Ian Keay: I first met Ian and his
sister Jane when I was 14 - and had just had my appendix out after a school
emergency before the Christmas holidays. Ian, who would be our best man in
1973, introduced me in the mid-1960s to the thinking of Buckminster Fuller
and to a whole raft of science fiction writers.
Jane Keay: Though a couple of years older, Jane asked
me to Charleston a few weeks after my appendicectomy. I was, as they say,
sorely tempted. My first real girlfriend and still a very close friend.
The Palmers: Cousins of the Keays and living in the same
village, we also grew up alongside Nigel, Cally and Debby. Their parents,
Judge Jack and Vanda (Bunny) Palmer were wonderful hosts.
Elaine Elkington:
In retrospect, meeting Elaine in 1968 was the pivotal point in my life. We
married in 1973 and she has been a Muse and hugely powerful influence in every
aspect of my life since.
Dr Stanley and Margaret Waite: They weren't at all sure
of what to make of me at the outset. The fact that I had (very) long hair,
beads and an antique Dior jewelled waistcoat probably didn't get us off on
quite the right foot, nor did the fact that all my grandparents had got divorced,
and at least two had subsequently divorced again. But things soon improved
- and I'm hugely grateful to them for helping us buy our Barnes home, even
though they were horrified when they saw the ruinous state we were living
in.
Martin Lindsay: Another friend at
Essex University, Martin introduced me to the music of Fairport Convention
(It's Alright, Ma, It's Only Witchcraft)
and to the more esoteric aspects of America's West Coast sound.
Rex Gowar: Also a friend from Essex days he kept an eye
on me during my first and only LSD trip.
Shawn Phillips: A musician we met in Positano, Italy,
on our way to Greece. Three of us, Rex, Ian Lovell and I, spent an extraordinary
night in Shawn's hilltop house, listening to music he had just recorded with
the likes of Paul McCartney and Stevie Winwood. www.shawnphillips.com
Stewart Brand: The man behind so many
things, but the key is his Whole Earth Catolog series, which I devoured
through the 70s.
Buckminster Fuller: I read most of his books, though
it wasn't easy, and finally met the man in Reykjavik in 1977. His concept
of ephemeralization and notion of 'doing more with less', as with geodesic
domes, were direct precursors of eco-efficiency.
Frank Herbert: Herbert's Dune series entertained
me for years. I tried to meet up with him but somehow our paths never coincided
- until we finally made it happen as I flew in from Seattle and he prepared
to leave London for the reverse trip. The conversation was captured in a couple
of articles, including a piece for Earthlife
News.
Hollister T. Sprague: A WWI American
fighter pilot, he later worked as Mr Boeing's lawyer in Seattle. A first cousin
of my grandmother Isabel, he looked after Elaine and I on our 1973 honeymoon,
escorting us across the Cascades and up into the Olympic Peninsula. His home,
Forestledge, overlooking Puget Sound, became a regular holiday destination
for us.
Chuck and Jeanne Branson: Via Hollister, we met his sister
Joan
(pronounced Jo-Anne) and her husband Elon, who lived on a ranch near Yakima,
on the other side of the Cascades. Closer to hand, indeed just along the bluff
on which stands Hollister's extraordinary house, Forestledge, lives his niece,
Jeanne and her husband Chuck and family. Hollister, Joan and Elon are long
dead, but the links live on.
Once the process of meeting cousins
started, it continued. Most notable have been Charlotte and Clark Turner,
whose house fronting directly onto Puget Sound on Vashon Island has been a
wonderful retreat - with Hania catching her first and only salmon from the
foreshore. Among the things that stand out in memory are horse-riding in the
hills around Yakima with Elon, sailing with Clark and Charlotte around Puget
Sound, and being taken to our first and only drag race with (not entirely
in character) the Bransons.
Robin Clarke: Previously editor of the Science Journal,
a precursor of New Scientist, Robin founded Biotechnic Research &
Development (BRAD). BRAD was somewhat akin to John Todd's New Alchemy Institute
in Cape Cod. It was a fascinating combination of solar energy, windmills,
fish ponds and the sort of social dysfunction you often found in low-discipline
intentional communities or communes.
John Todd: My shelves still contain several editions
of The Journal of the New Alchemists. A pioneer in such areas as intentional
communities and aquaculture, particularly tilapia farming.
John C. Lilly: Mad as a hatter, at times, probably because
of all the LSD he took. But his work on dolphins, (including building channels
that brought them into his home), sparked something in my imagination www.johnclilly.com.
Gavin Young: I was fascinated by Gavin's experience of
living with the Marsh Arabs of Iraq (see his Return to the Marshes), to whom
he was introduced by Wilfred Thesiger, and by his sense of Vietnam's history,
where he had spent a great deal of time.
Paolo Soleri: In 1973, Elaine and I visited Soleri's
Cosanti Foundation and Arcosanti project, which led to my first speech and
article. Originally a pupil of Frank Lloyd Wright, who had dreamed of 'Broadacre
City', with every family allocated a 1-acre lot, Soleri went for something
more like human termitaries, super-dense cities built into massive dams or
other giant structures. Arcosanti was fascinating, but a storey or two high
at best. My AAQ article mused that it would
make a great set of ruins.
Joan Davidson: She taught me rural environment subjects
at UCL in 1972-74 - and was one of the first people to recommend that I take
up writing professionally.
Mike Franks: I met Mike when working with TEST. He was
an architect-planner at the GLC office across the road in London's Covent
Garden. We shared a common interest in cities as ecosystems. Later, we (ENDS)
took an office in the huge office complex Mike's company, Regeneration, had
redeveloped in Clerkenwell. ENDS is still there some 20 years later.
< previous people page
> next people page