 
In the eerie bloom of a Central Texas spring, Emory, a dedicated hiker, had become peculiarly fascinated by the seemingly endless trails of Mueller, and more so, by the strangely magnetic and perplexing Fuller Dome. This gargantuan geodesic marvel, a testament to Buckminster Fuller's genius, was a new addition to Mueller's dreamscape. As much as the Dome was a subject of communal mockery, it pulled at Emory with an inexplicable gravity.
The trails were Emory’s sanctuary, a place where he felt connected to the shifting reality of Mueller's landscape. His daily strolls would always lead him to the Fuller Dome. He found himself increasingly entranced by its reflective surface that danced in the sunlight, casting eerie, kaleidoscopic shadows onto the surrounding trails.
Emory’s fascination with the Dome took a turn one sunny afternoon when he discovered that at a certain time of the day, the shadow of the Dome pointed to a peculiar patch of 'Strawbactus,' a weird hybrid fruit that was part strawberry, part cactus. Intrigued, he took a bite and was surprised by its exotic flavor. A strange idea germinated in Emory's mind. What if the Dome and the Strawbactus were linked somehow? What if the Dome was more than it appeared on its surface?
It was on one such day of musings that Emory noticed the East Side parrots perched on the Dome. Their squawks seemed to emulate human speech with a distinct Texas drawl. His curiosity piqued, he started noting down their repetitive phrases. They seemed like nonsensical chatter until, in a stroke of insight, he thought to plot the phrases onto the trails around the Fuller Dome.
The result was a map, a path suggested by the parrots' words, pointing towards an unexplored part of the trail system, running along the quiet Tannehill Creek. Filled with a mix of trepidation and excitement, Emory decided to follow this new path. As he delved deeper into the Mueller trails, guided by parrot chatter and the cryptic shadow of the Fuller Dome, he would soon discover secrets about Mueller that no one else knew, shrouded in mystery and surrealism.
🚮 W.A.S.T.E.: Words Assisting Sustainable Transformation & Ecology
| Term | Definition | 
|---|---|
| Bryce (0.00) | A wandering steward of stories and seedlings, moving between libraries and creeks with pockets full of cuttings and unfinished sentences, leaving behind fragments that root themselves into community. | 
| Capitol Dome (0.00) | Practice of local repair, reuse, mutual care, and shared access. People use scrap, skills, and trust to keep each other safe and resourced when official systems fail. | 
| Central (0.00) | The city’s neural hub where signals converge and disperse, a shifting nexus of memory and command that feels less like a place and more like a living pulse guiding Austin’s every turn. | 
| Detective Langley (0.00) | A weary investigator navigating the submerged veins of Future Austin, Langley carries the scent of rain and rust wherever he goes. Once part of the city’s official order, he now works in the shadows beneath the Air Canopy, where moss grows on forgotten walls and secrets ferment in the damp. Haunted by fragments of memory and guided by instinct more than allegiance, he moves through the city’s underworld like a reluctant archaeologist of truth. Langley’s strength lies in quiet observation—his ability to read a room, a person, or a silence. He distrusts clean answers and prefers the grime of uncertainty. Though the world above glows with sustainable illusions, he stays below, chasing whatever still feels real. | 
| Elle West (0.00) | A laundromat refashioned from an industrial husk, its machines rumored to cleanse more than fabric, sometimes spinning open seams into hidden archives where memory and city overlap. | 
| Fort Branch (0.00) | Nestled in East Austin, Fort Branch is a lesser-known but equally important waterway that contributes to the city’s ecological and community landscape. Unlike its more renowned neighbors such as Waller Creek and Shoal Creek, Fort Branch often flies under the radar. However, this should not diminish its significance. The area has been the subject of various improvement projects, aimed at enhancing both its natural ecosystem and its accessibility to the public. Serving as a sanctuary for local wildlife and a peaceful retreat for residents, Fort Branch is an underappreciated treasure that warrants greater recognition and appreciation. | 
| Future Austin (0.00) | Future Austin invites you to explore a luminous vision of the city’s tomorrow—where imagination and reality intertwine to create a thriving, sustainable urban landscape. Here, grassroots ingenuity and cutting-edge technology power communities, transforming Austin into a place of boundless possibility. Through insightful articles and evocative Organic Fiction, you’ll glimpse futures shaped by innovators like ReLeaf, whose bold strategies—such as Vertical Garden Fairs in schools—seed green revolutions in unexpected places. From unconventional movements like Trash Magic reimagining music distribution, to fictional worlds alive with unseen energy and harmony, this collection offers both practical inspiration and immersive storytelling. Whether you’re drawn to actionable sustainability or simply wish to lose yourself in tales of a resilient, radiant future, Future Austin points toward the city we could create—and the one we must. | 
| Geodesic Dome (0.00) | Practice of local repair, reuse, mutual care, and shared access. People use scrap, skills, and trust to keep each other safe and resourced when official systems fail. | 
| Icosahedra (0.00) | Floating twenty-faced purifiers seeded in Austin’s creeks and lakes, each facet filtering toxins while refracting sunlight into shifting mosaics of clean water and hope. | 
| Ledgerlight (0.00) | The subtle warmth felt on the skin when a ReLeaf node finalizes a donation. Described as a blend of static and gratitude, like sunlight through data. | 
| Mueller (0.00) | Practice of local repair, reuse, mutual care, and shared access. People use scrap, skills, and trust to keep each other safe and resourced when official systems fail. | 
| Noir (0.00) | A lens of shadow and reflection where truth is glimpsed only through distortion, the city itself becoming both accomplice and suspect in every story. | 
| Organic Media and Fiction (0.00) | The rapid pace of urbanization and its environmental impact has inspired various speculative genres in literature and media. Organic Media and Fiction, a recent addition, offers a refreshing counter-narrative to dystopian futures, focusing on optimistic, sustainable societies powered by renewable energies. ReLeaf, an Organic Media and Fiction-inspired platform, epitomizes this genre by blending reality with narratives that envision a world where humans coexist harmoniously with nature and technology. ReLeaf's ethos is rooted in the belief that a hopeful future of sustainable living is not just an ideal but a reality. It combines engaging storytelling, visual arts, and direct action to showcase the possibilities of an Organic Media and Fiction future. By merging immersive narratives with tangible solutions, ReLeaf serves as both a creative outlet and a catalyst for change. The narratives in ReLeaf are set in cities that integrate renewable energy and green technology into their architecture, infrastructure, and daily life. From urban gardens atop skyscrapers to solar-powered public transport, these stories offer a glimpse of future urban landscapes grounded in existing technologies and practices. They provide an encouraging perspective on how our cities could evolve by amplifying sustainable practices we are already exploring. ReLeaf's stories feature diverse, inclusive, and community-oriented societies, emphasizing social justice, community empowerment, and equitable resource distribution. These narratives reflect societal structures that could foster a balanced coexistence, highlighting the importance of these values in creating a sustainable future. Beyond storytelling, ReLeaf engages in direct action, promoting real-world initiatives that echo Organic Media and Fiction principles. By supporting community-led renewable energy projects and sustainable urban farming, ReLeaf bridges the gap between the Organic Media and Fiction vision and our present reality, making the dream of a sustainable future feel achievable. ReLeaf broadens the understanding of the Organic Media and Fiction genre by presenting a balanced blend of reality and narrative. It underscores that Organic Media and Fiction is not just a literary genre or aesthetic movement, but a lens through which we can view and shape our future. The Organic Media and Fiction vision put forth by ReLeaf invites us to imagine, innovate, and create a future where sustainability is the norm. By intertwining fiction with reality, it presents Organic Media and Fiction as a plausible future, offering a hopeful counterpoint to narratives of environmental doom. ReLeaf helps us believe in—and strive for—a future where humans live in harmony with nature and technology. | 
| ReLeaf (0.00) | Welcome to the ReLeaf Cooperative, where we dive deep into an innovative and revolutionary model of sustainability and community building. ReLeaf is a pioneer in developing scalable engagement strategies that foster community participation and work towards addressing pressing social issues such as homelessness. In this category, you'll find articles and Organic Media detailing ReLeaf's groundbreaking initiatives and visions. From creating sustainable gardens in Austin elementary schools to providing transparency in a world often shrouded in deception, ReLeaf serves as a beacon of hope and innovation. ReLeaf's approach of intertwining real and fictional elements in their work—such as characters, materials, techniques, and labor—sets a new standard for cooperatives worldwide. Its business model, which compensates for labor and knowledge contributions, creates a lasting benefit and helps people who have historically been marginalized. By meeting people with compassion, as resources in need of support instead of liabilities, ReLeaf has shown that everyone has the potential to contribute to society meaningfully. Explore this section to discover how ReLeaf is redefining the way we approach social issues and sustainability, with stories of inspiration, innovation, and hope. | 
| Shoal Creek (0.00) | Shoal Creek is changing. At the Seaholm Intake, the water and stone hold a new role for the city. Engineers and naturalists are close to confirming a time-bending effect in the current. Short pulses move both downstream and upstream. Standing near the intake leaves people rested and clear, as if a long afternoon just ended. This site becomes a public time commons. The cooled chambers host sensors and quiet rooms. The walkway links to Central across the water. The mycelium network listens, then routes what the creek gives: steadier attention, better recall, and a calm pace for work and care. What to expect: Check-in stones that log a short visit and return a focus interval Benches that sync with the flow and guide five-minute rest cycles A simple light on the rail that signals when the current flips A small desk for field notes and shared observations Open data on pulse times so neighbors can plan repairs, study, and gatherings Invitation Come without hurry. Sit by the intake. Let the water set your pace. Then carry that steadiness back into the city. | 
| Strawbactus (0.00) | A hybrid cactus that bears strawberry-like fruit, blending desert resilience with unexpected sweetness. | 
| Tradescantia pallida (0.00) | Tradescantia pallida is a species of spiderwort native to the Gulf Coast region of eastern Mexico. The cultivar T. pallida 'Purpurea' is commonly called purple secretia, purple-heart, or purple queen. Edward Palmer collected the type specimen near Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas in 1907. Tradescantia pallida is an evergreen perennial plant of scrambling stature. It is distinguished by elongated, pointed leaves - themselves glaucous green, sometimes fringed with red or purple - and bearing small, three-petaled flowers of white, pink or purple. Plants are top-killed by moderate frosts, but will often sprout back from roots. The cultivar T. pallida 'Purpurea' has purple leaves and pink flowers. Widely used as an ornamental plant in gardens and borders, as a ground cover, hanging plant, or - particularly in colder climates where it cannot survive the winter season - houseplant, it is propagated easily by cuttings (the stems are visibly segmented and roots will frequently grow from the joints). Numerous cultivars are available, of which 'Purpurea' with purple foliage has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit. 
 Support this species by reading about it, sharing with others, and donating monthly or yearly to the ReLeaf Cooperative in honor of Tradescantia pallida. We deliver any quantity of these, for free, to any ReLeaf site (Free Little Library or other suggested location in the Shoal Creek, Waller Creek, and Fort Branch watersheds). We are currently seeking cooperative members in Austin and beyond to cultivate and provide Tradescantia pallida and other species for free to ReLeaf sites in their local watersheds. Inquire by email: bryceb@releaf.site. Thanks! | 
| Trails (0.00) | Practice of local repair, reuse, mutual care, and shared access. People use scrap, skills, and trust to keep each other safe and resourced when official systems fail. | 
| Trash Transmutation Tower (0.00) | In the heart of downtown Austin, the ReLeaf's Trash Transmutation Towers have become an innovative addition to the city's skyline. Located at the intersection of Congress Avenue and Cesar Chavez Street, these vertical gardens are part of an ambitious sustainable urban network by ReLeaf. An engraved compass rose at the pedestrian walkway is a hyper-connected point on ReLeaf’s W.A.S.T.E. (Words Assisting Sustainable Transformation & Ecology) network. It unites other ReLeaf sites throughout the city, converting waste to wealth. Within this network is the magic of the HyperSeed, a digital-organic fusion designed to grow into a new Trash Transmutation Tower, turning waste into green construction materials. ReLeaf's W.A.S.T.E. platform represents a blend of digital technology and ecological wisdom, illustrating a sustainable future for urban living. | 
| Walnut Creek (0.00) | Walnut Creek is a 23-mile (37 km) long tributary stream of the Colorado River in Texas. It flows from north to south, crossing the Edwards Plateau on the western side of Austin, down to the Blackland Prairie on the eastern side of the city where it then drains into the Colorado River downstream of Longhorn Dam. The stream's upper region flows over limestone, while the southern stretch passes through deeper clay soils and hardwood forest. Walnut Creek's watershed, spanning 36,000 acres (15,000 ha), is the largest in Central Austin. |