Tim Dundon ZEKE the Compost Sheik needs the
community to come out on Labor day Sept 1-3 Pasadena to create /build a
gate
The La Loma Development Company gate workshop to benefit Tim Dundon
will run Saturday through Monday, September 1-3, 10am-5pm, 1355 Lincoln
Ave, (@ Washington Blvd), Pasadena. The final day may be on site in
Altadena. Admittance: $75 or work or goods in kind. For more
information call (818) 834-7074.
Labor Day weekend Barrantes’ firm will be hosting a three-day metal and
glass workshop to build a gate needed at Dundon’s home to meet code,
but a gate with a difference. Sculptor Ray Cirino will be leading the
class and glass artist Leigh Adams will oversee the metal and
glass-work component. The design (above), Cirino says, was inspired by
the idea of a lens to magnify Dundon’s teachings about soil. “It will
signify a looking glass into Tim’s world.”
“It must be so perfectly balanced that Tim can open it with his pinky,”
he said, before adding, “You might say it’s a balancing act.”
http://chanceofrain.com/2012/08/a-lens-into-paradise/
Tim Dundon Zeke the Sheik Compost
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3UD2rKFoIE
A LENS INTO PARADISE
Posted on | August 24, 2012 | 1 Comment
If you live in greater Los Angeles, chances are good that you’ve heard
of Tim Dundon. The deputy of a Los Angeles County supervisor once
compared Dundon’s pile of compost in the unincorporated foothill city
of Altadena to the mosaics of Simon Rodia in Watts. “Watts has Watts
Towers. Altadena has the pile,” Kathryn Barger told the Los Angeles
Times.
Eleven years later, most of the pile is gone and Dundon is in deep
trouble over what is growing on the remains. Labor Day weekend a star
line up of Los Angeles County artists will be leading a community
workshop to bail him out.
Tim Dundon with charcoal. Photo: Ray Cirino Facebook Gallery
Begun by Dundon in the 1970s, the compost pile near the Altadena
intersection of North Fair Oaks Avenue and West Mountain View Street
had reached forty feet tall when in 2001 the Times made comic hay of
Dundon’s straggling grey beard, a tendency to lapse into rhyme and his
Pasadena Doo Dah Parade alter ego, the caftan-wearing “Zeke the Sheik.”
The Times coverage by Richard Winton over a series of pieces was
memorably vivid, funny and good, but only Michelle Huneven, writing in
the LA Weekly in 2004, succeeded in capturing both the absurdity and
profundity of Altadena’s self-styled king of crap. It helped that
Huneven has a novelist’s eye; it helped even more that, as a serious
gardener, she’d been a customer of Dundon’s. Through passing swarms of
flies, Huneven studied Dundon as he made delivery after delivery of
stable manure to her Altadena property. This briefly hot mix smothered
a weedy lawn that soon gave way to a fecund garden. The transformation
of her yard imbued genuine respect for Dundon.
Manure deliveries were often accompanied, she noted, with “a few
minutes of his compost-based philosophy, occasionally delivered in
rhyme with periodic bursts of song and biblical quotation.” Punning on
the TV show ‘Walker’ starring Chuck Norris, Dundon emphasized to
Huneven that he was ‘Talker.’ Whereas Walker was violent, Dundon prided
himself on being the opposite. “Dundon’s compost, you must understand,
is ultimately more than a product,” Huneven explained. “It is also a
worldview, and a way of life — a means to health, happiness and world
peace. ‘This is the way, the truth, the life,’ he says of the stuff.
Indeed, Dundon does not talk so much as he preaches, and what he
preaches is the Gospel of Compost.”
Gallery at the End of the World piece by Dave Lovejoy and Leigh Adams;
Adams will be providing the glasswork for the Dundon gate. Photo: Emily
Green
After almost two decades of running skirmishes with the county health
and fire departments, Altadena’s answer to Watts Towers, which sat on
borrowed land next to Dundon’s family home, was finally bulldozed in
2005. Dundon retreated into the compost-fed overgrowth his side of the
property line. In the seven years since the pile was demolished,
Dundon, now 70, has become sharply stooped. Too frail to shovel
compost, he still manages to operate the stable front loaders to fill
his truck, and then drive the battered jalopy to long-standing garden
clients. His favorite customers are schools, from which he will accept
no payment. Zeke the Sheik could be roused for events like the yearly
meetings of the Los Angeles Community Garden Council. To compost
customers, it seemed that he had finally made peace with the county
agencies he once battled – until last month, when according to the
Pasadena Star-News, county sheriffs arrived, this time followed by
demands that he restrain wandering pets and trim his property’s thick
fringe of plants away from the curb.
This is more easily accomplished by those able to stand without a cane.
On learning about Dundon’s plight, the Pasadena-based landscaping firm
La Loma Development Company sent a crew of gardeners over to prune just
enough of Dundon’s mixed cactus front hedge to achieve a legal setback.
“We kept cuttings, both out of respect for Tim’s garden, and because he
has a lot of rare plants,” said La Loma founder Marco Barrantes.
Amphitheater at Arlington Garden in Pasadena by La Loma Development
Company’s Marco Barrantes and sculptor Ray Cirino. Barrantes and Cirino
are organizing the Dundon fence workshop. Photo: Emily Green
Over Labor Day weekend Barrantes’ firm will be hosting a three-day
metal and glass workshop to build a gate needed at Dundon’s home to
meet code, but a gate with a difference. Sculptor Ray Cirino will be
leading the class and glass artist Leigh Adams will oversee the metal
and glass-work component. The design (above), Cirino says, was inspired
by the idea of a lens to magnify Dundon’s teachings about soil. “It
will signify a looking glass into Tim’s world.”
“It must be so perfectly balanced that Tim can open it with his pinky,”
he said, before adding, “You might say it’s a balancing act.”
The La Loma Development Company gate workshop to benefit Tim Dundon
will run Saturday through Monday, September 1-3, 10am-5pm, 1355 Lincoln
Ave, (@ Washington Blvd), Pasadena. The final day may be on site in
Altadena. Admittance: $75 or work or goods in kind. For more
information call (818) 834-7074.