Meet Mrs Bilbo Baggins: Oxford graduate quits society to
live a hobbit-style existence in a mud roundhouse in Welsh hills
Emma Orbach, 58, has shunned society, living in a mudhut she
built herself. The Oxford graduate named her home Tir Ysbrydol, which means
‘spirit land’ in Welsh, where she has banned technology. She fetches water from a stream and keeps three goats, seven
chickens and two horses
[Left] Enjoying a night in: Oxford graduate Emma Orbach plays the Celtic harp in her hobbit-style mud and straw roundhouse in the Welsh mountains.
[Left] Enjoying a night in: Oxford graduate Emma Orbach plays the Celtic harp in her hobbit-style mud and straw roundhouse in the Welsh mountains.
Her straw and mud hut looks more suited to Bilbo Baggins.
But unlike the wandering hobbit, Oxford University graduate
Emma Orbach is staying firmly put.
The 58-year-old has spent the past 13 years living with no
electricity in her self-built roundhouse, generating her own power and growing
her own food.
[Left]Independent life: Emma collects firewood for her eco-home
which lacks electricity and running water.
Her daily chores involve tending to her vegetable plot and
collecting fruit, looking after her three goats, seven chickens and two horses
and chopping firewood.
VIDEO In her own words Emma just wants a simple life
She gets her drinking water from a nearby stream and only
rarely ventures to the shops for treats like rice and chocolate.
Her evenings are spent in the glow of her stove, cooking her
dinner and playing music on her Celtic harp.
Mrs Orbach said: ‘This is how I want to live.
This lifestyle makes me feel really happy and at peace and this is my ideal home.’
This lifestyle makes me feel really happy and at peace and this is my ideal home.’
[Left] Unassuming: The hobbit-like roundhouse has been named Tir
Ysbrydol which means 'spirit land' in Welsh.
Nestled in the mountains of West Wales, she named her home
Tir Ysbrydol, which means ‘spirit land’ in Welsh.
When her children, who are in their 20s and 30s and live
in London, Bristol and Brighton, visit, they, like all guests at the
roundhouse, are banned from bringing technology such as phones or laptops with
them.
[Left] Living off the earth: Emma has banned modern technology from
her mountain home.
It is all a far cry from the conventional trappings of Mrs
Orbach’s background. Her father was a violinist and her mother a librarian.
After graduating from Oxford with a degree in Chinese,
she married architectural historian Julian Orbach.
Together they founded the Brithdir Mawr eco-community in the
Preseli Mountains near Newport, in Pembrokeshire, round a 180-acre farm in
1993.
For five years they enjoyed a simple life, then a survey
plane chanced upon the ‘lost tribe’ and they were plunged into a decade-long
battle with officialdom.
Officials were unable to find any records, let alone planning
permission, for the mystery hillside village surrounded by trees and bushes and
insisted the eight grass-covered buildings should be demolished.
[Left] The simple life: Emma keeps seven chickens, three goats and
two horses at her eco-hut.
The eco-community endured a decade of inquiries, court cases
and a planning hearing before their fight, backed by more modern support for
green issues, finally ended in victory in 2008 when the roundhouses were given
planning approval.
But by then Mr and Mrs Orbach had divorced and the commune
split into three entities, including hers. Each community is independent and
they co-exist as neighbours in a more traditional style.
[Left] Animal care: Emma milks one of her three goats as part of
her daily routine.
Explaining why she set up her own home just before 2000, Mrs
Orbach said she felt a ‘very strong pull to live life even more simply’.
She is in the process of building a sixth roundhouse there
and has permission from the council to build four more, as well as a sauna,
workshop and community building.
She runs a ‘healing and retreat centre’ on the site and
usually has about five people living in the other roundhouses.
They pay her a donation, which covers her £63-a-month
council tax payments, repair costs and supplies of grain.
[Left] No stress: Emma relaxes in front of the fire in her hut
before she heads to bed when it darkens outside at around 7.30 pm.
She said: ‘I don’t miss anything at all about what is
normally called reality. The quality of life, in my view, is decreasing and
everything is speeding up and becoming more stressful.
‘Once or twice I have joked about getting a
takeaway pizza delivered here when I am tired after a long day. But I don’t think
anyone would deliver a pizza across two fields anyway.’
(Source)
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