Today I divided up the hardy kiwis I had layered in the fall.
I made four new 1 gallon kiwi plants.
DANDELION JELLY! !! It tastes like honey! ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ been a busy bee last few days harvesting flowers, plucking petals, extracting nectar, straining and canning this delicious jelly! Very Tideaous work but itโs worth it!
3 cups dandelion tea (made from 4 cups of petals in boiled water overnight ) 4 cups of sugar 2 tbsp fresh lemon juice 6 tbsp of regular ball fruit pectin Water bath can for 10 minutes Makes 6 - ยฝ pints
4/20/16
[Top left: Green onion seedlings. Bottom left: Baby basil seedlings. Right: A jungle of thyme.]
Iโve been growing some veggies indoors for a while now (almost a year?) and we finally got the lighting right for the plants. These little guys are completely solarpunk/lunarpunk. I live out in the country and for some reason that wasnโt known to us until after we bought our house there is a ban on all veggie growing and structure building. So we couldnโt even build an outdoor greenhouse. These little guys are growing in a legit solarpunk recycled diyโd greenhouse structure inside my garage. Eventually we are going to try and go with completely heirloom non-gmo organic seedlings but until then these little guys are fighting unjust zoning regulations, fighting our ever increasing dystopian reality (I have a yard and I canโt plant things!), and living it up #solarpunk style.
Did I mention our neighbors are bending these rules too? :) Iโm not the only solarpunk in my area. My neighbor plants mint and strawberries in their flowerbeds and planted a plum tree right between our property lines so that when it matures no one can say it was theirs or that the regulation people didnโt know about it. Itโs been there for years people. Iโve also started some mint and lavender bushes myself. They can ask me all they want about what they areโฆ Iโll just tell them theyโre decorative.ย
Now, Iโm not saying that people should do these things. Bending the rules can get you into trouble. But my area is poor and people are hungry, local food pantries have been closing too and without these solarpunk guerrilla gardening tactics people would go hungry. I only know three of my neighbors because everyone keeps loosing their homes. Neighbors last about a year here and then are forced to leave.ย
At my old town just 20 min away from where I live now, we grew grapes and apples and let whoever was hungry have them. Our neighbors sometimes foraged. There were wild apple trees, grapes, and mulberries and people knew where they were and when they were ready to be picked. It helped a lot of people who wouldnโt have had anything to eat otherwise. banning food sources is what should be illegal. Not tending to gardens. Gardens and plants should never be banned. We live on a living planet, itโs what kept us alive all these centuries. Why are we turning our back on it now?
Personally, Iโd try and find warm white LED lights to use in this. It just fits the aesthetic better, I think.
A massive spinning ring could store our excess energy
Volunteering at my local urban farm โ they have baby goats!!!!
I knew the basics before I got it, but I had no clueโฆ
* The blood wouldnโt necessarily be red. When I first got my period, I spent a few min looking at my underwear wondering how I shit myself. I didnโt know the blood could look brown, or be thick.
* That tampons werenโt a good idea yet. I was 10 or 11 when I got my first period and physically smaller than an adult woman. My first attempt at inserting a tampon was very painful and unsuccessful. I wouldnโt use them until I was around 14 or so.
* That when you use pads the blood can get on your bottom and Iโd have to occasionally clean off the toilet seat after using it.
* That getting your first period DOES NOT mean youโre fully developed and fully able to bear children. I could have technically gotten pregnant at that age, but I was still a child and pregnancy would have put my life in danger because I was still physically immature.
* That it wouldnโt be regular for another few years.
* That very painful cramping is NOT NORMAL once you reach your 20s and is cause for concern.
* That the blood and tissue you pass can look chunky or stringy and not like blood from a cut.
* That stress can halt your period for months BUT
* That doesnโt mean you canโt get pregnant
Feel free to add your own
Led by biotechnologist Marin Sawa, a group of researchers at Imperial College London have devised a way to print solar cells onto paper. They use an inkjet printer to place a conductive layer of carbon nanotubes and a layer of living cyanobacteria to create devices which can capture and store solar energy.
In their proof-of-concept experiment, the cyanobacteria survived the printing process and were able to produce energy from photosynthesis. The trial panel was palm sized and gave enough energy to power a small LED light. Even better, being little more than paper, carbon, and bacteria, the bio-cells are fully biodegradable.
The work is part of an emerging field of science calledย microbial biophotovoltaics (presumably related to the biovoltaics Iโve mentioned here before) which uses algae and cyanobacteria to generate energy. The energy generated may be small, but itโs also cheap and easy to manufacture, and the microbes can continue generating electricity after dark, using compounds made during daylight.
The bio-batteries arenโt intended to replace standard photovoltaics for large scale energy production. Instead, they can provide an inexpensive and renewable source of energy for specific uses, such as air quality monitors and healthcare applications.
โImagine a paper-based, disposable environmental sensor disguised as wallpaper, which could monitor air quality in the home. When it has done its job it could be removed and left to biodegrade in the garden without any impact on the environment.โ โ Marin Sawa
Sawa et al (2017) โ open access