste it\, to smell it. We want to create a large natural playground to explore\, be creative and learn in and from nature. And that’s just the beginning. \n  \n \nãW \n\n  \nMlango Farm supports the Mlango Farm Foundation\, an organization that offers school visits and various courses on agriculture on the farm. The educational work of the Mlango Farm Foundation is supported by the Stichting Mlango Farm in The Netherlands. \nMlango Farm grows in a sustainable way\, following the rule of the 5 R’s: we Refuse\, Reduce\, Recycle\, Re-use\, and Rot our resources as much as we can. We make and collect Ecobricks (building blocks made of plastic waste) to reduce the amount of plastic waste in our environment. Soon we will build a cottage made of ecobricks and cob. We will be happy to tell you more about it! \nAt Mlango Farm we aim at a sustainable way of farming\, without using chemical pesticides or synthetic fertilizers. We follow the principles of Permaculture and regenerative farming. \nFor individual households in Nairobi we deliver weekly farmshare baskets with a variety of fresh vegetables. We literally share the harvest with our ‘share-holders’. The basket comprises of at least 10 varieties and changes weekly\, depending on availability. One basket is enough for 4 or 5 meals. \nFollowing Mlango Farm’s commitment to sustainability\, reducing our carbon footprint\, and supporting greener living\, we deliver the baskets by electric bicycle\, to different areas in Nairobi. \nMlango Farm grows the following vegetables\, herbs\, and a few fruits: Arrowroot\, Avocado\, Baby Carrot\, Bananas (+ matoke)\, Beetroot\, Borage\, Broccoli\, Cabbage\, Cauliflower\, Carrots\, Celery\, Cherry tomatoes\, Chinese cabbage\, Chioggia\, Chives\, Chayote\, Courgette\, Cucumber\, Daikon\, Dhania/Coriander\, Eggplant\, Fennel\, Green capsicum\, Kohlrabi\, Leek\, Lemongrass\, Lemon Verbena\, Lettuce (12 different types)\, Mint\, Mizuna\, Nasturtium\, NewZealand Spinach\, Pakchoi\, Parsley\, Peaches (only in November)\, Radish\, Red Cabbage\, Rosemary\, Rucola\, Sage\, Savoy cabbage\, Spinach\, Spring Onion\, Sukuma Wiki\, Sweet potato\, Swiss Chard\, Tarragon\, Tatsoi\, Tree tomatoes\, Turnips\, White Sapote. \nThe Home Art Gallery at Mlango Farm is run by Njee Muturi (of Zanji Art). The collection consists of a wide range of African art: paintings from known and less known (mainly Kenyan) artists\, masks\, sculptures and wood carved furniture. Often we have an ‘artist in residence’ staying with us at the farm. We also organize workshops on ‘nature print’ and we support the Ngecha Artists group with workshops with different materials and different techniques. \nOur Host has been a COB-aholic for a long time and while her staff have made a Kenyan-style cob house with stick framing\, now Els and her team will get to experience Euro-American-style cob building  as taught by CruzinCobGlobal and built by the workshop students. \n  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nãW\n\n\n  \nTHE PROJECT \n  \nWe will be building a 14m2/150ft2 round Cob Community Space for the temporary volunteers and visitors as well as the permanent residents of Mlango Farm to meet as a community for Council Circles\, Healing Work\, classes\, trainings\, meditation\, ceremonies and other personal activities . The reciprocal roof we build in all of our workshops symbolizes an interdependent community in which all are equal at their essence.  It is the strongest roof there is due to its interlocking spiral structure\, which reflects the individuals sitting together below and the strength of their interconnection. It represents the horizontal social structure favored in indigenous and traditional societies. \n\nStudents in this Advanced Cobber Certification training will\, as always\, learn all the steps to building a complete Cob Building from scratch in the following order: \nWeek 1: digging the trench and building a stone foundation and building the first floor layers \nWeeks 2 & 3:  building a circular monolithic cob wall with all its detailed insertions with sculpting \nWeek 4:  plastering the inside and outside of the wall & building the primary rafter structure \nWeek 5:  completing the wood roof structure\, green roof\, the top of the wall & the 2nd floor coat \n  \n \nPescadero\, California workshop July/August 2024 \n\n  \nWe especially invite non-White and multiracial students to come learn the art and technique of cob building with CCG in Kenya\, in the Motherland of Humanity.  We want a workshop that feels comfortable for non-white students\, and in which there is a healthy balance of races and cultures. CCG has taught in many countries of the world and our mission is to create access to everyone interested\, especially the local people so we can create international cob building families.  We aim to create intercultural and interhuman bonding experiences through our Cob building workshops to heal the world one Cobber and one Cob house at a time.  So please listen to your Soul Calling and the excitement of your Heart when thinking of joining us in Kenya or anywhere else we are teaching\, and come and embark on a life-changing adventure in 2025. And be part of creating a New World…\n \n  \n  \nDETAILED WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION \n  \n\n\n  \n\n  \n \nA new Cob Family ready to go! \n\n  \nThe 35-day Advanced Cob Building Workshop consists of 25 days (Monday through Friday) of learning & construction for 4 hours in the morning and 3 hours in the afternoon with theoretical instruction (lectures with graphics) on most Monday\, Wednesday and Friday afternoons to complement the hands-on experience. \nStudents arrive on Sunday between noon and 2pm and settle in. The workshop begins at 4pm with the Opening Circle followed by a Host Site Orientation and Introduction to the Project. Dinner is served at 6pm\, and will be followed by an Introduction to the 5-week Workshop by Instructor Claudine Desiree and Assistant Tania de Froberville.  Monday morning we begin digging the trench for our Cob Building!!!! \n  \n \nSnack time….after a long day finishing the roof! \n\n  \nFollowing Breakfast from 7:30-8:15am\, the morning learning/building session begins at 8:30 am and lasts until 1pm with a 20-minute snack pause at 11am. Lunch break is from 1pm to 2:30pm\, which includes a rest time before the 3-hour afternoon session begins. Most Mondays\, Wednesdays and Fridays there is a 60-minute lecture\, followed by another session of construction and demonstrations. Tuesdays and Thursdays students begin the building and learning session again right after the rest time. After class in the afternoon there is a 90-minute break before dinner (served from 7pm to 8pm)\, in which students are encouraged to stretch\, do some type of relaxation/movement practice\, go swimming\, walking and just relax. \n  \n \nAppreciating the finish work! \n\n  \nThere is sometimes a work trade student officially or informally leading yoga and movement practice in the mornings or afternoons (depending on student preference). There will also be 3-4 evenings (once a week) after dinner for showing slides\, videos and having Course-related discussions. Other evenings are mostly free and sometimes students offer informal courses in their specialties and passions and we will also enjoy local music and dance\, fire\, singing and whatever other surprises our Host Nyakio has in store for the group. Tuesdays are reserved for our weekly Council Circle\, where we do a deeper sharing and listening to attend to the inner worlds of our students\, staff & Host(s).  This is a required and essential element of our workshops to keep a balance between the physical work and emotional/spiritual needs that will come up\, in a safe and intimate setting. \n  \n \nPlacing the roof shims on the rafters \n\n  \nOn weekends students are free to explore the area\, rest onsite\, and even continue building\, subject to Instructor approval.  All weekend meals are provided by students themselves\, who are welcome to use the kitchen.  Host and/or other students can carpool into town for weekend food provisions.  Students are encouraged to visit the surroundings and eat in local eateries and will be guided by Nyakio.  Also there will be information and transport options available for those who want to go on weekend getaways to see other parts of Kenya.  These are always an additional cost of course. \n  \n \nEnjoying the accomplishment of a beautiful niche \n\n  \nThe 35-day Course will offer practical learning by building a complete 15m2  curvilinear building from foundation to roof\, as  described in the “Project” section. Those who complete the 35-day Workshop will receive an Advanced Cobber Certificate of Completion for Foundation\, Cob Walls (which includes Door\, Windows\, Shelves\, Art\, Electrical Housing & Plumbing preparation)\, Floor\, Plaster & Roof.  Students who have to miss more than ONE day of the workshop will receive a temporary partial Certificate naming the parts they have completed and will need to complete all the missed time in another workshop to get the final Certificate. \n\n\n\n  \n  \nDAILY SCHEDULE \n  \nThe Advanced Cob Building Workshop begins on a Sunday at 4pm and ends on a Sunday\, 5 weeks later\, after the morning Closing Circle & Brunch. International students should arrive a day or two before Sunday to acclimate and settle in (please let us know) but will need to cover their own food  needs unless a work trade or payment option is approved by Host (to be decided closer to the date). \nThe daily schedule (subject to slight modifications due to climate/time of year) will be: \n7:30-8:15 Breakfast \n8:30-1:00 Class \n1:00-2:30 Lunch \n2:30-5:30 Class (Lecture on MWF’s) \n5:30-7:00 Rest/Yoga \n7:00-8:00 Dinner \n8:00-9:00 Slides/Videos/Discussion (once a week) \nStudents are expected to be ON TIME and participate in ALL sessions and required activities as the goal of completing a full construction depends on the whole group being present and working together: physically\, energetically\, emotionally. \n  \n  \nCOURSE CONTENTS \n  \nStudents will learn every phase of building a cob building from foundation through the reciprocal roof in hands-on building and lectures/theory. In addition to the lectures\, slideshows and videos will be shown to support and enhance their understanding of cob materials\, cob building\, design\, geography\, budgeting\, business options and legal issues. \nOur hands-on practice will include: \ndigging foundation trench\npouring gravel and inserting drainage pipe (if applicable)\nbuilding foundation stemwall\nanalyzing soils and materials\nmaking test bricks\ndeciding on correct mixture\ndeciding on best location\nmaking cob w/ partner and solo\nbuilding with cob\npreparing and inserting the door\npreparing and inserting fixed and opening windows\npreparing and inserting shelves\ninserting bottle windows\, glass and other objects\ninserting electrical housing and outlet/switch boxes (when applicable)*\ninsert PVC pipe for plumbing in walls (when applicable)*\nsculpting\npreparing and applying earthen plaster (1 coat)\npouring an earthen floor (2 coats)\npreparing walls for roof connection\nbuilding reciprocal roof frame\nputting on roof sheathing and other elements\ninstalling green roof\nmaking small-scale cob designs of future projects\, time permitting \nIn addition to Cob Building practices\, the Course material\nalso includes: \nlegal cob construction practices & the international cob code (Appendix AU in the IRC)\ncost analysis\ncreating a cob business (building/teaching)\nassisting\, interning and teaching with CruzinCobGlobal \n*While the insertion of electrical housing and one or more outlet/switch boxes and PVC pipes to hold plumbing are always included in the workshops\, the simplicity or complexity depends on the host’s design and preferences. There will be no electrical wiring or plumbing pipes installed during workshop. That is beyond the focus of this course and requires professional experience and certification/licensing. \n  \nREQUIREMENTS & IMPORTANT INFORMATION \n  \nStudents will need to come prepared for demanding physical work from Day 1. \nThis includes bringing: \nWork clothes appropriate for the country and climate we are in\nWork boots or other closed-toe shoes (for foundation and roof)\nFlip-flops (for cobbing/plaster days)\nRubber dishwashing gloves (for lime mortar)\nWork Gloves (for stone work)\nTape Measure\nBox Cutter\nWood Hand Saw (cheap)*\nLevel (2ft)*\nHammer*\nJapanese plastering trowel(s) (email:goldhillclayplaster@gmail.com)\nEar Plugs (roof week)\nWood Chisel*\n4”-6” Diameter Round Plastic Container Lids (for plastering)\nGood Moisturizer\nHat\nSunglasses\nWater Bottle\nNotebook/Pen/Camera\nSafety Glasses\nCarpenter Pencil & Sharpener\nSample of your Soil (optional) \nAny other power tools like skillsaw\, grinder with metal blade\, cordless drill\, chop saw…will be very welcome if you are driving in and able to bring them. \n*These tools will be very helpful to bring if you can\, to minimize sharing and waiting\, but if you can’t because you are flying in\, the Host will provide them of course. \n  \n  \n***VERY IMPORTANT INFO*** \n  \n  \n \nFinishing the roof in Puerto Rico \n\n  \nThese workshops are designed for people that want to learn how to build a complete structure from start to finish in a professional manner and timeframe. They are very intensive and\, while we make time for yoga\, stretching\, dancing\, music\, relaxing….all students are expected to be present and participating in ALL building and lecture learning hours unless absolutely incapable due to illness or have some other significant/emergency reason. This is because we design the size of the building  and organize the structure of the workshop in accordance with the number of students we will have\, and when people are absent it impacts the whole group and the other students have to work harder. In addition Instructors try to set up building work according to students’ preferences and learning needs. \n  \n \nMorning stretching is critical to a successful workshop and creates time for meaningful connection before starting the day \n\n  \nWe need and depend on everyone’s full participation in each day of the workshop.  This is a total group effort on all levels:  physically\, mentally\, emotionally and energetically.. If someone is physically absent from the site and lectures due to illness or other urgency for more than one full day\, they will need to make up the days missed in a subsequent workshop to receive the complete Certificate (and will only pay food costs).  If physically injured or ill (and capable)\, it is requested students be present at the site and for lecture and other required evening activities to not miss out on information and learning by observation\, and to qualify for the Certificate.  For those who have any disabilities that may interfere with these requirements and would like to participate in the workshop\, please contact Claudine. \n  \n \nWorking with the Ancestors \n\n  \nThe workshop intensity changes from week 1 to week 5 with the focus of the week. The first foundation week breaks people in with the work of moving\, lifting\, rolling and placing rocks and is a new and demanding physical experience for most students. It also includes  the first layers and coat of cob floor. The second week and part of the third week of cob making and building are similar to the rock foundation week in physical demand but are more flowing and active in movement and cardiovascular exercise. On Thursday & Friday of week 3\, the workshop takes a turn and slows down and the body can rest as students their creative source now and design and sculpt the walls and around niches\, shelves\, windows\, etc.  This is a very special rewarding experience and time of the workshop\, decorating the walls with visual beauty and meaning as expressed by each unique student.  Usually there is an overarching theme decided on by Host(s) but sometimes students are free to create the theme and design and present to Host. \n  \n \nSomeone enjoys the finishing work! \n\n  \nPlastering follows sculpting and is also an enjoyable more lightweight physical experience that lends itself to talking and sharing at the wall in a meditative rhythm as the students have bonded and shared deeply through a variety of experiences for a month. On day 5 of week 4\, the roof begins.  This part is the beginning of a change of pace from the earthen building work to carpentry skills\, power tools\, drilling\, hammering\, screwing\, trimming\, etc. But now the workshop is in its final stretch and there is a boost of energy to wrap up the roof\, close the top of the wall\, and tend to finishing touches….the grand finale.  The group also begins the process of letting go and tending to the new relations they have made and talking about the future. \nFor students wanting a more mellow slow-paced cob experience along with time for personal exploration and experimentation\, these workshops are not for you. However you can find a more suitable workshop online with other organizations that are usually for a  shorter period building a garden wall\, a bench\, a compost toilet or some other smaller scale project. \n\nStudents are required to read “The Hand-Sculpted House” and “Essential Cob Construction” (see website Resources page) before the workshop begins and any other books they find or listed on our Resources page\, ideally on plastering and reciprocal roof building\, as well as watching our “International Cob Workshop” videos on Claudine’s YouTube channel\, the new educational YouTube series “Building a Mud Home” by Cooper Green\, posted by Natural Buildings and created from our North Carolina workshop footage\, and the ones posted on CruzinCobGlobal’s website under Gallery/Videos\, to get an idea of what is expected. Also it is a great idea to watch as many other videos on cob and reciprocal roofs as you can\, to come mentally prepared. Please bring your book(s). \n  \n \nThe joy of sculpting after all the heavy work is done \n\n  \nStudents must tend to their own personal needs\, drink alot of water\, rest when needed and exert themselves at a steady pace. Students who cannot do the strenuous physical work should let us know when registering so we can make sure the workshop is a good fit. If approved before the workshop begins\, we can adjust appropriately. It is totally OK to come for the lecture/theory part\, and sometimes help the building part in less physically  demanding ways if you have physical limitations\, ie cutting straw\, sifting for plaster\, hammering nails into frames or shelves\, sculpting\, plastering\, cutting bottles. There is alot to do to support making and building with cob!!!!  But this has to be discussed and approved with Claudine so it does not impact the schedule of construction. \n  \n \nthe usual fine dining our Hosts provide to show their gratitude for the hard work of the students \n\n  \nFinally\, please bring a watch or use your phone to be prompt and ready for each part of the Course including meals. Please make sure you share your dietary restrictions/allergies with CCG in your registration form. Note that very demanding dietary needs will not be  able to be met (vegan & non-gluten ok) and those students may be recommended not to participate unless they are willing to meet their special needs on their own\, which will not include kitchen access on weekdays. Please discuss with Claudine at time of desire to register. Also please bring your essential snacks and foods\, pillow and whatever you NEED to be comfortable and happy. Feel free to also bring playlists\, speaker\, slides\, videos\, movies and books to share\, as well as a sample of your soil to test. \n\nWe look forward to opening you to a whole new world of experience\, skill\, growth and transformation as you bond with your new international COB family for life! \n  \n \nMud on the Brain after 4 weeks! \n\n  \n  \nMEALS & ACCOMMODATIONS \n  \nWe will serve three meals a day from Monday through Friday including the Welcome and Celebration Dinners and Farewell Brunch.  Weekends students can either be on their own for food and may use the onsite kitchen\, or choose to have meals made by the staff for a rate of 15€/day or 3€ for breakfast and 6€ for lunch or dinner.  Meals will be mostly vegetarian and locally-based as much as possible\, including farm produce and eggs\, but we will attend to meat eaters several times a week if desired! \nWe will also attend to vegan and gluten-free diets if needed but any other restrictions & allergies that require extensive preparation needs will not be able to be honored. Kitchen will not be accessible on weekends for students\, but there are plenty of places to eat in the surrounding neighborhoods! \nCamping in your own tent is free and available for everyone.  Please bring your camping gear. Our host is also offering a limited number of beds (first come first serve) in various locations on the Farm.  The fee will be 6€/night. Students can buy camping gear or just blankets in Nairobi with the help of our host if they don’t want to travel with it. \n  \nTRANSPORTATION \n  \nInternational students will fly into Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (NBO) in Nairobi and can share an Uber or Bolt (cheapest) to the site\, an hour away.   The distance to the site is only 25 miles/40km from Nairobi. Students should arrive on Saturday and can eat with the residents before the workshop for a small fee or choose to have meals prepared for a larger fee or bring their own food to make. \nADDITIONAL IMPORTANT TRAVEL INFORMATION: \nELECTRONIC TRAVEL AUTHORIZATION (ETA) \nAs of January 1st\, 2024\, all foreign nationals\, regardless of nationality\, can enter Kenya without a visa for tourism or business travel for stays up to 90 days. \nHowever\, you must obtain a new Electronic Travel Authorization (ETA) online prior to travel. \nTo apply\, visit the ETA Platform. Please note that this is the only website you should be using\, any other website you may find on Google is a scam! \nThe ETA costs $30\, is valid for 90 days from the day when you make the payment (i.e. the day you apply) and it takes about seven days to be processed and approved.\nHence\, we recommend to apply around two weeks before the trip. \nThe ETA is only valid for one trip and travelers must obtain a new ETA for each visit to Kenya. \nMake sure your passport is still valid for at least 6 months after your planned trip and that you have at least two blank pages. \nIf you plan to travel to other East African countries\, it may make sense to get an East African visa. \nIt’s best to print your ETA and have a paper copy. \nVACCINES \nThere is no mandatory vaccine required to enter Kenya\, unless you are arriving from countries where yellow fever is endemic. In that case\, you will need a valid yellow fever certificate. \nIf you are arriving from Europe\, Mauritius or the USA\, you will not need a yellow fever or any other vaccine\, however there are a few recommended ones.\nPlease visit the Travel Health Pro website for more info. \nWith regards to Malaria\, Kenya is not on the list of the high risk countries. As a result\, the choice of taking Malarone (or any other drug) as a prevention is very personal.\nPlease consult your GP should you have any more questions. \nTRAVEL INSURANCE \nWe recommend anyone to get a Travel Insurance to cover your trip in Kenya. \nYou can refer to Europe Assistance or World Nomads as providers. \n  \nCOB INSTRUCTOR \nClaudine Desiree \n  \n \nLa Reina del Barro! \n\n  \nFounder and Director of CruzinCobGlobal\, Claudine Desiree has been well-known in the world of Cob Workshops for 20 years\, since holding her first workshop in her downtown Santa Cruz\, California home in 2004.  After many years in California teaching shorter-format workshops\, in which part of a building was built or finished\, while holding many careers and raising her three sons\, she launched her GlobalCobTrotter Tour in December of 2014\, and realized a life-long dream of traveling the world by bike for an extended period of time. To keep earning a living while combining her two passions\, she decided to organize cob workshops on the road in all the countries she wanted to bike to and through.  The journey ended up going for 5 years in which 30 workshops in 15 countries were held\, in Africa\, South America\, \n  \n \nAzores livin’ \n\n  \nEurope and the US. The new CruzinCobGlobal was born in 2015 with a website and a new seriousness and organization and consistency that have\, together with the unusual goal of building a complete cob cottage in 5 weeks from feet to head and all the fixins in between\, brought CCG its global reputation as the only and best complete and intensive professional cob training in the world today. \nAt this point\, and after creating her first Cob Ecovillage\, “Quinta da Vida Beleza” from 2020 to 2023 in the Azores\, with workshop students and others\, she has now stepped back from the teaching role to honor and train her best students on this path.  However\, when the workshop takes place in a new location of interest\, like Kenya\, she may decide to step in for old time’s sake\, to keep stoking her passion and love of international cob teaching! \n  \nCOB ASSISTANT \nZoë  Verbaant \n  \n \nIn Zanzibar building a cob permaculture center last year \n\n  \nHi! I’m Zoë\, 34\, I’m from the Netherlands\, and currently I live wherever I lay my head down.\nI have always been very passionate about the world\, nature\, humanity\, and how everything is related. As a child I would philosophy about these topics. I was fascinated with indigenous tribal peoples living exclusively of the land they walk on. I dreamed of living like that too\, in a house made of bamboo\, or mud\, that I’d built myself.\nGrowing up\, I ‘did life’ differently than the people around me\, trying to follow my passions. I eventually studied ecology\, nature and wildlife management\, dreaming to contribute to conservation of primary ecosystems. I’d travel everytime I had managed to save up with waitress jobs. Not only because I love exploring every corner of the world\, also because of my strong need to put my energy into conservation related projects. Through these endeavours I eventually ended up volunteering at a place in Spain\, in 2015\, where 2 elderly people were re-designing their lifestyle to a more connected life\, and that included natural building – restoring the ruined dry stone wall buildings.\nI loved doing that\, and in 2017 I joined a massive earth bag build in Australia\, that also incorporated rammed earth walls and a cob oven. It was a very beautiful holistic experience. And somehow it felt as though I had built like it before. A puzzle piece fell in place.. From then on\, in my travels I would often look for opportunities to build\, restore or beautify people’s homes\, slowly learning more\, gaining skills\, growing as a person and feeding my soul. I’ve been interested in all the different possibilities within the concept of natural building…. and there are many.\nBesides the above\, I worked on 2 hempcrete builds in the Netherlands\, a round timber frame gazebo with reciprocal green roof in France\, restoring an old wattle/daub tudor house in Germany\, a cob roundhouse in Spain. And a month ago a mud brick house in Thailand. I have done several plastering and paint jobs here and there\, using earthen and lime mixes. Adding to that I have done some small works\, learning about slip straw\, pallet cob\, scrafito and other plaster murals\, tadelakt and building rocket mass heaters.\nI joined the Cruzing Cob Global cob house and oven+bench workshop\, on Sao Miguel in 2023. I really wanted a start to finish experience\, combining all the techniques involved. It gave me a big boost in my building skills and I made great friendships.\nMoving on from there I felt confident I could have a go at designing and teaching building\, which I did in Tanzania. We made a gazebo style classroom with coral rock\, earth and wood.\nAnd now it’s very exciting to continue the journey of sharing the knowledge\, with CruzinCobGloblal\, in Kenya\, alongside Claudine.\nI know we will have an amazing time. \n  \nREGISTRATION & PAYMENT \n  \nVery Early Bird Rate: 2250€\, paid in full by November 9th\, 2024 \nEarly Bird Rate: 2350€\, paid in full by December 31st\, 2024 \nStandard Rate: 2450€\, paid in full by January 26th\, 2025 \nWe are offering 2 work trade positions which give you a 250€ discount on either food or tuition for working one hour each weekday preparing the building site from 6:30AM to 7:30AM.  These are the first options to go. Depending on when you pay in full\, the discount is taken off the appropriate amount. \nPayment can be made in Euros using Wise to CruzinCobGlobal at the following IBAN: BE44 9673 1046 6145 or to claudinedesiree@gmail.com at Venmo\, Paypal (including the transaction fee) or Zelle with current Euro to USD conversion. \nPlease contact claudine@cruzincobglobal.org or on Whatsapp +1(831) 212-7225 to register and ask any questions. \nTo hold your spot (there are 12 for new students and 3 for returning students)\, you can make a 50% deposit.  The balance owed depends on the date of payment in full. Final payment deadline is January 26th\, 2025. \nSpecial Note: \nLocal\, Kenyan and African students with a locally-sourced income and with full-time residence on the African continent: \nTuition and Weekday Meals: 1525€ (accommodations & weekend meals extra) \nCamping with own equipment is free (2 tents available to borrow from Host) \nBunkbed: 6€/night \nWeekend meals: 15€/day (Breakfast: 3€  Lunch: 6€ Dinner: 6€) \nWe are working to complete our 4th 1000€ scholarship for a local very motivated Kenyan student Students will need to make the food payment with their own funds or raising money on their own. \nPlease help this happen by supporting our GoFundMe fundraiser here:  (link coming soon) \nGratitude \n  \nCANCELLATION POLICY \n  \nStudents who have paid and cancel by December 9th\, 2024 can get a full refund minus a 5% administrative/inconvenience fee on the amount they have paid. \nStudents who have paid and cancel by January 9th\, 2025 will receive a credit for a future workshop within two years minus a 10% administrative/inconvenience fee. \nStudents who have paid and cancel after January 9th\, 2025 will NOT receive a refund or credit unless they have proof of an emergency situation or other reason out of their control\, in which case they will receive a credit for two years minus the 10% admin fee. \n  \nCAN’T WAIT TO GET MUDDY WITH YOU!!!!
URL:https://cobworkshops.org/event/build-a-cob-community-roundhouse-in-naivasha-kenya-in-february-march-2025/
LOCATION:Mlango Farm\, Ngecha\, Kenya
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cobworkshops.org/wp-content/uploads/CCG-Flyer-KenyaCOB2025.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="CruzinCobGlobal":MAILTO:claudine@cruzincobglobal.org
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR