[geeks] Greenery and brambles...
Mike Hebel
nimitz at speakeasy.net
Sun Oct 27 23:58:16 CST 2002
I actually enjoy talking about this stuff quite a bit but have done very
little of it. Drop me a note off-list as I do have some questions -
particularly about growth rates.
Mike Hebel
Chris Hedemark wrote:
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> On Sunday, October 27, 2002, at 09:54 PM, Mike Hebel wrote:
>
>> I'm actually thinking hydroponics when we finally get an apartment.
>> not as simple as a garden but far more flexible. I actually like
>> tending plants.
>
>
> Have you ever heard of aquaponics? It takes the hydroponics idea to the
> next level, using a second crop (fish, usually) to create waste products
> to feed your hydroponic crop. It's a bit more self sufficient than
> hydroponics or aquaculture alone, and increases your diversity in the
> process. I haven't done it myself yet, but it seems merit further
> investigation. Having until recently been a major aquarium wonk, I know
> all too well the benefits of fish poop on the veggie garden.
>
>> Count me green-eyed. ;-) You realize that if the property is that
>> diverse you could probably make some side money by selling freshly
>> dried herbs on the 'net.
>
>
> Never really thought of that. Hmm. Are you familiar with square foot
> gardening? It's basically high-density raised bed gardening, usually
> using 4'x4' plots that are a foot deep. Plant very densely, where the
> individual plants are actually in competition with one another for
> space. With tomatoes you will get smaller fruits (but more of them) per
> square foot of garden space. I suspect herbs will not suffer nearly as
> much in such confinement, especially the mints.
>
> I've got enough space here, certainly, to make a go of it. Whatever the
> case, I'm sure it would pay me better right now than IT work has for the
> last 16 months (which is how long ago I was laid off from a sinking
> dot-bomb, and still today looking for gainful employment).
>
>> Actually we have mulberries in the back yard. The raspberry bush in
>> the back had to be removed due to it's overgrowth of the telco pole
>> that happens to be in the corner of our yard.
>
>
> Which brings us full circle, to the original suggestion of using it as a
> sort of natural fence at the edge of your property.
>
>> I just remembered a time when I lived in Chicago as a kid. Myself an
>> a few friends were eating the mulberries off of a large and old tree
>> when some lady came by and yelled at us trying to convince us that
>> they were poisonous. She went so far as to call the police on us who
>> stopped by, looked at what we were eating, and told the lady to leave
>> us alone. lol!
>
>
> Too funny. I'm convinced the average American would have starved to
> death if the predictions of Y2K had really come to pass. While I'm sure
> I would have lost a lot of weight (which is a good thing), I'd get by
> okay. That is, unless I had to eat octopus. Yeck. Tried it for the
> first time just the other night, and while the flavor wasn't disturbing
> to me, the texture of it going down my throat triggered a gag reflex and
> the bugger wouldn't go down. How the Japanese do it, I'll never know.
>
>> Suburbia west of Chicago. It's starting to get too built up for my
>> tastes. If I can get us out of this house I'll set something up.
>> Right now I don't have enough space. I'm still hoping to find a
>> remote industrial building (with some property) that I can renovate
>> but that's a long time down the road.
>
>
> How much space is "not enough space"? I think my house is pretty modest
> (only 1500 s.f.) and I manage to keep the whole Yonder Way Museum of
> Obsolete Technology, a couple of dozen chameleons (and from time to time
> their offspring), as well as a number of potted plants (all edible)
> inside the house. I also have a deck off the back of the house, not too
> large but it is a good ten feet above the ground since I'm on a slightly
> sloped lot, and any of the herbs that will benefit from having lots of
> vertical space to hang their long branches and runners will go in boxes
> on the edge of the deck.
>
> A parcel of yard space the size of a child's sandbox, four foot by four
> foot square, will yield you 32 ears of corn. Using intensive planting
> methods, imagine what a small amount of space could provide you with in
> terms of, say, zuchini or tomato (especially if provided with cages for
> climbing & support). The typical gardening method of planting crops in
> widely separated rows doesn't make sense. Why can the plants within a
> row tolerate close proximity, but the plants in two different rows have
> to be so far apart? For a small gardener, it is *not* necessary to
> apply large scale agribusiness logic to 16 square feet of land.
>
>> Either that of build Dr. Quest's cabin complex somewhere. ;-)
>
>
> Oh yeah.
>
> I already got a sort-a "Bandit". See
> http://www.dogbreedinfo.com/bulldogphotos8.htm first dog, top of the page.
>
>> Frankly I can learn to live anywhere but I prefer lots of space
>> between myself and my neighbors.
>
>
> That's precisely why I picked up that 36 acre woodlot. When I bought it
> five years ago, it was on a dirt road in the middle of nowhere. Today,
> the roads are all paved, the neighbors have big brick homes with paved
> driveways (very unusual to have paved driveways in the rural southeast),
> shopping megaplexes are going up nearby, and yet I still have my 36
> nearly undeveloped acres as a buffer. The stuff I'm doing here on an
> acre and a half is an experiment. I'll make my mistakes here so that
> when I get to the big lot, I'll have a better idea of what works and
> what doesn't work.
>
> If you enjoy talking about this stuff, I've been writing about it for
> years on my web site but I bailed out when the Y2K nuts came out. I
> just recently started back up again and need to repopulate from all of
> my old articles and lots of new ones as well (I backed up the old
> articles before I took it down). I dunno how long this sort of topic
> can be tolerated on a computer geeks list. ;-)
>
> Chris Hedemark
> Hillsborough, NC
> http://yonderway.com
>
>
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