Video

Action || Ushuaia Earthship Build

http://www.valhallamovement.com Action is the most sought after and crucial step in making things come together for positive change. We all want to see action manifest and the only way that will happen is we all personally take the responsibility to make it happen. Conclusion video coming up :)

Community || Ushuaia Earthship Build

http://www.valhallamovement.com Ingredient number 3 for changing the world – happens to be the one that is often toughest to create and maintain – Community. Community is what glues together the ideals and knowledge previously acquired. It’s what validates our ideas – allows them to come to life and creates the network of support that any idea needs to flourish.

UNIFY #LoveWater

Water Unifies us All. On March 22nd, Join the world in the Synchronized Global Water Ceremony. At 3:00pm in your local time and 3:00pm pacific. UNIFYing with the world to restore our relationship with this sacred medium of life. No Water, No Life. Know Water, Know Life.

Twin Oaks- Inside Perspective

This video is about how members of Twin Oaks Intentional Community feel about living there, why they like it and what they appreciate about the way their community works. Music: Love and Mathematics by Broken Social Scene

Twin Oaks- Labour and Governance

This video is about an intentional community in Virginia called Twin Oaks. It is one of the oldest intentional communities in the United States of America. This video discusses how they function as a unit with their shared labour for the community’s businesses and how their governance is set up.

Knowledge || Ushuaia Earthship Build

http://www.valhallamovement.com The next ingredient in the recipe for change is knowledge. After you have decided to adopt a sustainable mindset and lifestyle the next step is to acquire the knowledge needed to transition certain aspects of our lives into being more in line with our collective beliefs.

Sustainability | Ushuaia Earthship Build

http://www.valhallamovement.com After witnessing the Ushuaia Earthship going up it was clear to Marc that the 4 simple ingredients for change are really the main aspects of the solution towards positive change in our world today. Earthships themselves are a sustainable idea in all senses of the word and although perhaps not perfect are a leap in the right direction.

Producing Energy from Ocean Waves

Ocean waves and tidal currents are one of the most untapped and important, clean, cheap, rich, and reliable sources of renewable energy on the earth. UC Berkeley professor Reza Alam and his team at the TAF Lab (Theoretical & Applied Fluid Dynamics Laboratory) have developed a “wave carpet” which can extract the energy of ocean waves and turn it into electricity and freshwater for households and cities.

Rafea: Solar Mama

Rafea is 30 years old with four children and a husband who is eager to take a third wife. She is a Bedouin woman living in a small Jordanian village close to the desert. With encouragement from the country’s Ministry of Environment, she leaves her village for the first time to go to the Barefoot College in India to train to become a solar-energy engineer.

Simple: Biomimicry

A 2 minute film highlighting a sustainable solution called biomimicry. http://asknature.org/ http://vincent.callebaut.org/page1-img-dragonfly.html http://www.facebook.com/SustainableMan?sk=app_57675755167

Peso For Your Thoughts

http://www.valhallamovement.com Finally back in Montreal – the journey of the Earthship build in Ushuaia continues and transitions into the positive solutions side of the story. This is the first of a series of videos that are to follow about how Positive Sustainable change can come about.

Barefoot We Will Return | Valhalla India

The Valhalla Team gets ready to leave the beautiful community and organization of “Barefoot College” but not for long. We’ve learned and been inspired beyond explanation and now we’re pumped and ready to continue our journey to the next discovery India has to offer.

Desert Areas May Never Suffer Famine Again

Driven by a long-standing desire for justice, American biologist Gordon Sato is spending his retirement helping some of the world’s poorest people, in Eritrea, to help themselves. His innovative Manzanar project harnesses two of the Eritrean coast’s most abundant resources – intense sunlight and seawater – to grow mangrove plants that can be used not only to feed animals, but also to provide a habitat for fish and shellfish.