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submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by confused_polarbear@slrpnk.net to c/PolarPunk@slrpnk.net

Welcome to the new community for Polarpunk! Here are some initial thoughts about what Polarpunk might look like, feel free to add anything you can think of.

  • “Solarpunk in winter”
  • Life in cold regions
  • Learning from indigenous survival technologies
  • Solar energy is unavailable for much of the year but they will use it when it is available
  • Heavy geothermal energy use (and wind)
  • Huddling together to keep warm
  • Less outward expression of conflict as they have to get along for at least the winter before travel is possible, so mental privacy is paramount
  • Not low tech but slow tech. They will only adapt tech that is proven to work in their extreme climate and is worth the cost of getting it there
  • Use it up, wear it out, recycle elements
  • Seasonal ways of life are completely different
  • Summer is for outdoor work, prepping, shipping supplies, and travel; more individualistic
  • Winter is for rest, with traditions, festivals, holidays, music and art to keep spirits up; more communal
  • Importance of survival over all so a conservative approach to risk taking
  • How to be solarpunk in adversarial political, social, or weather climates
  • Death rites are well established and can be relied on, as nature can be adversarial
  • We and the animals are no different, respect for their life and death and being
  • Low expectations (it’s okay for a community member to spend all winter in bed; only if they are depressed and unproductive in summer is it cause for concern)
  • Batteries and food are stored underground
  • A “survival mode” that solarpunks and lunarpunks can also tap into if faced with natural disasters or scarcity
  • Caves with SAD lamps
  • Villages, not cities
  • Train tunnel to Solarpunk land
  • Helps Lunarpunk plan off-world survival in space
  • Covered walkways/pedestrian tunnels help with being carfree in bad weather
  • Accomodating of lateness/work from home/pajamas
  • Maximum coziness
  • Protecting and appreciating the icy climate and fighting to save it
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submitted 4 months ago by Midnight@slrpnk.net to c/PolarPunk@slrpnk.net
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This is an older photobash I did awhile back - inspired by conversations around a lack of winter (or generally seasonal) solarpunk artwork.

One thing I’ve been considering is if snow rollers, or a modern take on packing down snow instead of plowing it out of the way, might make a comeback in a society with fewer cars and snowy winters. Around here, they used to use sleighs in the winter, and snow rollers pulled by oxen to flatten the roads for travel. The idea of shoveling an entire road bare so you could drive on it would probably have seemed pretty extravagant to them.

It’s an idea that’s been rattling around in my head for awhile. There’s a sizable contingent in solarpunk spaces who are very much in favor of society deprioritizing cars and focusing on trains and other public transit options. If our solarpunk society has resource limitations, as most societies do, and they’re prioritizing big infrastructure stuff like trains, ropeways, etc, it’s possible that roads would fall apart pretty quick.

Around here at least, roads, bridges, etc require constant maintenance to remain anywhere approaching drivable. Winter breaks them with frost heaves and potholes, spring turns their footings to muddy slop or washes them away in floods. The maintenance is constant and expensive.

I feel like a society where most people take the train, and ride bikes, would find themselves wondering why they need to maintain a lot of these roads to a drivable level. Especially if this solarpunk community is rebuilding after our current society goes through a span of societal crumbles and leaves them with even more infrastructure debt. I tend to set these pictures in that period of post-post-apoclyptic rebuilding, after places like my hometown have already condensed back towards smaller, denser villages, rather than the sprawling pseudo-suburbia we have now. (Out of necessary due to societal crumbles and cars/gas becoming less reliable.) Towns here used to have multiple small clumps of houses and industry built around walking, with big spans of farms and forest between them where you’d catch a wagon or car ride to a town with a train station.

So in this setting, I imagine trains and ropeways link these small, dense villages. Primary roads to other towns are maintained, along with ones leading to nearby farms, but there are probably a lot of abandoned developments an impractical distance out, linked by roads that have been mostly left to break up and wash out just because the society doesn’t have the means or a strong reason to maintain them. Perhaps they’re letting some areas rewild, maybe they only make jaunts out on these old roads to disassemble houses for all their useful parts, and to return the lots to nature.

I imagine that sometimes, the ropeways don’t follow the main roads. Perhaps they take more direct routs, or cross spans where bridges have collapsed and haven’t been replaced. Most of the time they’d follow some kind of road, just because that makes it easier for the work crews who build and maintain them, but perhaps these roads aren’t active enough to justify plowing all winter. Seasonality is a good concept for solarpunk societies, I feel like a solarpunk society would consider seasonal means of travel.

I imagine a lot of these secondary roads are used as winter trails, packed down with snow groomers and traveled by people on cross country skis, snowshoes, sleighs, perhaps electric snowmobiles or those bicycle/sled contraptions.

That’s where I set this one. A seasonal road used as a winter trail, followed for some of its course by a ropeway. On either end of that cable, the villages are lit and warm, their streets plowed, but out here, its just the quiet static hiss of snow falling, the creak of the pulleys overhead, and the rumbling of the groomer crew making a pass to pack the trail.

More recently I added a page on seasonal roads to the writing resource collection in /c/writing 's wiki. It's got a lot of the same content, just written more about the concept and range of options rather than this specific image.

You can also find this picture on the solar seed library, which I quite recommend https://storyseedlibrary.org/art/jacob-coffin-ropeway-road/

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Hello, I am looking for recommendations and examples of Polarpunk in various forms of media.

My favorite one so far is the village of Hope Town in Tom Rob Smith’s sci-fi novel Cold People, but I am struggling to think of others.

Any Polarpunk music recommendations are welcome here as well!

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This just felt like a combo of Polarpunk/Lunarpunk to me. 💜

Polarpunk

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This community is dedicated to Polarpunk, a version of Solarpunk inspired by the far North and South regions of the globe and the unique challenges, adaptations, and resilience of practicing Solarpunk ideals in harsh environmental, social, or political climates.

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