Monday, 14 March 2011

New cob course dates added!



Our 4 day complete cob course on 'How to build your own cob house or cob studio' in May, has been over subscribed. And so due to demand we've decided to run a second course this summer.

It will take place at our site in Norfolk and run from Friday 12th August, until the end of Monday 15th August. We've put it over a weekend again, so participants have to take less time off work.

The cob course will cover everything you need to know - practical and theory in order to build your own cob project.

It will cover:
Design and passive solar design
Siting
Building and planning regulations
Getting the cob mix right
Cob-bale design
Cob Walls
How to insert windows and doors into cob
Roofs for cob construction
Foundations
Stem walls
Clay plastering
Lime rendering
Earthen floors
And more...............

You'll meet loads of great people, eat loads of yummy food, whilst learning masses from the cob expert Kate Edwards herself. And at the end of it, you'll be ready to go away and build your own cob house or cob studio.

The course costs £400. To book we need to send you a booking form you fill in and you return it to us with your deposit. Get in touch for a booking form and to ask questions by emailing us at charlotteevecreative@hotmail.com or by calling us on 01493 369952 or 07766 220526. You can also email us via the website www.edwardscobbuilding.com

We can't wait to meet you soon!



Monday, 7 March 2011

We're looking forward to more school work


This month we're looking forward to building a cob pizza oven with the pupils at Thompson Primary School in Norfolk. This picture shows an oven the children built with us at Kenninghall Primary school recently. They were natural cobbers and excellent sculptors!
If you know any schools that might like to get stuck in on a cob workshop with us, get them to call me on 01493 369952 or email me at charlotteevecreative@hotmail.com.
We build ovens, benches, sculpture, and even outdoor classrooms with young people and their schools.

On a high!

On a high!
Kate's been up on the roof again today, and
she's mastered the art of turning the reed. Her thatching is looking great.
Rojo our apprentice learnt how to limerender today and he's done a great job.
And I've been chatting to several schools in Norfolk this afternoon who've all booked us to come and run cob workshops with them this Spring - which is really exciting.

Thursday, 3 March 2011

Kate gives talk on cob in Graz

Suffolk County Council recently asked us if we'd go to Graz in Austria and give a presentation about cob building, to delegates from all over Europe at the Cradle to Cradle convention.

Kate did a stonking presentation and we're hoping to be visiting Bulgaria and Hungary soon to run cob workshops.

The Cradle to Cradle Network is funded by the EU and it's a network for sharing good practice in sustainability across Europe.
Check out their website at http://www.c2cn.eu/

Wednesday, 2 March 2011

I'm still bleating on. This is the last for today though.

We're on Twitter now.

See the clay-lump and wattle & daub

Banging on!
This is what all the noise is about. Kate and Rojo are knocking off the cement render to expose the wattle and daub (left side of picture) and clay-lumps (right side of picture). They're patching up the holes they find with new cob they've made, and then when it dries, Kate will show Rojo how to lime render.
It's really easy to maintain and repair your old cob or clay-lump house. We can show you how to do it on one of our cob courses, or you can get us to help you with it. Get in touch if you want to find out more. www.edwardscobbuilding.com

The cob-bale extension latest

This is the cob-bale extension we're building at the moment, onto our 400 year old wattle & daub and clay-lump cottage. The front walls you see are solid cob. The back wall is north facing, so it has straw bales embedded into it. This combination of straw and cob means that when this extension is finished, it won't need any heating! So not only is cob the ultimate sustainable building material - when cob houses are finished, they're also very eco to run. They're just so dammed perfect!

You can see here that Kate has started the thatch. Today she's been on the roof in the freezing cold, building the chimney stack, ready to thatch around. I'll put pictures of that on soon. We're going to build a Romford cob fire place in the sitting room - it's an open fire but it's as efficient as a woodburner - we'll take you through how to build one when we do ours.

Right, I have to go as I can't concentrate any more with the banging - our new apprentice Rojo is chipping the cement render off the old house so we can replace it with a lime render. It is essential that earth houses have a lime render so the walls can breath and no moisture is trapped.

Okay. See you later.
Charlotte.