12.9.12

summer wind-down.



... the average rate of consumption per person per day in the US is 575litres :that's: 151.899gallons. <http://www.data360.org/dsg.aspx?Data_Set_Group_Id=757&transpose=row>

Our Household of 3 robust, adult american specimens consumes an average of say 21-42 gallons/person/day (not counting rainwater and occasional water reuse or water we consume at work or drink-products we purchase), mainly depending on whether the rain barrels gone empty, i presume.  Containers can be thirsty buggers.

in mozambique, the average person would be consuming 4 litres::1.05669 gallons  of  agua . . . total: cleaning, bathing, drinking, cooking. 

so add the highest and lowest
151.93 :: 152.95569::152.94 = dumb on the abacus :: calculator :: calculator using the 2 decimal places i counted on the abacus = i'm dang dumb on the abacus...forgot to carry the one.
and divide by two
458.83569 /3= 152.94523 average of my first three stabs at addition without paper and pencil /2 = 
to get
76.472615. . .the crazily rough average of the water consumption of the most average person on the planet... that's slightly less than China on the graph.

So at the house we're consuming on the level of, say, wealthy urbanites in Bangladesh or Kenya.  

With the leak in the water line at the rate of flow measured by Kenny from the county, our house will wash 16,000 gallons of water into the stormwater system that pools up on occasion due to organic debris accumulations on a neighbor's back fence.
16,000 gallons per month  /30 days = 533.3repeating gallons per day /3 people = 177.77repeating gallons per person per day.
25.88 gallons more than the average american.
our main city supply pipe is corroded and water was shooting into the sky (though now it has a patch on that particular leak which has slowed the flow considerably), and that's just a lil more than what the average american is consuming everyday?

it's like everybody here has leaky pipes and hasn't recognized it yet....

water. it's so important to think about that They made it an element.
          




it's so nice out i wanna go dig some swales...utilize the filtering function of the intricate web of life that exists right beneath our feet: plants and fungi absorbing, purifying and releasing 

water 

that literally falls from the sky(!) and bask in the glow of the changing of seasons....

summer seem(s/ed) short and powerful hot but there were many merciful relief storms that washed over us.  i've just now almost drained the 275gallon rain tote plus 20 gallons i had stored from the winter to start the wine cap mushroom bed. 

20.3.12

here comes the sun (spring is sproinging pt.3)

alright internet-machine, it's just me & you.
and morning edition.
and a huge pot of lima beans that i woke up early to cook since it feels like summer already.

The odd absence of winter this year compelled me to ramp up my garden plans.  It's hard to focus on just 3 rectangular vegetable beds when it's 70degrees most of the winter.

I was having some problems keeping my janky bamboo/plastic/duct tape coldframe warm at night when a friend reminded me of hugelkultur.  Remembering hearing that hugelkultur beds slowly released heat somewhere, i figured i'd put a couple beds in around the coldframe...

14.3.12

spring is sproinging part 2

Alright, back to the computer to play catch-up.  Picking up where i left off:
    Onward to Plow Forward:

       Georgia Organics was awesome enough to award Backyard Beddie's a scholarship to their 2012 conference in Columbus, for which i am extremely grateful.  Here's a quick recap of what I learned and it's relevance:

11.3.12

spring is sproinging

a full moon has passed since i sat with you last.  many days of moving, dreaming, growing, planting.
 also driving, eating, pooping & sleeping.
this may be a long post. Lemme hit the high points first, then allow me to ramble:
  • disaster strikes slowly. be vigilant.
  • P is for polyculture
  • Plow Forward. . . but only once: they call it conservation tillage
  • hugelkultur beds
  • unfurling @Taproot
  • how to make straw from strawberries
  • first wave plantings
  • alfalfa: teeny-tiny cover cropping for compost/soil building
  • going in to business

10.2.12

The Vision

I've asked myself this question a lot: given complete freedom, how would i spend my time?  How would I fill my time if there were no bills to pay, errands to run, student loans to dread or the necessary "work" it takes to take care of those "necessities?"
   What would I do if I were truly free?

   I'd grow food. And eat it... and tinker & toy with the numerous projects that entails.

   There have always been hurdles barring the path to such freedom.  And like most humans, I'm prone to use hurdles as excuses.  But I'm ready to jump, wanna jump with me?

I'm not going to wait until we own land.
I'm not going to wait until there's enough start-up capital.
I'm not going to wait until someday in the future, because if I do I'll find myself hoping to retire into the life I wanted when I was young.
I'm not even going to wait until I'm out of the suburbs.
I'm ready to grow, wanna grow with me?

I want Backyard Beddie's to foster a network of local folks growing food in their yards, on their patios, in their kitchens.  I need us to come together, so we can show each other that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.  I believe a coordinated network of avid micro-growers can produce enough food to provide for their community and earn a living.

I'm ready to plant, wanna plant with me?

4.2.12

i heart winter-spring.


      Sometimes i almost wish that google put a chip in my head so i could keep yous guys updated on things as i'm doing them.  As i stands, i mostly just wanna play in the dirt so i find myself with a swarm of projects to update after a few weeks.
    Let's start with our impulse-ordered strawberries and see how far we get from there (the sun's coming up and i can feel the yard calling me...beckoning me.....).  If you recall, we were shipped 50 bare-root strawberry plants the first wk in january, and i was caught entirely unprepared.  A minimal amount of research later, i decided i would heel in the plants in a container and keep them in the shed to try and maintain dormancy.
   Let's talk about stacking functions, real quick, which is fundamental to finding the good life.  Function stacking is a permaculture principle that allows you to maximize output from any given task or object.  To me, it's a way of thinking about projects that helps me avoid unnecessary labor.

15.1.12

Low-Cost Raised Beds...

   Buenos Morning, Internet.
             I've found it's generally more productive to set up new growing beds over the fall and winter for spring plantings.  For one thing, it allows any soil amendments to filter their way into the dirt, and the alternating freeze & thaw seems to help open up the soil - a great way to utilize natural cycles to minimize human labor.  For another thing, it helps to keep me focused on my production goals through the winter, with the added benefit of keeping the winter blues at bay.

11.1.12

signs of life

     My little babies are breaking through the dirt...
I sowed some seed Saturday, eager to test my lil Seed Starting Station & hoping to get a jump on the fast approaching cool/cole crop season.  Resisting a chronic compulsion to plant everything at my fingertips was difficult, but i managed to start with 3 flats:
  • Flat #1: American Flag Leek & Red Torpedo Onion:  this is my first year really breaking into alliums (this fall i planted German White and California Early garlic at me madre's, and perennial Egyptian Walking Onions[cool pictures through that link] in the keyhole bed). As such, i've never grown them from seed, but shoots came up today from the leeks and the onions. Really hoping these work out, cuz i think the joe-knee and i consume at least a pound of onions and a clove of garlic a week.
  • Flat #2: Waltham Broccoli: i planted the whole flat and within 3 days nearly all the seeds had sprouted.  Which is good, cuz we love broccoli. All of it: stems, shoots & leaves. It's probably good for you, our tastebuds declare.  Barring some kind of cataclysm, i should have some extras for trade or sale by the time you wanna put em in the ground (around the 3rd wk of February)
  • Flat #3: Early Jersey Wakefield Cabbage & Red Russian Kale:  these guys have yet to emerge, but they've got some time left. We're overwintering a couple of each variety in our neighbor Randy's bed, so if for some reason they don't want to sprout, we'll still have some to CHOMPCHOMPCHOMP.
The next step is to build some kind of ramshackle cold-frame, to harden off the seedlings & free up more room to germinate my little seedlings. I'll need plenty in the next few weeks to start sprouting my celery, lettuce & tons of tomatoes...
the plan is to start lots of transplant tomatoes: Radiator Charlie's Mortgage Lifter (click link for radio story), Amish Paste, Brandywine & Beefsteak.  These should be ready by the end o' March for trade, sale, and baiting potential gardeners... :)

in other news: i made the ... correct decision? ... and impulse bought 50 strawberry plants when i ordered my heating coil.  My logic was that if i spent $6 more dollars @ www.groworganic.com  i'd get two free seed packets (i picked Kentucky Wonder green beans & Southern Giant Curled mustard), saving myself around $5.  what i failed to factor in was the cost of shipping dormant strawberries across the country (nearly twice as much as the plants) and the fact that since they're shipped from the golden valleys of California, the berries would arrive on my door in January. Sheesh. They're in the fridge until I can figure out what to do with them.  All cuz Joani said she wanted some strawberries, not because i am a berry glutton.
So stay tuned to find out:
  • if the shua keep his strawberries alive until their preferred pea-synched planting date
  • which plants thrive in this suburban microclimate & which wilt like cabbage in the dog days surrounded by all this noise & all these people
  • if catastrophic climate collapse affects our growing season in a good way or just a wierd one
  • if shua will go crazy and live in a teepee in the backyard, scaring neighborhood children & neglecting to properly launder his loincloth
  • or something else...

6.1.12

shakin off them winter blues.

it's easy to get caught up in the hodge-podge of suburban life, but i'm committed to maintaining at least some semblance of focus.  most folks sit through the winter dreamily leafing through their seed catalogs, wishing for warmer days.  admittedly, i've been doing more than my fair share of that recently.  never one to sit on my laurels for too long a stretch, i've gotten proactive and set up a seed starting station out back.

it's weirdly nice out today and i don't feel like sitting here nose to the keyboard, so i'll just show you:


space to work with

joe-knee sealed up the plexiglass windows and the roof


inside a 2x4box i laid a 1/2in of sand, and my heating coil attached to some chicken wire i bought for some other purpose

using a scrap 2by, i flattened the heating element and covered with more sand
and then...

...apparently our camera and i only see certain colors. ah well.

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