_t_o_

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
 

From grow.bio

A combo of Hemp hurds and ganoderma I would say for the mushrooms.

The pine 1x1 stock is to create a “Lego”- making it easier for them to be stackable.

Excited to keep experimenting with this

 

Good article about how we can reuse Spent Mushroom Blocks to improve our soils, generate energy sources, and make building materials. Cycling Nutrients like Mother Nature for the Win!

 

“In controlled experiments, the TLBS reduced the bioavailable concentrations of nickel and cadmium by 93.63% and 89.68%, respectively. Simultaneously, it degraded 71.41% to 96.79% of organic pollutants, including commonly used antibiotics and pesticides.”

 

Really interesting demo of how to make various types of building materials using Mud. Ratios and amounts given. Methods Included: Rammed Earth, Cob, Adobe Brick, Clay Mortar, Wattle and Daub, Straw Clay bricks, Light Straw Clay,

[–] _t_o_ -1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Please don’t make assumptions about me, or make it seem like being a centrist is equal to being a nazi - which I am not. I’m also not “just asking question” like you state. Nor am I comfortable with someone in massive position of power doing a nazi salute. But it seems you already know who am I, what I think and what I’m doing. (You don’t know any of those) Im also not white knighting him- where did I do that?

I thought trying to make the point that when making points about Important discussions using logical fallacies isn’t the best way to go about it.

But continue to make assumptions about someone you don’t know and point your anger at the issue at hand at me instead. If you wanted to say I was being a contrarian or this is no place or time to worry about things like that- I would have ceded that, begrudgingly but I would have seen where you were coming from.

Instead you attack me, don’t acknowledge what I was trying to get across. Tell me how much more enlightened you are. God do people spend all day arguing like this online? Is that a great life?

Agree, backdown and concede is all you seem to tolerate.

You’re right I should just get off this thing, stop engaging and go live my IRL life. It’s much better than trying to engage with people on the internet. Thank you for the reminder. I’m going back to growing food, teaching people about food security, natural building and building community in real life. Despite what your wrongly accuse me of, I honestly wish you the best in your life.

 

reishi block cut reishi block bagged reishi block progress

[–] _t_o_ 4 points 1 week ago

How many are in the age range for the draft? It's not just total population, you can only really count those that are in the age range for army service.

 

From Field to Form: Mycelium with the Architectural League of New YorkFrom Field to Form: Mycelium with the Architectural League of New York

 

Great presentation on the future and current work of using Mycelium as a building material. Hell ya, Lets GO!!

[–] _t_o_ 2 points 1 month ago

This is great, easy to take in info- thanks for spreading the knowledge

[–] _t_o_ 1 points 1 month ago

Well I live out in the woods now but when I lived in the city practicing permaculture was all about taking small steps and thinking in systems. I started a compost bucket for the apartment for everyone to fill up. Then I had to learn about compost. Now I didn't have a lot of space out back so I got a worm bin. Now I was using nature to process my food waste and building a system. Now I had worm casings So in spring I found the one small section of earth I had available to me (2ft x 8 ft) and planted some cucumbers, tomatoes,, and squash. The whole time I am learning and trying to understand how these want to interact and how I can expand this system.
Then I found this thing called a "Garden Tower" which grows plants vertically, can rotate on its axis, has a center tube for worms and food scraps as well as a reservoir to collect the excess water. Now I wanted to collect rain water to passively water my little plot and this new garden tower. Next I got some big pots and planted a fig tree and some blueberries.

At this point I had : Produced no waste produced a yield catch and store energy applied self regulation and accepted feedback started small and used small and slow solution Observe and interact Used edges and value the marginal used and valued renewable resources integrated instead of segregated And creatively use and respond to change

IMO its really just about watching nature and seeing how she does it- then working to mimic it. Also a healthy bit of laziness helps as it makes for coming up with creative solutions to make most of the task that need to get done passive (i.e. collecting rain water from the downspout to fill a barrel that then drip waters all your plants using terra cotta watering spikes -blumat if your curious - passively so you never have to worry about forgetting to water your plants.

..... then Covid hit- my metal fabrication shop shut down, I took the stimulus check to take a Permaculture Design Course, and took the opportunity to move to as small town in NH and worked at a local community farm. Built a bigger permaculture system at my new place with more knowledge and a bit more space to work with as I worked the farm and took a carpentry job. to learn how to build with wood as opposed to steel. Got chickens to add to the system and cycle nutrients. Did an internship with Ben Faulk of Whole Systems Design. If your looking for someone who is practicing permaculture well - IMO he's one to check out. Permies.com is a great resource as well. Active forums for all things permaculture as well as homesteading.

Pretty long winded way of saying - Collect your food scraps and start learning how to compost, grow something, anything that will produce something you can eat( its so satisfying), see if you can devise a way to capture some rain water to water your plants, but more importantly - start thinking in natural system - not man-made. Look at how nature does things and see if you can recreate it. Don't over plan- just experiment and see what happens. It's not a computer, it's nature so meticulously planning and over analyzing isn't going to work. Nature is messy, complex and yet endlessly beautiful if you take the time to observe it.

Inhabit is a good documentary I remember getting on jazzed on a while back.

If you need any more book recommendations or information just message me - I'm not by bookshelf but have acquired some good books over the years. Happy to Help

[–] _t_o_ 2 points 1 month ago

I modified an acrylic doll case. Drilled a hole in the top and glued filter patch to the top. Had success with just a glass dome as well. Sterilite tub stood up the tall way works as well.

84
Yurt being built in Maine (self.woodworking)
submitted 1 month ago by _t_o_ to c/[email protected]
 

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/09bf5038-7baa-404e-983d-ed06073de769.jpeg

[–] _t_o_ -1 points 1 month ago

I’m simply talking about fairness. If you had a specific example in regards to Harris I could take that statement serious. No one is claiming throwing anyone in jail. I think that by not taking this seriously and instead creating extreme hypothetical cases your not only not going to be taken seriously- but actually do the cause a disservice. By not honestly engaging and instead being absurd -you’re proving you have no argument and instead would just like to throw ad hominem around to avoid actual constructive conversation. Which is how we deal and figure out how we got here in the first place IMO. Best of luck

[–] _t_o_ 5 points 1 month ago

Nibiru? Is that you?

 

Part of a larger project I’m working on, which takes the “waste sawdust” and grows a Reishi mushroom out of it.

143
Red Oak Bowl (lemmy.world)
submitted 9 months ago by _t_o_ to c/[email protected]
 
 
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