tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-129316882024-03-07T18:35:17.954-08:00Permaculture, Perennial Polycultures & ResistanceNorris Thomlinson's preparations
<br>for a sustainable post-carbon lifeNorrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.comBlogger182125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-48507207199070607282022-05-15T19:24:00.001-07:002022-05-15T19:24:15.926-07:00Seeing into the future: full moon as sun proxy<p>I heard in the past, first from someone who'd studied permaculture, and then while listening to a recording of a Permaculture Design Course, that any given full moon will track the path of the sun in 6 months. So if you watch the full moon tonight, May 15th, you'll see what the sun will be doing around November 15th (which is the same as it'll be doing around January 26 on the mirror side of the winter solstice). I found this intriguing, and stashed the tip away, but haven't had reason to use it until now. Before committing myself to sleep deprivation tonight, I researched the veracity, and it does seem to check out.
<p>I don't have a deep understanding of these big objects whirling in different patterns through space, but <a href="http://www.jgiesen.de/SME/moon/fullmoon.htm">Jurgen Giesen explains it well</a>: the moon and the sun are in almost the same plane with the earth (the moon might vary up to 5.5°?), and the full moon is opposite the sun in relation to the earth. So a full moon is about equivalent to the sun offset by 6 months.
<p>I did some sanity checking (example <a href="https://www.timeanddate.com/sun/usa/hilo?month=6&year=2022">sun info</a>, example <a href="https://www.timeanddate.com/moon/usa/hilo?month=12&year=2022">moon info</a>) at timeanddate.com for Hilo, Hawai'i (year 2022), and the numbers are indeed the same within at most 4°:
<table>
<tr><th>Date</th><th>Sun or Moon</th><th>Rise</th><th>Set</th><th>Peak altitude</th></tr>
<tr><td>Apr 15-16</td><td>Full moon</td><td>95°E</td><td>262°W</td><td>64°S</td></tr>
<tr><td>Oct 15</td><td>Sun</td><td>99°E</td><td>261°W</td><td>62°S</td></tr>
<tr bgcolor="lightgray"><td>May 15-16</td><td>Full moon</td><td>111°ESE</td><td>247°WSW</td><td>54°S</td></tr>
<tr bgcolor="lightgray"><td>Nov 15</td><td>Sun</td><td>109°ESE</td><td>250°WSW</td><td>52°S</td></tr>
<tr><td>Jun 13-14</td><td>Full moon</td><td>117°ENE</td><td>242°WNW</td><td>44°S</td></tr>
<tr><td>Dec 14</td><td>Sun</td><td>114°ENE</td><td>246°WNW</td><td>47°S</td></tr>
<tr bgcolor="lightgray"><td>Dec 7-8</td><td>Full moon</td><td>63°ENE</td><td>298°WNW</td><td>84°N</td></tr>
<tr bgcolor="lightgray"><td>Jun 7</td><td>Sun</td><td>65°ENE</td><td>295°WNW</td><td>87°N</td></tr>
</table>
<p>To see just the extremes of the sun's paths across your site, you only need to observe during the month of June or December. If you can watch the full moon close to a solstice, you'll see the other end of the sun's range that you're directly observing that month. For approximately monthly gradation, you only need about 3 months of observation starting or ending on a solstice, with two caveats:
<ul>
<li>In temperate climates, the deciduous nature of many trees complicates predictions of what will actually get sun and shade.</li>
<li>The moon's path varies a lot from one night to the next, so watching it even one day before or after it's full will be significantly less accurate. If the full moon falls on a cloudy night, you're out of luck.</li>
</ul>
<p>Those caveats aside, these 2022 observations would let you envision a full year with approximately monthly gradation:
<table>
<tr><th>Observe date</th><th>Sun or moon</th><th>Sun equivalent 1</th><th>Sun equivalent 2</th></tr>
<tr><td>Jun 13-14</td><td>Full moon</td><td>Dec 13</td><td>Dec 29</td></tr>
<tr><td>Jun 21</td><td>Sun</td><td>Jun 21</td><td>Jun 21</td></tr>
<tr><td>Jul 12-13</td><td>Full moon</td><td>Jan 12</td><td>Dec 1</td></tr>
<tr><td>Jul 21</td><td>Sun</td><td>May 21</td><td>Jul 21</td></tr>
<tr><td>Aug 11-12</td><td>Full moon</td><td>Feb 11</td><td>Nov 1</td><tr>
<tr><td>Aug 21</td><td>Sun</td><td>Apr 21</td><td>Aug 21</td></tr>
<tr><td>Sep 21</td><td>Sun</td><td>Mar 21</td><td>Sep 21</td></tr>
</table>
<p>(Since the sun's path is identical on the equinoxes, March and September 21, there isn't much advantage in watching the full moon to predict the sun in those months.)
<p>The same observation dates in chronological order of "equivalents" (observation dates entered on multiple lines since most cover two "equivalent" dates):
<table>
<tr><th>Observe date</th><th>Sun or moon</th><th>Sun equivalent</th></tr>
<tr><td>Jul 12-13</td><td>Full moon</td><td>Jan 12</td></tr>
<tr><td>Aug 11-12</td><td>Full moon</td><td>Feb 11</td><tr>
<tr><td>Sep 21</td><td>Sun</td><td>Mar 21</td></tr>
<tr><td>Aug 21</td><td>Sun</td><td>Apr 21</td></tr>
<tr><td>Jul 21</td><td>Sun</td><td>May 21</td></tr>
<tr><td>Jun 21</td><td>Sun</td><td>Jun 21</td></tr>
<tr><td>Jul 21</td><td>Sun</td><td>Jul 21</td></tr>
<tr><td>Aug 21</td><td>Sun</td><td>Aug 21</td></tr>
<tr><td>Sep 21</td><td>Sun</td><td>Sep 21</td></tr>
<tr><td>Aug 11-12</td><td>Full moon</td><td>Nov 1</td><tr>
<tr><td>Jul 12-13</td><td>Full moon</td><td>Dec 1</td></tr>
<tr><td>Jun 13-14</td><td>Full moon</td><td>Dec 13</td></tr>
<tr><td>Jun 13-14</td><td>Full moon</td><td>Dec 29</td></tr>
</table>
Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-25446247185008393622019-07-04T09:40:00.000-07:002019-07-04T09:40:00.594-07:00Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari: A (Very) Brief Review<p><em>Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind</em> by Yuval Noah Harari is wildly popular by the standards of nonfiction books. Probably because it fully reinforces the ideologies of ruthless competition and "might makes right" at the core of modern capitalism, giving readers a comfortable sense of erudition in thinking about weighty matters, but without actually challenging them at all.
<p>Harari is so entrenched in a domination mindset that I couldn't make it past 20 pages, especially since it's mostly a broad overview of stuff with which I'm already familiar. Not worth the frustration. During those 20 pages (17 pages worth of actual text), I had probably 3 dozen moments of "wait, what?" in response to captions like "Map 1. <em>Homo sapiens</em> conquers the globe." and epitomized by this passage:
<blockquote><p>Like a government diverting money from defence to education, humans diverted energy from biceps to neurons. It's
hardly a foregone conclusion that this is a good strategy for survival on the savannah. A chimpanzee can't win an
argument with a <em>Homo sapiens</em>, but the ape can rip the man apart like a rag doll. Today our big brains pay off nicely,
because we can produce cars and guns that enable us to move much faster than chimps, and shoot them from a safe
distance instead of wrestling.
</blockquote>
<p>Ugh.
<p>The book is suffused with this attitude, and I don't believe Harari is even aware that he has this set
of assumptions which affect how he interprets and synthesizes everything. He's not making a case for pure competition
and domination as the driver of evolution vs some combination of competition & cooperation; he just takes it for granted and presents these
beliefs as a given.
<p>As I was giving up on the book and flipping through it, the book fell open to "Afterword: The Animal that Became a God." I'm guessing he doesn't mean bacteria or
plants or fungi or earthworms or the others fundamental to creation, who make life possible for countless other species.
<p>For those who do read this, I recommend balancing it with Derrick Jensen's <em><a href="http://www.derrickjensen.org/myth-of-human-supremacy/">The Myth of Human Supremacy</a></em> for a much-needed perspective on the role of cooperation in the grand scheme of human and non-human life.Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-59146420218000790192019-06-17T08:57:00.000-07:002019-06-17T08:57:01.285-07:00Not a creepy search term, honestly...<p>Today I found myself DuckDuckGo'ing for "make detached head master" which I swear makes sense in the context of git repository management. I really don't have mad scientist aspirations...Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-56078242404222847862019-05-13T18:10:00.001-07:002019-05-13T23:30:19.185-07:00Elaeagnus in Hawai'i—philippensis, pungens, and x ebbingei<p>When I lived in Portland, I loved <em>Elaeagnus</em> for inclusion in food forests: nitrogen-fixing shrubs in their own family (allowing diversification of this important function rather than relying solely on Fabaceae), producing tasty berries following abundant flowers which feed pollinators. When I visited Hawai'i in 2010, I was excited to see a small nursery selling <em>Elaeagnus philippensis</em> at Maku'u Market. According to the entry for synonym <em>E. triflora</em>, in <em>A Tropical Garden Flora</em> by George Staples & Derral Herbst, its common names are "Lingaro" and "Gumi." That suggests a similarity to the "Goumi," <em>E. multiflora</em>, which made delicious fruits in Portland. And in fact the book says that <em>E. triflora</em> has long been misidentified as <em>E. multiflora</em>. All signs point to a goumi-similar <em>Elaeagnus</em> for the tropics!
<p>Disappointingly, after moving to Hawai'i I never saw the species again at Maku'u Market, nor could I find it with web searches...until I searched again a few months ago and finally found the same nursery! It turns out they also sell <em>E. pungens</em> and <em>E. x ebbingei</em>, who I also planted in Portland! (They went by the common names of "Hybrid Silverberry" and "Golden Silverberry" at One Green World.) The nursery is at about 100' elevation, and the owner says the <em>E. phillipensis</em> does not fruit there. He guesses perhaps above 700' would be cool enough for fruiting? The others do fruit at his location.
<p>I visited the nursery two weeks ago. I wasn't convinced their sad looking <em>E. x ebbingei</em> '<a href="https://onegreenworld.com/product/hybrid-silverberry-2/">Gilt Edge</a>' cuttings were actually rooted, since I've had cuttings keep their leaves in a pot for a year before finally dying off. So I passed on that variety, but bought one each of:
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhEhFpujKCC4kmLUoCTc5t5leZfQzwhqMuBFluRtBJTUZuumtZSRX4xZGyHjySXMcGP3pKiYv1362_1-SlSHjC8oMgkjklQOGo9u7tut1UNDR0isGNbwEdXGsOo0aMgFQcwy_uL/s1600/elaeagnus-phillipensis.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhEhFpujKCC4kmLUoCTc5t5leZfQzwhqMuBFluRtBJTUZuumtZSRX4xZGyHjySXMcGP3pKiYv1362_1-SlSHjC8oMgkjklQOGo9u7tut1UNDR0isGNbwEdXGsOo0aMgFQcwy_uL/s320/elaeagnus-phillipensis.jpg" width="320" height="240" data-original-width="500" data-original-height="375" /></a></div>
<h3><em>Elaeagnus philippensis</em></h3>
<p>Lingaro Berry. Description from the <a href="https://tom-piergrossi.squarespace.com/buy-plants-d-f/elaeagnus-philippinensis">nursery:</a>
<blockquote><p>An evergreen shrub or small tree to about ten feet with a great arching habit with silvery leaves. Delicious shimmering red berries in the fall are small but in large clusters. The darkest red are the sweetest, but still have a tartness and a great after taste. If not ripe they are astringent. Excellent eaten fresh, in a sauce or dessert, great on ice cream. Small seeds can be eaten, but some prefer to spit them out. Full sun, easy to grow, drought tolerant, a big bird draw. A great source of lycopene, a cancer fighter. It has 19 times the level in tomatoes. From the higher areas of the Philippines, produces the most fruit in areas with cooler nights. Produces fruit on two year old wood.</blockquote>
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgMkSTknURgJ9c7b4CWDNq0OlJXcmnv5o90aYNoBPut-NgL4sW8IHXi9h6yf2P4gaTv6t6UMMkKx3hGH1rTw1L4dYZ7pSF7tKXx2M1BVIxyKJVsBjyT8Yl3mHb8rpzPYzZClgTj/s1600/elaeagnus-pungens-maculata.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgMkSTknURgJ9c7b4CWDNq0OlJXcmnv5o90aYNoBPut-NgL4sW8IHXi9h6yf2P4gaTv6t6UMMkKx3hGH1rTw1L4dYZ7pSF7tKXx2M1BVIxyKJVsBjyT8Yl3mHb8rpzPYzZClgTj/s320/elaeagnus-pungens-maculata.jpg" width="320" height="240" data-original-width="500" data-original-height="375" /></a></div>
<h3><em>Elaeagnus pungens</em> 'Maculata'</h3>
<p>Variegated, perhaps the same as One Green World's '<a href="https://onegreenworld.com/product/golden-silverberry-2/">Aureo-maculata</a>' golden silverberry? Description from the <a href="https://tom-piergrossi.squarespace.com/buy-plants-d-f/elaeagnus-pungens-maculata">nursery:</a>
<blockquote><p>Mottled Elaeagnus. An easy to grow drought tolerant evergreen shrub with showy variegation, blending multiple shades of green and yellow throughout leaf. Can grow 5’ or more, can be grown in the full sun or part, but grows tighter in hot sun. Any soil, tolerates abuse well. I love this plant, and it was hard to find for a long time. It was grown by my mentor Sinjen, so it has always has a special place in my heart. 'Gilt Edge' is the more commonly available selection, but I like the multi-hued variegation of this one better. They both grow about the same size and share the same habit. It can be a little gangly when young, but prunes well and can be trained to grow in many situations. Great on a hillside, or even espaliered on a hot wall.</blockquote>
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhDyhX_gxnIKkIcDmSDmQZSKbobKepg6NjID-WsW_vviAFKz5KPYOpWlw4cKJ25IFQalewo1q05VY5HJCk_6K4f1ZFQ9LXCeP_gJ1kE48OCZdBZ7xQ5NElMw-0bGETuW3-XtlwZ/s1600/elaeagnus-pungens-hosoba-fukurin.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhDyhX_gxnIKkIcDmSDmQZSKbobKepg6NjID-WsW_vviAFKz5KPYOpWlw4cKJ25IFQalewo1q05VY5HJCk_6K4f1ZFQ9LXCeP_gJ1kE48OCZdBZ7xQ5NElMw-0bGETuW3-XtlwZ/s320/elaeagnus-pungens-hosoba-fukurin.jpg" width="320" height="240" data-original-width="500" data-original-height="375" /></a></div>
<h3><em>Elaeagnus pungens</em> 'Hosoba Fukurin'</h3>
<p>Description from the <a href="https://tom-piergrossi.squarespace.com/buy-plants-d-f/elaeagnus-pungens-hosoba-fukurin">nursery:</a>
<blockquote><p>Variegated Elaeagnus. An easy to grow drought tolerant evergreen shrub with grayish broad leathery foliage. This selection has a light golden edged variegation. Can grow 5’ or more, full sun or part, but grows tighter in hot sun. Any soil, tolerates abuse well. Has a small fragrant flower, a reddish berry attractive to wildlife. Can be thorny. The plant came to me unlabeled, but I think the name is correct, if anyone knows differently, please let me know.</blockquote>
<hr>
<p>I planted the three in a row about 12' long, with about 6' between them. They'll each get about half a day of mid-day sun. (For my own reference: <em>E. phillipensis</em> is southmost, 'Maculata' in the middle, and 'Hosoba Fukurin' northmost.) I look forward to propagating them once the plants establish, both from cuttings and eventually from seed!
<p>If anyone has silverberries (<em>E. pungens</em> or <em>E. x ebbingei</em>) established and wants to send me cuttings, please <a href="mailto:norris@aktivix.org">get in touch!</a>Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-62151795378912672512019-05-06T17:33:00.002-07:002019-05-06T17:33:59.668-07:00Acornucopia & Nutty Buddy Collective<p>Worth checking out, especially for those in the Eastern US: two sites with visions of community-supported perennial agriculture:
<ul>
<li><a href="https://www.acornucopiaproject.com">Acornucopia</a>
<li><a href="https://nuttybuddycollective.com/">Nutty Buddy Collective</a>—In nut season 2018, they paid foragers for unprocessed nuts, which the collective then bulk-processed.
</ul>
<p>They're working towards more planting and use of resilient, low-maintenance nut trees such as oaks, walnuts, and chestnuts. Establishing and learning to utilize such staples is critical in a future of unreliable industrial agriculture, so read their sites, subscribe to their updates, get involved with their work, and/or take inspiration to encourage staple perennial polycultures wherever you are!
<p>Warning: lots of silliness and puns throughout the pages. Nuts seem to encourage that for some reason.
<p><em>See also my post on Pacific Northwest nuts: <a href="https://farmerscrub.blogspot.com/2012/11/nuts-about-acorns.html">Nuts about acorns...</a></em>Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-3797996728221078752019-04-21T03:11:00.000-07:002019-04-22T17:20:37.127-07:00Paradise or hell?—Hawaiian future depends on little fire ant biocontrol<h2>The Scourge</h2>
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-8NOftO-H-6s/XLwVfVlEdkI/AAAAAAAACAs/5b4jLQniHYcfbAruadSy4sYurJxhTReUgCPcBGAYYCw/s1600/wasmannia-auropunctata-little-fire-ant-sting.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="480" data-original-width="640" height="150" src="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-8NOftO-H-6s/XLwVfVlEdkI/AAAAAAAACAs/5b4jLQniHYcfbAruadSy4sYurJxhTReUgCPcBGAYYCw/s200/wasmannia-auropunctata-little-fire-ant-sting.jpg" width="200" /></a></div>
Those who haven't lived with little fire ants (LFAs, <i>Wasmannia auropunctata</i>) may not be able to imagine the hell they bring when unchecked. Their stings burn like fire for up to hours, leaving angry welts which can itch and irritate for days. The ants readily sting when trapped against flesh, making sitting on a couch or rolling over in bed perilous in an infested home. Painlessly climbing trees for fruit or fun requires an armor of clothing carefully secured so as not to press exposed skin against ant-coated bark.
<p>The ants don't cling to surfaces well. Anything which shakes branches, including a strong wind, harvesting fruit, or pruning or cutting a tree, brings down a barrage of confused six-legged pressure-trigger venom grenades. Though not aggressive—they're content to just crawl around once they land—if they get caught in the fold of an elbow, or in an armpit, or where a collar or bra or waistband or sock meets flesh, the stinging and the pain begin. In a tropical environment, bundling up in a full layer of tightly cinched clothes is its own mini-hell; your choice when working infested land is between the frying pan and the fire.
<p><table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="float: left; margin-right: 1em; text-align: left;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-4xrFsaEa1B0/XLwaeZUme5I/AAAAAAAACBA/uSGHkIRZ7QMlbED2DuPJyPFV2Y541SZdQCLcBGAs/s1600/wasmannia-auropunctata-little-fire-ant-corneal-lesion.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" data-original-height="711" data-original-width="945" height="150" src="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-4xrFsaEa1B0/XLwaeZUme5I/AAAAAAAACBA/uSGHkIRZ7QMlbED2DuPJyPFV2Y541SZdQCLcBGAs/s200/wasmannia-auropunctata-little-fire-ant-corneal-lesion.jpg" width="200" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Blinded cat</td><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;"><br /></td></tr>
</tbody></table>
When LFA's get trapped in eyes, their stings can <a href="https://entomologytoday.org/2017/09/29/the-story-of-the-little-fire-ant-and-why-modern-medicine-can-learn-from-indigenous-cultures/" target="_blank">permanently damage corneas</a> of non-humans and sometimes of humans. These corneal lesions, also known as tropical keratopathy, impair vision and can even cause blindness.
<p>LFAs are a "tramp species," readily colonizing new tropical and subtropical territory with the aid of human transportation. Native to South America, they're now found in Central America into Mexico, in Africa, on many Pacific and other tropical islands, and in Florida and Texas. Global warming will likely increase their range.
<p>Here in Hawai'i, they displace all other ant species and form an infernal monoculture, densely covering the ground and nearly every plant surface. I have a disability and often fall down; in doing so, I frequently receive a dozen bites at once.
<p>The "Little" is perhaps an understatement; at 1.5mm (1/16") long, they could just as well be named Tiny Fire Ants. Reproductive colonies can live in a single macadamia nut shell, and have been found between the threads of a mason jar with the lid on. It's all too easy to inadvertently seed a new infestation by moving coconuts, mulch, and potted plants—or canning jars which appear sealed. Even without human aid, the LFA front expands up to hundreds of meters per year.
<h2>Intractable doom?</h2>
<p>The East Hawai'i Master Gardener Program <a href="https://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/uhmg/EastHI/little-fire-ant.asp" target="_blank">advises</a>, pessimistically but realistically:
<p><blockquote>
Unfortunately, once your property is infested with Little Fire Ants, you will probably never successfully eradicate them. The best you can do is to avoid bringing them onto your property in the first place and, if your property or home is infested, to manage their numbers.
</blockquote>
<p>That "management" depends entirely on commercial pesticide. Though many in my hippie region of Puna have trialed alternative, natural LFA deterrents and killers, nothing has worked reliably. Until I began living with LFAs, I unequivocally opposed chemical herbicides and pesticides, but I now make this one exception. Land work and daily life are just too miserable if the LFAs are allowed to spread unchecked.
<p>But this chemical warfare is only a stopgap. When the ships inevitably stop bringing us products reliant on an unsustainable—meaning it won't be sustained—global system, then techniques dependent on imports will break down. Chemical suppression of fire ant populations is salve applied to ongoing burn damage from an unquenched fire. But upon winning relief from the immediate onslaught of LFAs, busy landowners, understandably, accept the chemical treadmill and are less motivated to seek out a long-term solution.
<p>The best cure by far is prevention. Those living in clean areas at risk of infestation should take all necessary precautions to block introduction. I realize that hypothetical threats of never-experienced misery are only lukewarm motivators. If you're insufficiently impelled by LFA's status as one of the world's worst invasive species and by the horror stories of others, contact me about my "LFA tourist" package. (I'll send you to an infested property where you can roll around in the grass and imagine that as your future LFA-coated bed.)
<p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://tropicalselfsufficiency.com/litte-fire-ant-wasmannia-auropunctata-prevention-and-protocol/" target="_blank" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="738" data-original-width="626" height="200" src="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-LqPjIHTBgEo/XLwxdqHFO8I/AAAAAAAACBY/xW1_WBUDw9U3rVx1IKglb0nj3jOoxLmCACLcBGAs/s200/wasmannia-auropunctata-little-fire-ant-quarantine.jpg" width="169" /></a></div>
With vigilance, it's not difficult to <a href="https://tropicalselfsufficiency.com/litte-fire-ant-wasmannia-auropunctata-prevention-and-protocol/">avoid introducing LFAs</a> to your property. If neighbors are infested, disciplined poisoning of your borders and trimming of vegetative "bridges" will keep you clean. However, if you suffer a <a href="/2012/10/book-review-resilient-gardener-carol-deppe.html">year or two of ill health</a> and can't maintain your borders, or if a hurricane blows colonies across your land, you'll quickly find yourself defending only core living structures. Once the poisons become unavailable, you won't be able to defend even those.
<p><a href="https://deepgreenresistance.net/resistance/liberals-radicals/lifestyle-consumer-choices/">Systemic problems never yield to personal solutions.</a> Quarantining one's private patch of ground will only hold off the ants for so long. Their range in continental areas will ultimately depend on whether climate or other barriers block them from migrating. But uninfested islands can and should implement rigorous education campaigns and inspection routines to keep the LFAs out until the collapse of inter-island commerce minimizes the risk of introduction. If small infestations are discovered, they should be diligently and thoroughly eradicated.
<p>That doesn't help those of us who've lost the chance for permanent exclusion. The good news is that, naturally, LFAs don't form a monoculture in their native range. They're presumably kept in balance by natural enemies. Even in their non-native Florida, they aren't huge pests once resident fauna strikes a balance following their initial invasion. The long-term solution for areas where LFAs remain serious problems is biological control.
<p><h2>
Biocontrol</h2>
<p>I used to feel gloomy about the post-collapse Hawai'i future being one of welt-covered, cowering humans drawing straws for who has to harvest food each day. But I gained hope from "<a href="https://www.ars.usda.gov/ARSUserFiles/60360510/publications/Wetterer_and_Porter-2003(M-3778).pdf">The Little Fire Ant, <i>Wasmannia auropunctata</i>: Distribution, Impact and Control</a>" by James K. Wetterer & Sanford D. Porter. They estimate "based on experience with finding, screening, and releasing phorid flies as biocontrol agents for <i>Solenopsis</i> fire ants" that a comprehensive biological control program for little fire ants would cost a mere "several hundred thousand dollars per year for 5-10 years."
<p>Relevant paper excerpts:
<p><blockquote>
Classical biocontrol agents may be the only hope for controlling exotic populations of <i>W. auropunctata</i> in areas where it is firmly established. A classical biocontrol agent is one that expands naturally and becomes permanently established without the need for further releases. The advantage of using classical biocontrol agents is that their benefits are widespread, permanent, and without cost after the agent becomes established.
<p>One parasite of <i>W. auropunctata</i> has been identified, the eucharitid wasp <i>Orasema minutissima</i> (Mann 1918). Johnson (1988) and Heraty (1994) recommended further evaluation of <i>Orasema</i> wasps as potential biocontrol agents of pest ants. Several pselaphid beetles (Mann 1921, Park 1942) and a staphilinid beetle (Silvestri 1946) have been identified as symbionts in <i>Wasmannia</i> colonies.
<p>In an attempt to discover additional natural enemies of <i>Wasmannia</i>, we recruited colleagues to inspect <i>W. auropunctata</i> colonies in Trinidad, Costa Rica, and Brazil (Porter & Wetterer, unpublished). From a total of 95 <i>W. auropunctata</i> colonies, a wide variety of organisms were extracted. Although no known parasites of <i>W. auropunctata</i>, such as eucharitid wasps, were identified, some associated organisms deserve additional attention, including gamasid mites and several unidentified fly larvae and microhymenoptera. Among the fungi, most were probably saprophytic, though <i>Verticillium</i> is possibly pathogenic. Determining the exact relationships of the organisms found in the nests will require much further study.
</blockquote>
<p>The fascinating paper "<a href="https://www.researchgate.net/publication/229495220_Specialized_predation_on_Wasmannia_auropunctata_by_the_army_ant_Neivamyrmex_compressinodis">Specialized predation on <i>Wasmannia auropunctata</i> by the army ant <i>Neivamyrmex compressinodis</i></a>" explores an intriguing biocontrol possibility. It's unlikely to be deployed in Hawai'i, as people might be understandably reticent to introduce an army ant, but perhaps where other army ant species already live...?
<p>Back to Wetterer and Porter, who sketch out a biocontrol research program:
<ol>
<li>Native populations of <i>W. auropunctata</i> should be carefully compared to exotic populations to determine if native populations are really less dense than exotic populations and what are the likely causes of any differences.
</li>
<li>In order to find biotypes of natural enemies that are best adapted to attack exotic populations of <i>W. auropunctata</i>, researchers need to identify the original range of <i>W. auropunctata auropunctata</i>. Exotic populations of <i>W. auropunctata auropunctata</i> may be originally derived from only one population or from multiple populations. Ideally, DNA analysis of exotic and native populations should be used to identify specific source populations.
</li>
<li>A thorough search for natural enemies would probably require several weeks to several months of efforts in each of several different areas. Furthermore, this search would likely require scientists with expertise in parasites and others with expertise in pathogens.
</li>
<li>Several months to a year or more are often necessary to obtain permits to export and then more permits are needed to import the presumptive control agent for study in quarantine.
</li>
<li>Once candidate agents are found, researchers would need to find ways to rear enough agents.
</li>
<li>Conduct host specificity tests to determine whether the organisms were environmentally safe for field release.
</li>
<li>Then, if results justified it, more permits and reviews are needed for field release.
</li>
<li> Finally, researchers would need to release prospective biocontrol agents and monitor their survival, expansion, and impacts on <i>W. auropunctata</i> populations.
</li>
</ol>
<p><blockquote>
In short, a comprehensive biocontrol effort for <i>W. auropunctata</i> would probably require significant cooperative agreements between governments, conservation groups and scientific organizations concerned with the problem. Though difficult and expensive, classical biocontrol is the only likely long-term solution to the ecological ravages of exotic populations of <i>W. auropunctata</i> on tropical and subtropical islands.
</blockquote>
<h2>
Project leader needed</h2>
<p>If Wetterer and Porter are correct in their financial estimate, it might only cost $5 million to fund a full biocontrol research program. That's insignificant next to the economic damage LFAs threaten to Hawai'i agriculture, tourism, and real estate. Many other governments also have a vested interest in controlling LFAs, so the money needn't even come solely from Hawai'i. I'm too busy <a href="https://stopfossilfuels.org/">stopping fossil fuels</a> to lead a campaign for government funding of a biocontrol research program, but it should be relatively uncontroversial and straightforward:
<p><ul>
<li>Contact the <a href="http://www.littlefireants.com/" target="_blank">Hawai'i Ant Lab</a> to discuss all this.
</li>
<li>Figure out where funding might come from for such a research project and who allocates the funds. This will guide the rest of the campaign, since all pressure should ultimately be directed towards these decision makers.
</li>
<li>Educate citizens about the the feasibility of a long-term biocontrol solution. Target areas already affected by LFAs.
<ul>
<li>Gather petition signatures to demonstrate popular support to decision makers.
<li>Grassroots campaign to write and call decision makers in support of a biocontrol program.
</ul>
</li>
<li>Contact environmental orgs, especially invasive species councils.
</li>
<li>Contact business associations and influential players potentially motivated to reduce threats to tourism, ag, nursery business, and real estate.
<ul>
<li><a href="https://hfuuhi.org/" target="_blank">Hawai'i Farmers Union United</a>
</li>
<li>Hawai'i Department of Ag
</li>
<li>CTAHR
</li>
<li>??
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Explore collaboration with groups and governments outside of Hawai'i which might contribute to biocontrol research.
</li>
<li>Work with sympathetic politicians where advantageous.
</li>
<li>If all else fails, infest the homes of unsympathetic politicians with little fire ants to give them incentive to find a solution.
</li>
</ul>
<p>It will take a lot of work to see this through, but success is entirely feasible. The sooner this push is started the better, since energy supply (and thus funding) will only get tighter in the future. This needs to happen while there's still available money and political & societal focus to pull it off.
<p>If anyone is seriously interested in taking this on, I can provide some support, and probably muster some others willing to help if someone provides solid project leadership. Comment below or <a href="mailto:norris@aktivix.org">email me.</a>
Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-33350037800009665872018-11-30T17:56:00.000-08:002018-11-30T18:42:06.494-08:00Book review: Every Living Thing by Rob Dunn<img style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;" border="0" src="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-o-epbAyYYfM/XAHlgE1CW7I/AAAAAAAAB8w/UJTao8xRuHw2kmuw-M3jq5PAL9dR7LUIgCLcBGAs/s1600/every-living-thing-rob-dunn.jpg" data-original-width="275" data-original-height="412" />
<p>I discovered Rob Dunn while researching the Stop Fossil Fuels <a href="https://stopfossilfuels.org/ecological-collapse/biological-annihilation/">biological annihilation</a> page. I greatly enjoyed his article on the perhaps foolhardy attempt to estimate the <a href="http://yourwildlife.org/2015/04/could-there-be-200-million-species-on-earth/">number of global species</a>. His humorous yet informative approach convinced me to read <em>Every Living Thing</em>. The subtitle—<em>Man's Obsessive Quest to Catalog Life, From Nanobacteria to New Monkeys</em>—only superficially summarizes the scope.
<p>The book does indeed portray the work—and, frequently, in laugh-out-loud moments, the quirks—of scientists from Carl Linnaeus to Carl Sagan, with dozens in between. (Including, disproportionately, at least three more "Carls.") But the underlying theme is awe of and love for biological <em>life</em>, in all its frequently unbelievable, unimaginable, and incomprehensible richness.
<p>Dunn zooms from the mostly visible...
<blockquote>
<p>There are more species that live with ants; more species in this one obscure relationship than there are bird species. There are hundreds of lifestyles, as strange or stranger than living with ants, that are more common than being a bird, hundreds that are more common than being a vertebrate, for that matter. [...] There are tens of thousands of species of beetles, silverfish, mites, and other invertebrates, not to mention microbes and the occasional ant-following snake that lives with, and only with, ants.
<p>[...]
<p>What Carl and Marian [Rettenmeyer] have discovered, in their years of studying army ants, is not some “big new world of life.” They did not discover microbes or a new kingdom. What they did discover was the intimacy of the interactions of one group of species, the army ants, with others. They discovered these intricate possibilities in the slow way that the morning sun discovers leaves and birds and then finally the forest floor and its interstices.
</blockquote>
<p>...to the tiny...
<blockquote>
<p>Leeuwenhoek did not know it yet, but this would be the first of hundreds of microscopes he would build and the first of thousands of days he spent looking through them. At night, he would go to sleep seeing microscopic creatures on the backs of his eyelids. He would dream of fleas, ants, and smaller things. His lenses, combined with his abilities to observe and to experiment, were about to open up an entire world of life.
<p>[...]
<p>All along, the biological story had seemed to be about humans, but Leeuwenhoek would show that we were enormous and oversized—the Big Gulps of life. Linnaeus would much later show that there were more big species than had been imagined. But it was Leeuwenhoek who showed that most life was many times smaller than us.
</blockquote>
<p>...and ranges more than a mile below the ocean surface, to the deep sea floor in the aftermath of the eruption of a submarine volcano...
<blockquote>
<p>As the [submersible] <em>Alvin</em> rounded the hill, the tube worms, crabs, and other life seen in the photos of the site were gone. In their place was a blizzard of white forms, a blizzard, somehow, like the Milky Way. As far into the distance as they could see, the sea was speckled white and the specks were being blasted up in the moving water. [...] [T]he white flocs of the deep sea were produced by bacteria. The blizzard was, in fact, a ninety-foot-tall cloud of bacteria and bacteria excretions. This flowering of life and its products had come out of the cracks and caves in the crust of the Earth through which the magma moved as it had escaped. Life had been coughed in a dense cloud out of the realm of the world once thought lifeless.
</blockquote>
<p>...and to outer space. This segment interested me the least, especially phrased as it is with the question (no less insane in its commonness) of "Are humans alone in the universe? Are we the only intelligent life?" This anthropocentrism in a book otherwise enamored with the beings all around us is an ironic, painful juxtaposition. Similarly, some passages are difficult to read as they blithely describe torturous or murderous experiments on living beings, e.g. Terry Erwin's "canopy fogging," a euphemism for applying pesticides to massive tropical trees to wholesale kill and collect tens of thousands of insects. [Part II is, perhaps intentionally, appropriately named for what this culture is doing to the world—"Fogging (The Tree of Life)."]
<p>But besides those occasional glimpses into the sociopathology of the strains of science funded within capitalism, the book is a pleasure to read. I recommend it for anyone biophilic or simply curious about the diverse species with whom we share the earth. Even for those without such interest, the book offers a fascinating dose of humility, an antidote to the ingrained misconception that humans have more-or-less mastered knowledge and control of the planet. We really only know just enough to be dangerous.
<hr>
<p><em>On a personal note, this gem may have the longest lasting impact on the story of my own life, as a strong contender for my gravestone epitaph:</em> "Imagine how much less he would have done had he brushed his hair more often."
<hr>
<h2>Table of Contents</h2>
<ol>
<h3>Part I: Beginnings</h3>
<li>What we All Used to Know
<li>Common Names
<li>The Invisible World
<h3>Part II: Fogging (The Tree of Life)</h3>
<li>The Apostles
<li>Finding Everything
<li>Finding an Ant-Riding Beetle
<h3>Part III: Roots</h3>
<li>Diving the Cell
<li>Grafting the Tree of Life
<li>Symbiotic Cells on the Seafloor
<li>Origin Stories
<h3>Part IV: Other Worlds</h3>
<li>Looking Out
<li>To Squeeze Life from a Stone
<li>The Wrong Elephant?
<li>What Remains
</ol>
<hr>
<p>Rob Dunn has several other titles which promise a similar mix of interesting topics and enjoyable writing:
<ul>
<li><em>Never home alone: from microbes to millipedes, camel crickets, and honeybees, the natural history of where we live</em>
<li><em>Never out of season: how having the food we want when we want it threatens our food supply and our future</em>
<li><em>The man who touched his own heart: true tales of science, surgery, and mystery</em>
<li><em>The wild life of our bodies: predators, parasites, and partners that shape who we are today</em>
</ul>
Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-85814507462232961942018-10-13T08:51:00.000-07:002018-11-03T16:44:46.231-07:00How many cats to catch 100 rats? Not what you think.<img style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;" border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhcm0FgH4igvQUOuf60JWfbXWo2o7DOrwv-pD0dePIsPfUw2zvdYsYKKGefiDsiJlvUi7Du2nkkmY3hphQz8XQjmpoqOlVeI8HmDyGhyziuklAeylLPhmXCg5tjvIDDpLfUSpt-/s1600/pouncing-cat.jpg" data-original-width="270" data-original-height="212" />
<p>Anthony Doerr's World War II novel <cite>All the Light We Cannot See</cite> poses the following question in the notebook of Werner Pfennig, a mathematically gifted German boy. Take a couple of minutes to answer the riddle, then expand to read my take.
<div style="clear: both;"></div>
<p><details><summary><em>If five cats catch five rats in five minutes, how many cats are required to catch 100 rats in 100 minutes?</em></summary>
<p>My intuition initially jumped to an answer of "one hundred cats." It feels like a simple scaling: 5 x 5 x 5 to 100 x 100 x 100.
<p>My next instinct was that the answer couldn't be that easy, or there'd be no reason to pose the question. So I applied logical analysis and mathematics to yield an answer of "five cats." Most answers to similar questions on internet sites take the same approach.
<p>However, this conjecture is only accurate if the cats are killing machines, malevolent cousins of the Energizer Bunny, methodically catching rat after rat until their batteries run down. But real cats are individuals with motivations and needs and desires.
<p>So, why do these hypothetical cats want to catch rats?
<p>Cats often stalk and play with mice for practice or for fun, but rats are significantly larger than mice, relatively dangerous prey armed with sharp teeth and claws. Cats usually only take risks with rats in hopes of a substantial meal. In my experience with a sample size of one rat hunter (hi Pookie!), a hungry cat can eat an entire rat in one sitting, then <em>might</em> catch a second rat in the same night, to partially eat or stash for later. I'd guess it rare for a cat to risk catching more than two rats in one hundred minutes.
<p><em>If five cats catch five rats in five minutes, how many cats with wills of their own are required to catch 100 rats in 100 minutes?</em>
<p>Taking into account what I think I know about cats and their motivations, my answer is "about seventy or eighty cats."
<p><p style="text-align: center;">* * *</p>
<p>Our culture turns everyone into numbers, manipulated as variables in equations to maximize profit. Trees older than any human, soaring skyward and spreading a vast canopy sheltering countless individuals of hundreds of species, become board feet. Hens, evolved to scratch and eat seeds and insects while gossiping and squabbling and teaching their chicks to forage, become "layers," their worth measured in eggs deposited from battery cages.
<p>Humans evolved to be nurtured by and in turn contribute back to an intimate community. Human communities evolved to be nurtured by and in turn contribute back to their land bases. In such environments, people fully express their personalities, develop their interests and strengths, and build lives of purpose and responsibility and meaning. In contrast, our culture reduces us to taxpayer IDs, statistics and quotas, interchangeable employees of global systems of extraction and exploitation.
<p>In Nazi Germany, the Jewish men, women, and children in cattle cars were the quintessential abstraction of living beings into numbers, forcibly computed into a final solution. In Doerr's book, even Aryan Germans are valued not as individuals, but because "what the führer really requires is boys. Great rows of them walking to the conveyor belt" as war fodder, "this final harvest of the nation's youth rushing out in a last spasm of futility."
<p>Werner Pfennig, trapped within the Nazi war machine, is repeatedly told "It's only numbers, cadet. Pure math. You have to accustom yourself to thinking that way." But as the story unfolds, abstract numbers wielded in the real world impact real people in devastating, even deadly ways.
<p>Our minds are evolved to form and maintain relationships with a few thousand humans and nonhumans, lifelong family and friends and acquaintances. We can only conceive in abstractions of the 7.6 billion humans and trillions of nonhumans with whom we share the earth. We can't possibly feel the reality of 40.3 million human slaves, 6 million annual deaths from fossil fuel pollution and climate change, 2.4 million children dead from malnutrition, half an acre of natural forest lost every second. In a world globally linked by technology, abstractions are often necessary to grapple with the ethical choices of our time.
<p>But we must never forget that there are lives behind the abstractions. It's not only numbers.
</summary>Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-51877420160834846472018-10-03T18:04:00.001-07:002018-10-03T18:05:05.108-07:00Book review: The Overstory by Richard Powers<img style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;" border="0" src="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-7zSmvTj_qGk/W7VltHFQM9I/AAAAAAAAB68/jC_CS6d1TQ4L2_46_ukS7I5NGK_1i8B0ACLcBGAs/s1600/overstory-richard-powers.jpg" data-original-width="247" data-original-height="375" />
<p><em>“The best arguments in the world won’t change a person’s mind. The only thing that can do that is a good story.”</em></p>
<p>So states one of the nine protagonists of a story good enough to change minds, and perhaps the world as a result. <em>The Overstory</em> weaves the growing science and philosophy of biocentrism with traditional myth and with emerging legends of our digital creations, all illuminated and explored by multiple human narratives. The result offers us a desperately needed alternative path into the future, characterized by relationship rather than exploitation; satisfaction of actual needs rather than endless pursuit of ceaselessly manufactured wants.</p>
<p>Other reviewers (such as <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/09/books/review/overstory-richard-powers.html" target="_blank">Barbara Kingsolver</a>) have extolled the book’s literary merit. As expected from an author with a decades-long string of major awards, Powers’ writing is excellent and engrossing. The story builds slowly as Powers grows its roots one person at a time. The mini-biographies are engaging in and of themselves, but the real payoff comes once they intertwine. It’s difficult for us short-lived humans to understand a time perspective an order of magnitude larger than our own, but the patient arc encompassing multiple generations nudges the reader towards thinking on the scale of forests.</p>
<p>The rise to dominance of our culture has taken place within the lifetime of some trees, the merest blip in planetary history. Our fall will likely occur even faster, as our collective unwillingness to live in relationship with the rest of the world’s inhabitants will doom not only industrialism but hundreds of thousands of species to ruin, leaving the world impoverished for millions of years. Powers sees the insanity of our course clearly. He writes with passion, despair, and anger commensurate to the crisis (albeit leavened by awe for the wonders here now, the possibility of protecting them if we act, and solace in life’s eventual long long long term recovery.)</p>
<p>In many ways this is the antitheses of T.C. Boyle’s <a href="https://farmerscrub.blogspot.com/2018/07/book-review-friend-of-earth-by-tc-boyle.html"><em>A Friend of the Earth</em></a>. Both books revolve around the practical and moral questions of how to respond appropriately to environmental atrocity after atrocity, with one answer being ecosabotage for planetary self defense. But while Boyle’s book is nihilistic, with unconvincing characters motivated by often petty anthropocentric goals, Powers writes eight realistic journeys of people who come to respect, even love, trees. All make sacrifices for their nonhuman kin, some even risking freedom and their very lives. Several are fully biocentric, recognizing trees as <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/30/world/europe/german-forest-ranger-finds-that-trees-have-social-networks-too.html" target="_blank">intelligent, communal beings</a> and rejecting the notion of <a href="http://www.derrickjensen.org/myth-of-human-supremacy/" target="_blank">human exceptionalism</a>.</p>
<p>Powers sympathetically portrays the decisions to take underground action, making it easy to understand why the activists in his novel, like those in real life, escalate to illegal tactics. With the system designed to coopt or disempower dissidence, and well practiced at circumventing democratic processes and brutally suppressing protest, anyone wanting to make substantive change is forced outside the box of accepted and expected tactics. Unfortunately, as in <em>A Friend of the Earth</em>, the novel’s ecosabotage is ineffective because it’s limited to a <a href="/#attrition">strategy of attrition</a> and doesn’t target critical infrastructure. The eco-fiction genre still needs a story of strategic activists instigating cascading failure by shutting down fossil fuels.</p>
<p>The pursuits of Powers’ protagonists include not just blockades and ecosabotage, but scientific research, art, land restoration, psychology, and harnessing artificial intelligence. Within this diverse tapestry, anyone can find strands which resonate and beckon, inviting the reader to join in the real life struggle with whatever skills and interests he or she can bring. The true measure of <em>The Overstory</em> will not be whether it makes best seller lists or wins critical acclaim and literary awards, but whether it motivates readers to action:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>To be human is to confuse a satisfying story with a meaningful one, and to mistake life for something huge with two legs. No: life is mobilized on a vastly larger scale, and the world is failing precisely because no novel can make the contest for the <em>world</em> seem as compelling as the struggles between a few lost people. But Ray needs fiction now as much as anyone. The heroes, villains, and walk-ons his wife gives him this morning are better than truth. Though I am fake, they say, and nothing I do makes the least difference, still, I cross all distances to sit next to you, keep you company, and change your mind.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Perhaps it’s true that even the best arguments won’t change minds. If so, then what we all, human and non-human, need right now is fiction which can. <em>The Overstory</em> may be just that.</p>
<hr />
<p><em>Read a long, thoughtful and deep interview with Richard Powers: <a href="https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/heres-to-unsuicide-an-interview-with-richard-powers/" target="_blank">Here’s to Unsuicide</a></em></p>
<hr />
<p>Review originally published at <a href="https://stopfossilfuels.org/ecosabotage/review-overstory-richard-powers/">Stop Fossil Fuels</a>Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-50352866112546701002018-07-14T19:19:00.001-07:002018-07-14T19:19:08.318-07:00Book review: A Friend of the Earth by T.C. Boyle<img style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;" border="0" src="https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-RwxVHGA8ACM/W0qtlHVP-yI/AAAAAAAAB6I/oqMqKD1S1j8sISdiMg2hwGEjYCVG-uLaQCLcBGAs/s1600/FriendOfTheEarth.jpg" data-original-width="258" data-original-height="385" />
<p>T.C. Boyle’s <em>A Friend of the Earth</em> could be a fun read for tree huggers and tree spikers alike. In a narrative split between the climate battered world of 2025 and life as a circa 1990 ecosaboteur, environmental doom meets righteously taking on the system. Supporters of Deep Green Resistance, Earth First!, the Earth Liberation Front, or Stop Fossil Fuels are reminded of the climate chaos and mass extinction we’re fighting to head off, and can vicariously (and safely) enjoy the thrill of underground, illegal tactics against a system immune to transformation from within.</p>
<h2 id="the-annoying">The Annoying</h2>
<p>The book falls short of its potential, reflecting real life limitations of early (and all too much contemporary) monkeywrencher culture: misogyny and an absence of strategy. This is understandable, since the book was published in 2000 before activist rape culture and toxic male behavior was being called out, and before serious analysis of how to bring down the industrial economy was readily available. If the reader can accept these historic limitations, she can probably still enjoy the book for what it is.</p>
<p>To get past those shortcomings, let’s discuss the negatives first. The protagonist, Ty Tierwater, is 40 and 75 years old in the two narrative time frames. At both ages, he heavily objectifies women, as do most of the other male characters, and he’s obsessed with sex. Maybe this is meant to be cute in a 75 year old man, but is in fact offensive, boring, and distracting in both time periods. Ty mentions many (many) times the large size of his wife Andrea’s breasts (and, oddly, her hands), but at least her personality is also fleshed out in some depth. None of the supporting characters are fully convincing as real people, but Andrea comes as close as anyone. Their daughter is less well developed, but adequately so, and at least she’s subject to less sexual objectification than most of the female characters.</p>
<p>At ages 40 and 75, Ty has the emotional maturity of someone half his ageimpulsive, reckless, alcoholic, bickering, self pitying, jealous, easily distracted by petty revengea case study of someone you don’t want in your underground affinity group. Presumably he’s meant to be an antihero, but his unnecessary misogyny on top of all this moves him to the very margins of being a sympathetic character. (Or perhaps beyond the margins; it’s easy for me as a male to find his woman-hating to be merely annoying, but others may, understandably, give up on the book entirely.)</p>
<p><em>A Friend of the Earth</em> also suffers from rampant nihilism. The opening torrential rains which will, we’re told, inevitably give way to punishing heat and drought, warn us from the start that the activists’ 1990 efforts to save the world are doomed. Given their absence of strategy, their failure makes sense, but Ty and the book as a whole relish hopelessness, martyrdom, and juvenile lashing out, rather than an adult approach to solving an (admittedly massive) problem. Even Ty’s motivation to protect the earth is more of a passionless “just cause” than the love of someone in relationship with his non-human community members. The book repeatedly depicts humans losing against nature when they stray from the role of subjugator, further undermining the gravity of Ty’s work.</p>
<p>Resignation to failure is understandably common for activists burned out by a failing strategy, but Boyle could choose a different emotional theme. The book hints early on at renewed struggle by the older-yet-wiser activists in the 2025 time frame, with Andrea declaring “Earth Forever! is going to fly again, in a big way.” But Boyle abandons this plot point, instead allowing the book to wallow in despair amidst a broken world. This may realistically depict many one-time activists, but it doesn’t make for a satisfying story. More damningly, it demoralizes rather than inspires readers, including potential activists needed to derail the future Boyle clearly recognizes as a real danger. With the world at stake, using his authorial gifts so perversely is irresponsible.</p>
<h2 id="the-good">The Good</h2>
<p>The plot moves forward quickly and keeps the reader engrossed. Ty’s irascible narration, though at times over-the-top, generally convincingly portrays a flawed man doing his best to protect the animals he (at least abstractly) loves.</p>
<p>The book excels in its realistic, if unflattering, baring of the failures of the environmental movement. An early nonviolent direct action illustrates the futility of such tactics in the absence of media coverage. The physical danger to the blockaders, unprotected in the absence of witnesses against the sadism of agents of the state, is frighteningly accurate. In the aftermath, Ty and his comrades ratchet up their struggle with tactics straight out of <em>Ecodefense: A Field Guide to Monkeywrenching</em>. (This escalation is appropriate for the environmental movement as a whole, but since Ty and his fellow arrestees are known to the state as aboveground environmentalists, taking up underground action seriously violates the firewall between above- and belowground actionistsa security error all too common among real life activists, even today.)</p>
<p>Ty has some success with his monkeywrenching campaign, wreaking havoc on many earth destroying machines. But as with most <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_ELF_actions" target="_blank">real life underground actors</a> in the past decades, he chooses minor targets. Local battles are temporarily won, but the industrial economy at large is allowed to proceed unhindered, and the larger war is therefore lost. Ty exemplifies Lierre Keith’s critique of acting like a vandal rather than thinking like a field general, and the real life experience of busted ecosaboteur Michael Carter around 1990: “We had some vague ideas about tactics but no manual, no concrete theory. […] We had little strategy and the actions were impetuous. If we’d been robbing banks instead, we’d have been shot in the act.” (<a href="https://dgrnewsservice.org/resistance/strategy/interview-eco-saboteur/" target="_blank">Carter’s full interview</a> is a fascinating reflection on ecosabotage gone wrong.)</p>
<p>Ty and his comrades belong to Earth Forever!, a conflation (understandable as a simplifying literary device) of <a href="http://earthfirst.org/about.htm" target="_blank">Earth First!</a> and Big Green NGOs. Boyle captures well the tension between directly stopping destruction of the land through small scale illegal action, vs garnering donations and political clout by working within the system. (It’s easy to be cynical now about the latter approach, but in 1990 it probably wasn’t as obvious that obediently begging for the scraps of reform dispensed to the well behaved gives no hope of changing the system’s trajectory.)</p>
<p>Since, as in real life, neither Ty nor Earth Forever! act to materially challenge the industrial economy, it falls to an eccentric 2025 pop star, with Ty’s employed help, to <a href="http://www.derrickjensen.org/myth-of-human-supremacy/modern-noahs-ark/" target="_blank">play God</a> in deciding which species live or die. As the biblical rains fall and the floodwaters rise, the reader wonders whether they’ll succeed with those animals deemed worthyor perhaps stops caring, with a shrug of “too little too late.”</p>
<h2 id="the-verdict">The Verdict</h2>
<p>If you can get past the misogyny, <em>A Friend of the Earth</em> is worth the read. Just be aware that unless your thing is doomer collapsism, you won’t find satisfaction and fulfillment here. A great tale could be spun of ecosaboteurs who bring down the electric grid, halting industrial destruction and proving themselves true friends of the earth. Until then, enjoy T.C. Boyle’s work for what it is.</p>
<hr>
<p><em>Originally posted at <a href="https://stopfossilfuels.org/ecosabotage/review-friend-earth-boyle/">Stop Fossil Fuels</a></em></p>Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-42383414530960311532018-06-08T17:00:00.000-07:002018-06-08T17:00:49.018-07:00Reefs At Risk<p>A good friend of mine and her mom have produced a short video about the impacts of sunscreens on our oceans, especially on coral reefs. The governor of Hawai'i will soon sign pioneering legislation to ban the sale of sunscreens containing oxybenzone or octinoxate, chemicals especially dangerous to the health of humans and oceans. If you buy sunscreen outside of Hawai'i, and even within the state since the ban doesn't take effect until 2021, please take the time to understand the ingredients. Switch to a product safer to reefs if your sunscreen is harmful, and let the manufacturers know why you're making the change.
<p>View the video by Malina Fagan and Lynn Pelletier below, download their <a href="https://thecoverupfilm.com/reef-safe-sun-guide/" target="_blank">reef safe sunscreen guide</a> (PDF), or learn more from their <a href="https://thecoverupfilm.com/reefs-at-risk/" target="_blank">Reefs At Risk</a> website. Please share these resources with anyone concerned about our oceans!
<p><iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/aGP9loQ0dqs?rel=0" frameborder="0" allow="autoplay; encrypted-media" allowfullscreen></iframe>Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-16596790945357590292018-06-04T08:44:00.000-07:002018-06-04T08:44:05.687-07:00Crop summary: Air potato, Dioscorea bulbifera<p>Eric Toensmeier's <em>Perennial Vegetables</em> first introduced me to this easy staple carbohydrate. Although it's only truly perennial in the subtropics or warmer, I brought a few back to Portland from my first Hawai'i visit. I hoped to cultivate it similarly to a dahlia, overwintering propagules in a non-freezing space to be planted in spring, and yielding crop and more planting stock before the killing frosts. Alas, my precious babies rotted away in our pseudo root cellar before I ever got to plant them, so I didn't get to really make their acquaintance until I moved to Hawai'i.
<p>As the name hints, air potato vines form large (up to triple-fist sized) balls of starch in the air, so no soil disturbance is necessary for harvest. Fortunately, you needn't stare worriedly at the vigorous vine engulfing its 30' living trellis tree, wondering how you'll get to the crop. After the deciduous plant dies back in the fall, the ripe tubers fall to the ground (from November through February here in Puna.) You should ensure that the ground under the vine is reasonably clear of vegetation, or can be hacked down before the tubers start falling, so you can find them with reasonable ease. Once you have them, use them in any way you would potatoes. Peeling is optional.
<p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><figure style="float: right"><a href="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-NnMNmKhNItc/WvEXpP3GjiI/AAAAAAAAB48/rooSCTgVGysrT_t3M-ka_px11YdwVSTLgCLcBGAs/s1600/air-potato-one-year-yield.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-NnMNmKhNItc/WvEXpP3GjiI/AAAAAAAAB48/rooSCTgVGysrT_t3M-ka_px11YdwVSTLgCLcBGAs/s320/air-potato-one-year-yield.jpg" width="320" height="209" data-original-width="1292" data-original-height="843" /></a><figcaption>One year yield</figcaption></figure></div>A yam relative, <em>Dioscorea bulbifera</em> is very low maintenance; I pretty much just plant them under or near a tree I don't mind having covered by the vine, weed them once or twice or maybe thrice, and pee on them now and then. The yield can be excellent. Last April (or May?), I planted three moderately sized tubers, roughly the size of the three at far right in the photo. The harvest from those three plants is collected on the table (not counting any I failed to find; I didn't follow my advice above about having clear ground for easy harvest!) So in their first year, the plantings gave back roughly thirteen-fold, and hopefully now that the perennial roots have established, they'll yield even more this year.
<p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><figure style="float: left;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEidW8cRIfnWcti_P-QfUQ_UgAprg0PThYxYYnN3H6TZ6SspyXarTa6LJWlLz-R1u1rHgYnrZ60ds3zNaJg5vW4NCu7m9_6OwrY8LvypMfleKm6520-oYkMLGBQJvMmmIyFUxoU2/s1600/air-potatoes-sprouting.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEidW8cRIfnWcti_P-QfUQ_UgAprg0PThYxYYnN3H6TZ6SspyXarTa6LJWlLz-R1u1rHgYnrZ60ds3zNaJg5vW4NCu7m9_6OwrY8LvypMfleKm6520-oYkMLGBQJvMmmIyFUxoU2/s320/air-potatoes-sprouting.jpg" width="320" height="208" data-original-width="1296" data-original-height="842" /></a><figcaption>Stored air potatoes beginning to sprout</figcaption></figure></div>Planting is from any of the tubers you harvested in the previous months; the larger the propagule, the more vigorously the vine takes off. I've found that the harvested aerial tubers sprout as much as two months earlier in storage than the roots remaining in the ground.
<p style="padding-top: 40px; margin-top: 40px;"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center; margin-top: 5em;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEidCh1VtekGHblwQraYx19UyMdTsBojmheM26Jp15-g_S0ZjLUa_1beWd9kDRulYlHwPEsG5BwL-BAOAnSBTfl-DkdhcWyUHnTTbXETUF0xIjIjPfWcxn95sl1_DDwjxdsbKMAT/s1600/air-potato-chunks.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEidCh1VtekGHblwQraYx19UyMdTsBojmheM26Jp15-g_S0ZjLUa_1beWd9kDRulYlHwPEsG5BwL-BAOAnSBTfl-DkdhcWyUHnTTbXETUF0xIjIjPfWcxn95sl1_DDwjxdsbKMAT/s320/air-potato-chunks.jpg" width="320" height="192" data-original-width="1296" data-original-height="777" /></a></div>Toensmeir writes that you can cut a tuber into smaller pieces to plant out individually, so I cut three large tubers in half to double my planting stock. While the halves which got the existing sprouts continued to grow quickly, it took the other halves 6-8 weeks to develop new sprouts, so it may be best to perform this surgery well in advance of spring.
<p>You could also make the cuts to eat most of the tuber while planting just the portion with the sprout.
<p>A land owner where I lived has seen pigs eating both aerial and belowground tubers, but nonetheless, many plants survive from year to year. If pigs are a threat on your land, keep an eye out. Be prepared to gather fallen tubers frequently during harvest season, or to harvest them before they fall.
<p>Hawaiians introduced both a bitter form of air potato, and <em>Dioscorea pentaphylla</em>. Both grow wild but are only eaten as famine food.
<p>If you're curious for more, check out Spencer's <a href="https://tropicalselfsufficiency.wordpress.com/2017/11/22/air-potato-dioscorea-bulbifera/" target="_blank">air potato write up</a> at Tropical Self Sufficiency.Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-89905006944008188862018-05-21T11:27:00.000-07:002019-01-26T13:57:48.722-08:00Permaculture: Revolution or Lifestylsm?<p><em>Covering two of my three blog themes—permaculture and resistance—<a href="https://dgrnewsservice.org/resistance/strategy/freedom/" target="_blank">Boris Forkel</a> writes a piece I wanted to republish here:</em>
<blockquote><p>Capitalism reaches fulfillment when it sells communism as a commodity. Communism as a commodity spells the end of revolution.</p>
<p>—Byung-Chul Han</p></blockquote>
<p>I’m a permaculturalist. And I became a permie in the first place because I wanted to break free from this culture.</p>
<p>To me, permaculture was and still is highly political. “Permaculture is revolution disguised as gardening” is one of my favorite Bill Mollison quotes.</p>
<p>After all, what freedom can we have without subsistence, without having control over our most basic resources, our own food? “There is no sovereignty without food sovereignty,” said Native American activist John Mohawk.</p>
<p>I’ve been so ardent and naive. I thought that the permaculture-approach is so ingenious that it would become a mass-movement, indeed a quiet and peaceful revolution. It would free us from being dependent on the digital food they sell us in grocery stores nowadays, and from the wage economy at the same time, because we would build small, local food cooperatives that would all be <em>sharing the surplus</em>.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, time and experience shows that it’s not that easy.</p>
<p>One of my permaculture teachers, who taught me the concept of the food forest, often said: “I don’t understand what’s the problem for all these critical people. Nowadays, we have all the freedoms we want.” He also articulated a very strange notion about the future: “Once we have reached the number of 10 billion, human population growth will come to a halt. Thanks to Internet technology, humans will then all be connected and serve as the consciousness of planet earth.” Attendants hung on his lips when he said that, and while everybody else was amazed by this perspective of a golden future, I sat quietly, stunned.</p>
<p>I knew in my heart that he was wrong, but couldn’t articulate a sufficient answer to his statements back then.</p>
<p>It made me angry. How can one say that “we have all the freedoms we want,” while the air we need to breathe is being polluted, the greatest mass extinction in planetary history is happening, the climate is being destroyed, the oceans are vacuumed and filled with toxic garbage? In short: when the most basic functions of our planet to support life are being destroyed?</p>
<p>What about the freedom of having breathable air? What about the freedom of having a livable planet? What about the freedom of having a future?</p>
<p>I’ve given a lot of thought to his statements ever since, because they seem so appealing to many people. The Earth never supported more than 2 billion humans until Fritz Haber and Robert Bosch indeed broke the planetary boundaries with the invention of the Haber-Bosch process. Nowadays, we are hopelessly overpopulated. So the number of 10 billion is purely random and nothing but magical thinking. The notion of Internet technology and humans as the consciousness of the planet is nothing more than a new fashion of the good old ideology of humans as the crown of creation. What about nature in this fantasy? With 10 billion (industrial) humans, there will hardly be anything left.</p>
<p>Everybody with a sane mind and a little understanding—especially a permie—should know that the trees, the fungi, the soil, the air, the water, the animals and so on, in short what we call nature, indeed <em>is</em> the consciousness of planet earth. Apparently, the <em>manifest destiny</em> of the technocrats is to eradicate what they perceive as primitive, raw, red in tooth and claw, wild and uncontrollable, and to replace nature with a “better” system of human technology.</p>
<p>Deconstructing that was the easy part. The hard part is his statement about freedom. With all this in mind, the primary question is: what does <em>freedom</em> mean for someone like him?</p>
<p>A friend of mine, who was lucky enough to hear Noam Chomsky speak live, told me that in the discussion after somebody asked the usual question: “What can we do about it?” Chomsky responded that he thinks this is a strange question. People from so-called developing countries would never ask such a question, only westerners, he stated. Apparently, third-world-people still have a clearer sense for suppression and cultures of resistance. “We should rather ask what we can’t do,” Chomsky said.</p>
<p>When I attended a talk by Rainer Mausfeld, of course someone asked the very same question. Mausfeld stated that this question shows how well the <em>soft power techniques</em> he’d been describing work. We can’t even imagine any form of resistance.</p>
<p>For more than a century, the political left’s analysis has been very clear: The suppression and exploitation of the poor (working class) by the rich (owning class), that is the very basis of capitalism, can only be solved by organized class struggle to come from the working class. This concept isn’t hard to understand. It is classic Marxism. But somehow, the ruling class has managed to completely eradicate it from the proletarian minds.</p>
<p>I’ve come across a lot more of what I like to call liberal lifestyle-activists. I understood that most permies chose permaculture not because they want a revolution (like I did), but because they want a more sustainable lifestyle for themselves. They believe that they are free, because they perceive their individualism and their freedom of choice as the greatest freedom, the greatest achievement of modernity. Being part of any group, class or movement is perceived as regressive. The notion of class struggle is <em>so yesterday.</em></p>
<p>At the same time, they’re usually educated people, and they know that a lot of things are going badly wrong. But as liberals who are taking power out of the equation, and individualists lacking any concept of social group our class, they must take it all on themselves. “It is all of us who are causing the destruction,” they’d say.</p>
<p>As a result, the only thinkable form of political action are personal consumer choices. Buy organic soap and feel better.</p>
<p>A great example of this are vegans. No doubt that factory farming is horrible and has to stop. But as a lifestyle-activist, all you can do about it is to stop consuming meat. In your worldview, the problem can only be solved by everybody stopping eating meat.</p>
<p>For liberal lifestyle-activists, “having all the freedoms we want” can only mean the freedom to consume (or not consume) whatever we want, whenever we want, in any quality and quantity we want. This is the kind of “freedom” with which capitalism has hijacked us. If we can afford it, of course. But within neoliberal capitalist ideology, there is no such thing as a suppressed class. The poor are poor because they don’t work hard enough, or they are simply to stupid to sell themselves well enough.</p>
<blockquote><p>“Neoliberalism turns the oppressed worker into a free contractor, an entrepreneur of the self. Today, everyone is a self-exploiting worker in their own enterprise. Every individual is master and slave in one. This also means that class struggle has become an internal struggle with oneself. Today, anyone who fails to succeed blames themselves and feels ashamed. People see themselves, not society, as the problem.”</p>
<p><a href="https://www.opendemocracy.net/transformation/byung-chul-han/why-revolution-is-no-longer-possible" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Byung-Chul Han</a></p></blockquote>
<p>For radicals, the question remains: Without the possibility of mass movements, how do we stop the destruction of the planet that is our only home?</p>
<p>For a new generation of serious activists who are tired of all that shit and ready to take action, DGR has the <a href="http://deepgreenresistance.org/deep-green-resistance-strategy/decisive-ecological-warfare" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Decisive Ecological Warfare</a> strategy.</p>
Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-65410956496076925182018-05-07T19:18:00.000-07:002019-04-21T16:29:28.623-07:00Blog to know: Tropical Self Sufficiency<p>A Puna, Hawai'i resident named Spencer has been experimenting for a couple of years with perennials in the tropics, and he's written up some excellent experience based species profiles. You'll find many of the species explored by Toensmeier's <em>Perennial Vegetables</em>, one of Spencer's inspirations. Some species are purely tropical, but many are familiar friends (or could become such!) of temperate permaculturists as well.
<p>The site is loaded with information on propagation, growth, harvest, and use of perennials, in a combination of collated research and original discoveries. Multiple photos accompany each entry, usually including shots of the plants living in polycultures, with the surrounding species conveniently named as well. As the site title indicates, there's an emphasis on staple crops.
<p>All in all, my kind of info-dense resource! Check out Spencer's site at <a href="https://tropicalselfsufficiency.wordpress.com/" target="_blank">Tropical Self Sufficiency</a>.
<p><a href="https://tropicalselfsufficiency.com/" target="_blank"><img class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;" src="https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-E8AEPktIbtg/WvEIPzSby8I/AAAAAAAAB4c/0x7cKTwsH_w9SJX-jurPGCUN0GZa5A9AQCLcBGAs/s1600/tropical-self-sufficiency.jpg" data-original-width="600" data-original-height="265" /></a>Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-60874832409073065722017-09-21T15:19:00.000-07:002017-09-21T16:47:17.125-07:00Puna Hawai'i avocado bearing seasons<p>Wade Bauer of <a target="_blank" href="http://hawaii-permaculture-institute.weebly.com/">Malama Aina Permaculture</a> compiled this useful list of 18 popular avocado varieties, based on info from David Frenz and Plant it Hawai'i. The bearing times should be accurate for the Puna district of the big island of Hawai'i, but may also be useful in other areas, at least to give an idea of relative order of ripening.
<ul>
<li><em>Fujikawa</em> - spring</li>
<li><em>Linda</em> - spring </li>
<li><em>Murashige</em> - spring (late spring to early summer)</li>
<li><em>Yamagata</em> - spring - summer (March - July)</li>
<li><em>Hulumanu</em> - summer</li>
<li><em>Pohakulani</em> - summer (June - Aug)</li>
<li><em>Malama</em> - fall (early fall)</li>
<li><em>Tagawa</em> - fall (Aug - Sept)</li>
<li><em>Kahaluu</em> - fall (Aug - Oct, can be alternate)</li>
<li><em>Beardslee</em> - fall - early winter</li>
<li><em>San</em> Miguel - fall - winter</li>
<li><em>Ota</em> - winter (late fall - winter)</li>
<li><em>Sharwil</em> - winter (Nov - Feb)</li>
<li><em>Beshore</em> - winter</li>
<li><em>Sphinx</em> - winter</li>
<li><em>Green</em> Gold - winter - spring</li>
<li><em>Kainaliu</em> aka <em>Shatauer #1</em> - late winter - spring (Feb - April)</li>
<li><em>Minicado</em> - winter then all year when mature</li>
</ul>
Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-57139259442042877722017-08-16T17:12:00.001-07:002017-08-16T17:21:04.086-07:00Charlottesville and violence of aggression vs self-defense<p>As some of my readers know, I was born and raised in Charlottesville, VA. I moved away at age 21 (almost half a lifetime ago, wow...) I've followed the reports from last weekend with shock, correlating sites which are now major flashpoints to my naive childhood memories of these places. But I don't feel any more knowledgeable about current events there than anyone else who can read the news, and I wouldn't normally spend the time to write about current events anyway. But a relative still living in Charlottesville sent a group of us a <a target="_blank" href="http://www.newsmax.com/Headline/charlottesville-virginia-fake-news/2017/08/16/id/808009" rel="nofollow">vile piece by David Horowitz</a> which I couldn't let pass without a reply. So I may as well post the reply here.
<p>My relative commented on the piece:
<blockquote><p>Right on!
<br>I am sick of the lawlessness condoned in our country.
</blockquote>
<p>I replied:
<p>Dear [relative],
<p>I'm really confused. From what I've read, the neo-Nazis and their supporters were posting copiously in advance of the gathering about their plans for violence, showed up armed and defended as if for rioting, and then carried out their violent threats to the point of murder. (And committed dozens of incidents of vandalism, harassment, and physical assaults, which would be shocking were they not overshadowed by the vehicular homicide.) Trump's statements implicitly condone this lawlessness, and the piece you sent is in support of doing so. Why do you say "Right on!"?
<p>The piece also greatly misrepresents the facts:
<p>No one believes the racists came to "defend a historic monument" (Lee's statue is not under threat; it's simply being moved from a place where it has no historical relevance except in its use to enforce institutional racism, to somewhere more appropriate/relevant.) (See also: <a target="_blank" href="http://www.nationalreview.com/article/450470/charlottesville-virignia-robert-e-lee-statue-remove-right-decision-confederate-monuments-museums">National Review perspective</a>.)
<p>Trump's politics have been racist from the start. He's deliberately appealed to a white working class base who've been screwed over by the capitalist system (as you taught us, the rich get richer, and the poor get poorer -- and this has only gotten more extreme over the decades.) White working class economic interests would be best served through unification with the working class of all backgrounds, but Trump (not the first politician, surely not the last) has successfully used this wedge issue to divert their energies away from economic inequities and against people of color as scapegoats. It's incredibly disingenuous to claim that "the anti-Trump left [is using] race to divide America."
<p>Characterizing BLM and Antifa as "violent groups" is equally disingenuous. (As you know, corporate media is heavily biased towards maintaining the status quo, so independent research is required if you want to understand these groups.) Most crucially, there's a clear legal and moral difference between the <a target="_blank" href="https://deepgreenresistance.net/resistance/liberals-radicals/categories-of-violence/">violence of aggression and the violence of self-defense</a>. Trump and Horowitz are deliberately conflating the two to obscure how deeply racism is embedded in our society, how we (whites, especially white males) benefit, and the struggle necessary to obtain social justice.
<p>"Who started the fight is really immaterial." <--- Classic line of abusers.
<p>Of course you're in an ideal situation to talk with people who were on the ground, so I highly recommend you do so if you want to understand what happened over the weekend. That would give you a much more accurate picture than the opinion of an author trying to capitalize on events to sell his political agenda, or any other distant observer such as myself.
<p>If you can't take advantage of your opportunities to talk directly with locals who were there, you can also read <a target="_blank" href="https://www.reddit.com/r/Charlottesville">r/Charlottesville</a> for eyewitness accounts.
<p>Love,
<br>NorrisNorrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-28891964044295212192017-06-02T15:48:00.000-07:002017-06-02T15:48:53.382-07:00Incredible Wild Edibles by Samuel Thayer: pre-order now!<p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://www.foragersharvest.com/store/p330/Incredible_Wild_Edibles%3A__36_Plants_That_Can_Change_Your_Life_by_Samuel_Thayer___%2A%2A%2APre-publication_order%2A%2A%2A_Will_Not_Ship_Until_October-November.html" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKxnUCoCWussQL4j4JDwW6xXzmLBNCZkusxA8Dpt2m5fMZM0Lve0ZvuVlc3wv9M-SHEEmX0Wvovk7np44AnP7K2BfQd-42cPrDhWTu7Az326fFEqqnnz31NlWqEcKF3Bgrz-l7/s1600/incredible-wild-edibles-samuel-thayer.jpg" data-original-width="300" data-original-height="450" /></a></div>Samuel Thayer, my favorite foraging author, is finally coming out with a third book. If it's anything like <cite>The Forager's Harvest</cite> (<a href="http://farmerscrub.blogspot.com/2007/11/book-review-foragers-harvest-by-samuel.html">read my review</a>) or <cite>Nature's Garden</cite>, then this is well worth getting. Of the three dozen profiled plants, I recognize at least two dozen as either growing around Portland or already under cultivation in my old garden. I'm sure that after I read this, I'll wish I'd known then what I know now...
<p>Although very few of these plants are likely to grow for me in my new home of Hawai'i, I plan to buy the book anyway. Thayer's entertaining writing is reason enough for a plant geek or rewilder to pick up the book, and I'm sure I'll learn some new things about the old friends I had to leave behind.
<p>I was happy to organize group buys in the past for Thayer's books to get us all wholesale prices. Although I can't do so for this one, you can pre-order the book directly <a target="_blank" href="http://www.foragersharvest.com/store/p330/Incredible_Wild_Edibles%3A__36_Plants_That_Can_Change_Your_Life_by_Samuel_Thayer___%2A%2A%2APre-publication_order%2A%2A%2A_Will_Not_Ship_Until_October-November.html">from Samuel Thayer</a> for $18 with free shipping. You can support his superb work while getting yourself a great discount on what's sure to be a great book. He's also offering discounts on his first two books if purchased along with the new one.
<p>Enjoy!
<hr>
<p>Description of <cite>Incredible Wild Edibles</cite> From Samuel Thayer's website:
<blockquote>
<p>Sam's 3rd book on wild edible plants. There is no overlap in what is covered in this book or his previous 2 books. The plants contained in this book include:
<ul>
<li>Black Mustard
<li>Bladder Campion
<li>Sweet Flag (Calamus)
<li>Caraway
<li>Chickweed
<li>Chufa
<li>Creeping Bellflower
<li>Fennel
<li>Wild Garlic
<li>Gooseberry
<li>Hickory
<li>Hops
<li>Japanese Knotweed
<li>Kentucky Coffeetree
<li>Maple
<li>Miner's Lettuce
<li>Mulberry
<li>Pawpaw
<li>Persimmon
<li>Poke
<li>Prairie Turnip
<li>Purple Poppy Mallow
<li>Purslane
<li>Quickweed
<li>Rose
<li>Sassafras
<li>Shepherd's Purse
<li>Sochane
<li>Strawberry Spinach
<li>Sweetroot (Sweet Cicely, Aniseroot)
<li>Violet
<li>Watercress
<li>Water Parsnip
<li>Wild Radishes
<li>Wintercress
</ul>
<p style="color:rgb(51, 51, 51)">Incredible Wild Edibles covers 36 of the best edible wild plants in North America: fruits, berries, nuts, shoots, leafy greens, root vegetables, culinary herbs, teas, and syrups that boast exceptional flavor and nutrition. The plants chosen represent every habitat and every region in North America, from the northern forests to the southwest deserts, from the largest cities to the wildest mountains. Rather than cover hundreds of species in brief accounts that leave the reader unsure of how to proceed, Samuel Thayer encourages readers to thoroughly learn one plant at a time. Each of these traditional foods has a rich culinary and cultural history―a wholesome past that is still relevant for our health and happiness today. The text is fully accessible to the novice, but remains botanically accurate and has the in-depth information that seasoned foragers crave.</p><p style="color:rgb(51, 51, 51)"><br></p><p style="color:rgb(51, 51, 51)"> Sharing the wisdom of a lifetime of daily foraging, the author answers all of the reader’s questions about each plant: How do I identify it? What might I confuse it with? Where can I find it? What part do I use, and when is it ready to be picked? How do I gather and prepare it? How can I be sure to harvest it responsibly? This discussion is accompanied by more than 350 color photos showing all the key features for identification, including potentially confusing species. Photos also depict the exact parts to use and the proper stage for collection. All of this is delivered in a familiar but authoritative tone, along with humorous anecdotes and insights from extensive real-life experience with each plant covered in the book.</p><p style="color:rgb(51, 51, 51)"><br></p><p style="color:rgb(51, 51, 51)"> Incredible Wild Edibles contains an index, bibliography, illustrated glossary, range maps, and foraging calendar. This third volume in Thayer’s <i>Forager’s Harvest </i>series has no overlap of the plants covered in the first two volumes.</p>
</blockquote>
Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-25849235880474128972017-01-03T14:44:00.000-08:002017-01-03T14:44:01.943-08:00Book Review: Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer<h2>Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants</h2>
<p><center><em>"I fear that a world made of gifts cannot coexist with a world made of commodities."</em></center>
<br>
<img style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh3s_q-xX_lFn_EFeotmgvWvyCxAZwZqg77z-ydIcSSTrsKctXnVgXf-JB0iZl8rntxPEVh_6ye3XY7rQemCXARZOsmC8IB9spuJkZfvWOrQvlh8VBigzicdSg1J73eOa1iW1V-XQ/s1600/braiding-sweetgrass.jpg" />
<p>Robin Wall Kimmerer transcends boundaries, and so does her latest book. Simultaneously a botanist and author-poet, scientist and Potowatomi Nation citizen, professor and mother, she brings together unusually diverse perspectives and ways of knowing. The result is a gift to readers: beautiful writing exploring knowledge and ideas often buried in academia or dismissed as "unscientific." As in her first book, <cite>Gathering Moss</cite>, her enthusiasm for nature and learning comes through strongly, a joy for any nature lover to read. She softens and contextualizes modern hard facts by relating them to indigenous worldviews developed over thousands of years. She reconciles art, appreciation of the natural world, and science (in many ways just now catching up to traditional knowledge.) Rejecting human exceptionalism, she considers all the beings with whom we share the earth while addressing deep questions of ethics and morality.
<p><cite>Braiding Sweetgrass</cite> draws on stories from elders and on Kimmerer's own experiences for its 32 chapters. Each could stand alone, ranging across seemingly disparate subjects: relationships between masting nut trees and squirrels, gift economies vs market economies, the Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving Address, harvesting plants in a regenerative manner, and what it means to be a good citizen. But the chapters are tied together by recurring elements, most notably the titular sweetgrass. Sections entitled Planting, Tending, Picking, Braiding, and Burning Sweetgrass organize the individual chapters, and sweetgrass appears again and again as part of traditional legend, knowledge, and practice. The book is densely multilayered, with specific material practices seamlessly integrated into broader teachings about the physical world, and then into deep philosophy. The real magic comes from Kimmerer skillfully interweaving themes of relationship, gratitude, and responsibility into a story larger than the sum of the parts. Her art mirrors a well-lived life which has transformed individual experiences into holistic wisdom.
<p>The overarching theme, drawn forth through the dozens of stories in hundreds of ways, is reciprocity. A fundamental difference between the culture of civilization and those of indigenous peoples is a mentality of exploitation vs one of gratitude. Derrick Jensen defines sustainability as giving back more than you take, and Kimmerer richly depicts a worldview in which that ethic is held first and foremost, even (or especially) when harvesting the lives of others. Her multiple detailed accounts, backed by science, of human interactions with other species to the benefit of all rebut the belief that humans are intrinsically destructive. We have the potential ― indeed, the responsibility ― to take up a supportive role in the web of life.
<p>Building on this revelation, <cite>Braiding Sweetgrass</cite> challenges the reader to consider how an individual, or a culture, can become indigenous to place. With the vast majority of the earth under siege by settler cultures with a domination mindset, this is an urgent task. Sooner or later (hopefully sooner), collapse will render industrialism and globalization infeasible, reigning in civilization's ecocide. But local cultures unable to develop reciprocal relationships with their landbases are doomed to continue the destruction, even if at a smaller scale.
<p>Perhaps the most important lesson is that everyone has gifts. Birds have the gift of song, stars the gift of shining. But with each gift comes a responsibility to use it in the service of life. Birds have a responsibility to greet the day with music, stars to guide night travelers. What gifts do humans have, and what responsibilities? And more personally: as Carolyn Raffensperger asks, “What are the largest, most pressing problems that you can help to solve using the gifts that are unique to you in all the universe?” With the world at stake, contemplate the question. Find your answer. Then take action.
<hr>
<p><em>Review first published at the <a target="_blank" href="http://deepgreenresistance.blogspot.com/2016/11/braiding-sweetgrass-robin-wall-kimmerer.html">Deep Green Resistance blog</a></em>
<hr>
<p><em>Braiding Sweetgrass is available as a paperback, ebook, and audio book.</em>
<p><em>Derrick interviewed Robin Wall Kimmerer for the September 25, 2016 episode of <a href="http://deepgreenresistance.blogspot.com/p/derrick-jensen-resistance-radio-archives.html#160925">Resistance Radio.</a> Readers who enjoy Braiding Sweetgrass will probably also enjoy Derrick's <a target="_blank" href="http://www.derrickjensen.org/work/myth-of-human-supremacy/">The Myth of Human Supremacy</a>, and vice versa. </em>
Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-71090988634816681282016-08-23T00:54:00.000-07:002018-07-10T23:11:36.818-07:00Book review: The Bio-Integrated Farm by Shawn Jadrnicek<h2>A Revolutionary Permaculture-Based System Using Greenhouses, Ponds, Compost Piles, Aquaponics, Chickens, and More</h2>
<p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-JNndzXN_CPY/V7v_QNMdieI/AAAAAAAABcw/nB741aGsr0EHQRrJrwgW0Ja2x5NLLrZKQCLcB/s1600/bio-integrated-farm-shawn-jadrnicek.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-JNndzXN_CPY/V7v_QNMdieI/AAAAAAAABcw/nB741aGsr0EHQRrJrwgW0Ja2x5NLLrZKQCLcB/s320/bio-integrated-farm-shawn-jadrnicek.jpg" width="256" height="320" /></a></div><blockquote><em>In my experience farmers and gardeners aren't philosophers, they're doers. They want to know why ― but most importantly they want to know how.</em></blockquote>
<p>In this quote, Shawn Jadrnicek summarizes what I like best about <a target="_blank" href="http://www.chelseagreen.com/the-bio-integrated-farm">his book</a>. When I first got into permaculture in the mid-2000s, most books were heavy on theory, but light on practice. Bill Mollison's epic <cite>Permaculture: a Designer's Manual</cite> has lots of great ideas and big claims. But good ideas on paper don't always end in good results in the real world, and details of implementation can make or break even the best ideas. For successful replication, a designer needs to know what worked and what didn't, under which circumstances. Which elements need to be included? What patterns matter?
<p>Dave Jacke and Eric Toensmeier's <cite>Edible Forest Gardening</cite> provided the needed details, grounded in ecological science, for a field until then mostly dependent on anecdotes. Now Shawn Jadrnicek, with the help of his wife Stephanie, has applied similarly rigorous analysis to the subtitular greenhouses, ponds, compost piles, aquaponics, and chickens, all system elements popularly used by permaculture practitioners. There's plenty of information out there about how to build and manage each of these elements in isolation, and much of the permaculture literature offers good ideas for building functional relationships between them. But this book, based on experience with commercial- and home-scale areas, shares the knowledge and wisdom people need for successful integrations.
<p>For example, Mollison and other permaculture authors suggest that chickens, greenhouses, and plants can coexist in a natural and easy combination. When temperatures get cold, chickens move into the greenhouse, adding heat when the plants need it, and improving plant growth by increasing CO<sub>2</sub> availability. Jardnicek opens the section "Connecting Chickens to the Greenhouse" by stating:
<p><blockquote>Before implementing this project, I'd read a lot about connecting chicken coops to greenhouses ― and in theory it works. But as with all theories, the application itself presented challenges. In a nut-shell, chicken coops connected to the greenhouse are both beneficial and problematic.</blockquote>
<p>After experimentation in his South Carolina location, he discovered drawbacks to the theory: plants don't use the extra CO<sub>2</sub> at night, when the chickens spend most of their time in the greenhouse; failing to open the coop early each morning may cause heat stress to the chickens; high heat levels may dissuade the chickens from returning to the greenhouse to roost on summer nights; ammonia from poop can quickly build to levels harmful to plants; and chicken dust doesn't mix well with raw veggie crops. He concludes that northerly climates are better suited to the combination than areas with hot winter (and even hotter summer) days. In fact, in any locale, it may be better to situate a chicken coop next to the greenhouse and move filtered air, rather than try for full integration,
<p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-EkfgI5mWhMM/V7v_cNFU-tI/AAAAAAAABc0/Lx0FiEmvwmQ0yHsKwBtmdn0SYH_E0dXSwCLcB/s1600/bio-integrated-farm-floating-raft-seed-trays.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-EkfgI5mWhMM/V7v_cNFU-tI/AAAAAAAABc0/Lx0FiEmvwmQ0yHsKwBtmdn0SYH_E0dXSwCLcB/s320/bio-integrated-farm-floating-raft-seed-trays.jpg" width="320" height="190" /></a></div>The book excels in its attention to detail for the many uses of water. Jardnicek addresses residential needs, crop irrigation, multi-purpose ponds, moving nutrients across the land, and even using water flushes to separate acorns from leaves, with formulas or at least approximations to guide design in each area. He thoroughly covers moving water into and out of tanks, ponds, basins, and fields, and integration with greenhouses, plant nurseries, fish, aquaculture, and chickens. One of my favorite ideas is a system of self-watering seed trays, floating in ponds on Styrofoam rafts weighted to submerge the bottoms of the trays. The detailed description gives me confidence that I could make it work for myself.
<p>Two factors prevent me from raving about the book as I did for <em>Edible Forest Gardens</em> and Martin Crawford's <em>Agroforestry News</em>. The first needn't hold back most readers: my tropical location makes much of the discussion of heat trapping and storage irrelevant. The second is more universal to anyone concerned with sustainability or self-sufficiency. Jardnicek relies heavily on industrial products: chicken and fish feed; pond liners and covers; pipes, pumps, expansion tanks, and valves; tractors and trucks; shade cloth and greenhouse plastic.
<p>As <a target="_blank" href="http://lierrekeith.com">Lierre Keith</a> puts it in <em>The Vegetarian Myth</em>, "The absolute bottom line is: what methods of food production build topsoil while using only ambient sun and rain? <em>Because nothing else is sustainable</em>".
<p>To be fair, much of what Jardnicek describes is for commercial-scale operations where the goal is almost always "less harm" rather than sustainability, and of course each reader needs to decide for him- or herself how much to design for true sustainability. But I think most of the described systems have unwise and irresponsible levels of industrial dependency, and the ideas need to be read with caution.
<p>That said, I do recommend the book. I'm glad I read it, glad I have it for ongoing reference, and will likely reread it when the time comes to design my own homestead. Many of the principles and concepts could be adapted for my tropical needs and non-industrial ethics. I'm already brainstorming about seed trays floating on bamboo mats, or maybe on pond weeds...
Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-13200463740908255282016-03-08T13:26:00.000-08:002016-03-08T16:56:10.231-08:00The limits of gardening as the world burns<p><blockquote>If every homeowner in Seattle ripped up their lawn and replaced it with edible plants, the resulting crop production would be enough to feed just one percent of the city’s residents, according to a new study by researchers at the University of Washington.</blockquote>
<p>Researchers in Seattle performed a rigorous analysis of the potential to grow the city's own food. Their conclusions are very similar to my own, based on our <a href="/2014/04/self-sufficiency-five-years-in-audio.html">experiments in Portland</a>: if everyone in Portland converted their yards and rooftops and driveways to food production, and planted all the public areas, and did a better job than we did...the city could still only feed half its population.
<p>The Seattle study estimates the city could grow 21% of a balanced diet for the city's inhabitants, assuming conversion of all possible surfaces (permeable and impermeable) to food production. Seattle, like Portland, and like all other cities with dense populations, can never be sustainable.
<p>What are the implications for those of us working towards local food systems? It doesn't mean we shouldn't continue our work. But we shouldn't delude ourselves or others into denying cities' dependence on massive importation of resources, almost always extracted violently from the land, and often from humans. It's good and noble work to establish a community garden, or to convert our lawns to perennial polycultures to support humans and non-humans alike. But these individual actions, even if adopted by everyone, will never add up to the systematic transformation we need. To leverage their impact, this localization must be integrated into a <a targe="_blank" href="http://deepgreenresistance.org/who-we-are/faqs/deep-green-resistance-faqs#resistance-culture">culture of resistance</a>, supporting direct dismantling of the industrial infrastructure wreaking large-scale havoc.
<p>It's enjoyable and satisfying, but it's not a real solution to just putter around in our backyards while the world burns. We have to think about, and get involved with, the big picture.
<img style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;" border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg_zuHFWdKq8pHqK0Nb4QVXMhyhTbo-dBUboWMvcUO6luS1aANsdbVE54k3SIUkk-rA4wkBe0AqS3augVPYpCeaI8jdlRgGzr_OBuNvnNYprgClgzPXFBQCdm4XY5ywU0asHHYY/s1600/limits-of-gardening.jpg" />
<p>Read the full article about the study: <a target="_blank" href="http://conservationmagazine.org/2016/01/this-is-why-cities-cant-grow-all-their-own-food/">This is why cities can't grow all their own food</a>
<p><em>The article has also sparked a <a target="_blank" href="https://www.reddit.com/r/Permaculture/comments/49k9vp/this_is_why_cities_cant_grow_all_their_own_food/d0sftg1">discussion between myself and another person</a> on Reddit, with more of my thoughts on cities, sustainability, the value of individual action, and more</em>
Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-32701227230141386642016-02-06T13:16:00.001-08:002016-02-06T13:16:43.944-08:00(Relatively) quick-yielding perennials<p>As the new growing season approaches, you may want to plan for some low-maintenance, habitat-building perennial plants to supplement or replace some of your annuals. A friend just asked me, "Do you have any garden plant recommendations for us here in Eugene? We're interested in perennials that establish relatively quickly and provide a good crop in the first year or two." I replied with the following:
<p>Very few perennials will yield much, if at all, in the first year, especially if you're trying to let them establish for a strong future. Some will yield decently in the 2nd year, but for most you'll have to wait til the 3rd year or later. (Assuming from seed - starting with transplants or tubers will speed it up.) That said, I'll include everything below which gives some harvest in the specified time frames, but don't expect huge returns.
<h3>First year</h3>
<ul>
<li>French sorrel
<li>Mallows (Malva sp.)
<li>Anise hyssop, lemon balm, peppermint, other mints
<li>Fennel
<li>Andean tubers (mashua, oca, yacon)
<li>Jerusalem artichoke
<li>Wapato
<li>Salad burnet
<li>Alliums
<li>Columbine
<li>Malabar spinach
<li>Comfrey
<li>Perennial kale
<li>Chicory
<li>Perennial arugula (Diplotaxis sp)
<li>Sweet potato for greens?
<li>Scarlet runner beans
<li>Lactuca perennis
</ul>
<h3>Second year</h3>
<ul>
<li>Scorzonera leaves & flowers, and maybe roots
<li>Fuki
<li>Bellflowers (Campanula sp)
<li>Strawberries
<li>Lovage
<li>Dandelion
<li>Miner's lettuce
<li>Daylily from divisions
<li>Sedums
<li>Good King Henry
<li>Cow parsley
<li>Tree collard
<li>Turkish rocket
<li>Sea kale & giant sea kale
<li>Mitsuba
<li>Hot tuna
<li>Sweet cicely
<li>Sorrels (Oxalis sp)
<li>Pokeweed
<li>Rhubarb & Asparagus (a little bit)
<li>New Zealand spinach? (not successful for us)
<li>Violets
</ul>
<p>Self-seeding annuals (such as Amaranthus sp, Chenopodium sp, Calendula, Land cress, and Borage) and biennials (such as Angelica, Burdock, Evening primrose, and Alexanders) are intermediate in investment and return, yielding in the first year yet often persisting in the garden. It's also well worth identifying and researching all your "weeds", since many of them are probably edible and provide an immediate easy yield.Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-21657914598765830382015-04-03T19:25:00.000-07:002015-04-03T19:25:03.317-07:00Open Letter to Reclaim Environmentalism<p>Derrick Jensen and Lierre Keith wrote a powerful letter challenging modern mainstream environmentalism, pointing out that it has wandered down a dead-end trail of trying to preserve our industrial comforts and way of life rather than trying to preserve the natural world. Environmentalism has been so co-opted that members of the "conservation-industrial complex" advocate for nuclear power in its name, with straight faces.
<p>Jensen and Keith decry the insanity of prioritizing the needs of our murderous culture over the needs of the earth which actually sustains us. If you agree with their conclusion, please read their full <a target="_blank" href="http://www.derrickjensen.org/open-letter-to-reclaim-environmentalism/">Open Letter to Reclaim Environmentalism</a> and join nearly 1,000 others as a signatory:
<blockquote>
<p>Environmentalism is not about insulating this culture from the effects of its world-destroying activities. Nor is it about trying to perpetuate these world-destroying activities. We are reclaiming environmentalism to mean protecting the natural world from this culture.
<p>And more importantly, we are reclaiming this earth that is our only home, reclaiming it from this extractive culture. We love this earth, and we will defend our beloved.</blockquote>Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-86178810610495793262015-02-25T15:53:00.000-08:002015-02-25T15:53:32.361-08:00PIELC 2015 in Eugene, March 5-8<img style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;" border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiB4biXoASR7yzUVbf7hK_buHxnlZqon3ITDZsgCWxt34GzWLagsRtXhw79XjfesINowIexXVdeDbQ9_guKyQDPZeUW3N9IrT-qsOl9Leu98Tm5Mj3qw_w1oBEBNHcnN1tMN5BAyg/s1600/PIELC2015.jpg" />
<p>This year's Public Environmental Interest Law Conference is coming up soon: Thursday March 5th through Sunday March 8th, in Eugene OR. Several Deep Green Resistance members will be presenting, so join them if you can, for this free and informative long weekend!
<p>Keynote speakers include Kathleen Deane Moore, Amy Goodman, Gary Nabhan, and others. The theme for this conference is "Changing Currents":
<blockquote>“Changing Currents” expresses an awareness that the physical currents of our planet are shifting and that we must alter our human patterns to adapt for a better future. Actions of the past set in motion the drastic changes we are experiencing today. At the same time our actions today will deeply affect our world’s future. The currents that drive our climate system are changing and causing unprecedented changes to human and biotic communities across the globe. But, armed with an awareness of these changes, we can mobilize the social currency needed to change currents and set humanity on the path to resiliency. This year’s conference will provide an opportunity to challenge each other and discuss solutions and strategies for how we may move forward in confronting the world of today with an eye towards tomorrow’s reality.</blockquote>
<p>For more information or to register for free, visit the <a target="_blank" href="http://pielc.org">PIELC website</a>.Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-51827895426647466522015-01-31T20:41:00.002-08:002015-01-31T20:41:45.356-08:00Spring 2015 Fertile Valley Seeds<p>Carol Deppe, author of <a href="http://farmerscrub.blogspot.com/2012/10/book-review-resilient-gardener-by-carol.html" target="_blank"><em>The Resilient Gardener</em></a>, has posted this year's seed list on her website. Unlike past years, it sounds like this year she'll keep the website info up to date as seeds run out.
<p>She has some unique offerings, only available in the spring, so check out her list and order anything you want right away!
<p><a target="_blank" href="http://caroldeppe.com/Seed%20List%202015.html">Carol Deppe's 2015 seed list</a>Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12931688.post-85569765163213570182015-01-12T16:24:00.002-08:002015-01-12T17:13:21.046-08:00Book review: Eric Toensmeir's Paradise Lot - parallel universe?<table border="0" style="border-spacing: 0;"><tr><td><a href="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-l4KkKfcw9RU/ToJQuM0FaHI/AAAAAAAAAVQ/R_G27vLQIFc/s720/DSC04283.JPG" imageanchor="1"><img border="0" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Ruuyx7O0Iqo/VLRiga8aAnI/AAAAAAAABXo/lbANjz9GTn0/s1600/paradise-lot-my-yard-s.jpg" style="float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; width: 283px;"/></a></td>
<td><a href="https://paradiselotblog.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/overview1.jpg" imageanchor="1"><img border="0" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-5R02FiOGnIM/VLRiocQeayI/AAAAAAAABXw/dg4_m_4jiNQ/s1600/paradise-lot-holyoke-s.jpg" style="float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; width: 283px;"/></a></td></tr>
<tr><td align="center">My yard</td>
<td align="center">Toensmeier's yard</td></tr>
</table>
<p style="clear: both">My project took place in Portland OR, his on the other side of the continent in Holyoke MA. My lot was two tenths of an acre, his lot half that. But besides differences in space for trees, and somewhat different plant palettes, Eric Toensmeir's account in <em>Paradise Lot</em> of applied permaculture reads like a parallel universe of my own experimentations with urban lot rehabilitation and perennial polycultures. We each started with infertile and unpromising soil, but guided by permaculture literature from other regions and with the help of gardening partners (romantic in my case; friend Jonathan Bates in his), we embarked on labors of faith towards similar goals of abundant food production and restored habitat health.
<p>And we both succeeded. I've documented most of my experiments, successes, and failures on this blog. Toensmeier has shared much of his plant knowledge, from which I've drawn heavily, in the appendices of <em>Edible Forest Gardens: Volume Two</em> (coauthored with Dave Jacke), his book <em>Perennial Vegetables</em>, and his DVD <em>Perennial Vegetable Gardening</em>. But besides early site analysis in <em>Edible Forest Gardens</em>, a few video clips from garden tours, and the <a target="_blank" href="http://www.apiosinstitute.org/wiki-member-home">Apios Institute wiki</a> behind a paywall, we haven't gotten many details on the overall transformation of his lot or on his polyculture explorations. <em>Paradise Lot</em> provides a fairly thorough account of how Toensmeir and Bates selected, analyzed, amended, sheet-mulched, planted, and enlivened their site. Though the theoretical process is well described in various forest gardening books, it doesn't hurt to have another case study providing specific details of how a site plan can evolve over the years.
<p>Many individual species are briefly described, without many surprises for those who have already devoured references like <em>Perennial Vegetables</em> and Martin Crawford's <em>Creating a Forest Garden</em>. Most exciting for me is Toensmeier and Bates covering new ground with perennial polycultures (literally). It seems they encountered many of the same challenges <a href="/2011/06/perennial-polyculture-designs-five-year.html">I had with perennial polyculture design</a>, especially from lack of hands-on experience growing and using individual species. It's difficult to assemble successful mixes without intimately understanding the life cycle, growth habits, and harvest season of each component. Amusingly, they created a hog-peanut/gooseberry mess similar to, though not as bad as, my infamous <a href="/2010/09/polyculture-summary-stinging-nettle.html">gooseberry/stinging nettle polyculture</a>. A great example of why we need to share information about what works and what doesn't, to reduce effort wasted on demonstrably bad combinations!
<p>Disappointingly, the book ends before Toensmeier has had a chance to develop many successful polycultures, similar to my timing of moving before getting to implement my own <a href="/2011/06/perennial-polyculture-new-designs.html">new perennial polyculture designs</a>. Even so, there are some succesful polycultures and further hints and lessons in the book. Notably, he arrived at the same conclusion I did: low, spreading groundcovers are critical components. He describes success with some strawberry species, a violet, and some native plants, but without many details beyond that of what specific crops to fit together.
<p>I find it very promising that we achieved similar <a href="/2014/04/self-sufficiency-five-years-in-audio.html">positive results</a> in fairly different climates. We both successfully rehabilitated trashed urban lots into land that could support both humans and non-humans. We both, through the simple techniques of heavy mulching to build soil and planting a wide variety of perennials, created habitat for greater numbers and species diversity of insects, birds, and other life. By selecting mostly edibles for our plantings, we both wound up with abundant harvests of low-maintenance <a href="/2009/11/our-perennial-vegetables.html">perennial vegetables</a>. (And we both had a shortage of perennial greens in the summer; apparently this has more to do with the life cycles of perennials than with the summer drought of the Pacific Northwest.) We both had similar success allowing natural predators to handle pest outbreaks. We both put a lot of time up-front into planning and design, but both made lots of <a href="/search/label/Mistakes">mistakes</a> easily avoidable by others learning from our examples, so I feel pretty confident that our achievements are replicable by anyone who takes this approach with even a minimum of planning and research.
<p>I felt surprised by how much focus Toensmeir put on nitrogen-fixers, as I realized a couple years into our endeavour that <a href="/2007/12/liquid-gold-calculations-revisited.html">one person's urine fertilizes 4000-5000sf of forest garden</a>, the size of their entire lot. Despite cycling the urine from four adults into the yard, Toensmeier is still carefully planning N-fixing plants at the end of the book. Perhaps they all spend so much time off-site that they can't capture enough urine, or perhaps Toensmeir never thought to calculate this?
<p>The book also features a strong subplot of the two bachelors hoping to attract mates, with as much success as in their gardening! Personally, I was much more interested in the plant-geek narrative, but I'm sure many readers will appreciate the human interest story balancing out the site analysis and gardening.
<p>Toensmeir explores some of the dynamics of the neighborhood, the town of Holyoke, and the even broader community. I found his vague hope of inspiring change through personal example to be unconvincing. I'm fairly jaded by my own experience in Portland attempting to model something approximating urban self-sufficiency and sustainability: not only were our inputs of free wood chips and dumpstered waste streams unscaleable to more than a small fraction of the entire city, and not only did I conclude that Portland would have to kick out half the population even in a wildly optimistic scenario of everyone doing a better job than we'd managed, but only a handful of the people who toured our yard actually adopted perennials to any great extent. So I'm pessimistic (or realistic) about the inability of cities to ever support their populations in any sustainable manner.
<p>But that's fairly tangential to the main focus of the book, and certainly anyone interested in urban, suburban, or rural zone 1 and 2 gardening can and should learn from this case study. It's a quick, fun, and relatively light read. Enjoy!Norrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02790917341588271564noreply@blogger.com1