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JAMES & CLARE MORRIS


JAMES AND CLARE MORRIS on their Green (and fiery) adventure


J


ames and Clare Morris have a track record for liking all things ‘green’. Clare used to work at Slapton Ley as Site Manager of the National Nature Reserve where she practiced the FSC motto “Environmental Understanding for All”. Dr James – he has a PhD in


laser Physics (like you do) - worked for the last five years on a project using algae to provide clean energy. However, both are heading in potentially new directions


but with their green credentials very clearly still intact. From their converted chapel in Blackawton, where


they live with their two children, they are working on two projects with green ethics at their heart. clare is starting a new florist venture using flowers


grown in the village. This breaks from the normal practice used by florists to buy-in from large nurseries, with blooms trucked in from holland or flown in from Kenya. At Blackawton Blooms, she and her partner Jane Willmott use flowers they have nurtured themselves - from seed to flower to bouquet - they do it all: “home-grown not flown”. “We love flowers and wanted to create displays that


feel more natural and are more sustainable. We are not certified organic, though we do practice organic growing. We mostly grow cottage garden and wildflowers with a natural feel and our arrangements range from formal to funky that you simply won’t see


Interview by Phil Scoble


Clare Morris (l) and Jane Willmot


“We’ve been inspired by nature in the geodesic design and used the best of modern technology to create an affordable and attractive product.”


elsewhere. They last longer too as they are cut, arranged and delivered in less than 24 hours – imported flowers just can’t compete. They are proving very popular – we’re in delis, pubs, holiday accommodation, restaurants and we’ve done four weddings and a funeral, plus a commercial photo- shoot.”


James’ project is a complete departure in many ways


for him. He spends his normal week translating texts from German into English or developing oceanographic sensors for Valeport in Totnes. So how did he come to make a new version of a


traditional classic? “I was on holiday with my family in Sicily when I saw local people using a traditional wood-fired oven,” he said. “I was convinced that I could improve on the design whilst preserving the classic features. When we got home I started work.” Enlisting the help of his friends and colleagues Will


Benzies, Sven Hirons and Jack Faulkner, James conducted more than 70 tests on his materials and constructed part and full prototypes in only four months. James had looked at the large, heavy firebrick oven in


James Morris (l), Will Benzies & Jack Faulkner visit www.bythedart.co.uk - for everything & anything about Dartmouth


Sicily and realised that with modern materials it should be possible to create a lighter oven that could be as strong and as effective at holding heat as its thousand-year old inspiration. He thinks he’s succeeded.


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