[-] nature@slrpnk.net 7 points 2 weeks ago

I feel the need to clarify that these types of projects usually don't bring "generational jobs and careers" but usually bring outside workforce who will leave when damage done.

[-] nature@slrpnk.net 4 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

garden plot corner

made a tiny berm out of all the leaves I raked and the grass I cut from the garden bed!

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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by nature@slrpnk.net to c/greenspace@beehaw.org

picture of garden beds with plants or seeds, St Andrew’s Cross bush, a tree branch, and a berm

Nitrogen-Fixing Food Crops

  1. "Iron and Clay" cowpea (ran out, so went back and scattered them out well)
  2. Snap Pole Bean Rattlesnake 🫘
  3. Snap Bush Bean Mountaineer White Half-Runner 🫛

Nitrogen-Fixing Cover Crops

  1. Crimson Clover
  2. Red Clover
  3. Alfalfa
  4. White clover

Cover Crop

Buckwheat. (couldn't get drought-tolerant. sold out)

Crops

  1. Anasazi sweet corn (almost out. definitely need to save some of these seeds and the cowpeas)
  2. sunflower (edible, not ornamental or bird seed)
  3. Flat parsley - ran out, time for regular, curly parsley.
  4. Red Ruby 🥬
  5. Detroit Dark beet
  6. Early Scarlet radish - I am not sure if I will like this, but I missed the daikon radishes so.
  7. Southern curly mustard - doing well and always resembles a tastey dinner, happily soaking up the ☀️ from a pot.
  8. Leek
  9. Red Russian kale 🥬
  10. Swiss Chard - like beet seed because they are in the same family, who are all drought tolerant. I got a clump of seeds the other day!

Crop for cat

Cat grass

It took a few hours to cut the grass in today’s garden bed. It was a bit daunting and a bit tedious sometimes, and sometimes, I just wanted it to be over with; but other times, I was lazily lying on my mat and trimming the grass.

I started with cat grass on the edge of the bed since it’s on the edge of the garden plot, so if the neighbor cat comes back over, they might figure out that there’s a snack there for them. I had some buckwheat, today. I’m growing that as cover and maybe some food/seed.

I found a little more grass as I was dropping the initial type(s) of seed. Of course, this grass-cutting might be unnecessary, and a controlled burn might be easier. Like, if there's enough room for a fire, just piling up limbs or sticks that I'm trying to get rid of and burning them on a permitted day with a water hose nearby might make a great garden bed.

Didn't put any food crops with cat grass but did put cover crops. I hope the cats don't poop on my food crops! But if they do, I will clean it out, and I could let those crops go to seed? Some animal has dug some more in my plot and a bed. Previously, they had dug in the mulch near a garlic plant.🧄

With the big seeds, I can space them out by hand.

Stare-at-sky break, some stretches. No, I am not praying.

Not much drought.

I just go by one of those seed schedules that I see in seed stores or seed swaps. Didn't do that until last autumn.

When I walk by my food, grown full of nutrients, it's easy to harvest them

St Andrew's Cross volunteer who gets yellow cross flowers, provides seeds for birds & pollen for bees and butterflies, and might nurse the crops with shelter and shade during the scorching summers.

[-] nature@slrpnk.net 3 points 3 months ago

We could garden and farm by ourselves and the communities we can make, staying as close to nature as possible, without tilling, irrigating, or using chemicals, and by using mulch and some native plants instead.

[-] nature@slrpnk.net 1 points 8 months ago

Yeah, but from an anthropologist view, cities (and specialization) have basically been the downfall of our species. I don't know; I guess bolo'bolo mentioned some city-like places supported by farms. (and Çatalhöyük)

[-] nature@slrpnk.net 3 points 8 months ago

Don't do it. Quit fighting nature. Move inland. Quit living in cities! Okay, I know no one is going to do any of this.

[-] nature@slrpnk.net 3 points 8 months ago

Benjamin Franklin wanted everyone to be apprentices.

[-] nature@slrpnk.net 2 points 9 months ago

Privet also does just fine as a hedge, and people in the UK actually use it for this purpose. Ironically, that's where I've seen privet growing—along borders, so people who hate privet might as well leave the stuff unless it's in their way.

[-] nature@slrpnk.net 20 points 9 months ago

For biodiversity, for example, if the rate at which species disappear is less than 10 times the average extinction rate over the last 10 million years, that is deemed acceptable.

In reality, however, extinctions are occurring at least 100 times faster than this so-called background rate, and 10 times faster than the planetary boundary limit.

Will the miracle of life actually survive our self-induced extinction?

[-] nature@slrpnk.net 2 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I would just do the cover crops along with some nitrogen fixers for several years.

PS – I would keep getting the lawn clippings and use them to mulch my plants.

[-] nature@slrpnk.net 2 points 10 months ago

Try clover again for the fall and winter. You can sow clover seeds until late spring. If necessary, you can start back again in mid summer.

[-] nature@slrpnk.net 1 points 10 months ago

I don't wait for rain, but when I see there's going to be a few days of rain, I try to get some seeds out there before it rains. A few days of rain might give the seeds a good start, and then, you could mulch the seedlings to help them make it to the next rainfall. You could use a handheld tool to cut competing plants like grass and use them as mulch. If you can spend a little time every day or week, then you'll figure out what works.

[-] nature@slrpnk.net 19 points 10 months ago

With radical demands such as a 32-hour workweek

oh my gosh, go, go!

although the company has been successful, they haven’t paid the employees back for that.

This is why they deserve a raise and why we all deserve a raise. There's no reason to keep all the wealth at the top, but of course, saying so is blasphemy in America.

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2023/08/24/the-united-auto-workers-are-redefining-what-is-possible-for-us-labor/

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nature

joined 10 months ago