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dcarch

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Posts posted by dcarch

  1. 22 minutes ago, Darienne said:

    A question from the ignorant:  Ed bought me a basil plant from a grocery store and yesterday I used ALL the leaves on the plant making tomato soup ...my first time and I was blown away with the deliciousness of the result...but now my plant is denuded and all I have left is the stalks and the small leaves which I know will grow and be usable in some time.

     

    What do I do next about the plant?  Or do I simply wait for the next leaves?

     

    DSC04014.thumb.JPG.55f5b2c3f91b6e13900c6e7c96c5d83f.JPG

     

     

     

    Get a bigger pot, with potting soil, spread out the basil plants. Soon you will be having basil tomato soup for breakfast, lunch and dinner everyday.

     

    dcarch

    • Like 4
  2. 5 hours ago, JoNorvelleWalker said:

     

    No cover.  This is a range hood from the '70's.  Remember I live in an old apartment.  I can't even get a new grease filer for it.

     

     

     

    LEDs can only work on low voltage DC power, and there is no such thing as white LED lights. So a simple LED white bulb that you can just screw in an AC socket is a very complicated device with lots of electronics cramped in. The biggest problem for a LED bulb is heat. The higher the wattage, the more sensitive it is to heat.

     

    dcarch

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  3. Many Vitamix parts are made in China, including the motor. I believe the blade and the container are made in the US.

     

    And BTW, I don't think you should make soup in a Vitamix. Using a 2 HP motor to generate heat from friction is probably the most energy wasting way to cook. 

     

    dcarch

  4. If you go to youtube and search "perpetual motion machines", you will find endless samples of "successful"  inventions . You can also find all kinds of fantastic methods of gardening like how to make papaya plants produce bananas instead.

     

    Electroculture, using copper wires  to attract electromegnetic energy in air so you never have to use fertilizer again is another "perpetual motion machine" concept.

     

    Today with cellphone towers everywhere blanketing the earth with electric field, I have not noticed plants growing better than in the old days.

     

    Copper wires antennas? I wonder how many people realize that today a lot of "copper wire" are actually aluminum wire coated with a thin layer of copper. You know how people catch earthworms? They electrify the soil. guess what would happen to your garden soil if these tiny copper antennas can electrify your garden soil.

     

    dcarch

     

     

     

  5. Interesting for sure. I have not done much research on this topic, but I do have questions at this point.

     

    1. First, I seem to think that for those who has tried, many say Wow! should have done this earlier, and many say it makes no difference after trying.

    2. Why is that so many plants next to metal structures with massive electromagnetic energy fields are not benefited? like near power transmission towels, microwave transmission antennas, etc.

    3. I have many metal construction and electrical installations (solar panel system) in my garden, I have not seem any difference in plant growth, that including a 24 hour LED lighting system and an electric fence system which has a high voltage field.

    4. Does using copper for the antenna make a difference? As far as I know, to electrons as long as a material is conductive, they don't care. That includes plants, they are electrically conductive. That's how thunder lightning can blow a tree apart, and that's why for some radios, you get better reception if you touch the antenna.

    5. If the plants are electrically conductive, they can form what's known as Faraday cage and cut out a lot of "energy" from reaching that tiny antenna under the leaves.

    6. This year, I am shocked by how productive my garden have been. Given the fact that all element for my garden is the same as all previous years, the one thing that's changed big time is the weather. Hot and rained every other day. I would not believe any thing I have done can explain this "miracle" .

     

    When Alternate current (AC) was introduced, Thomas Edison insisted DC current  was better, when frequency modulation (FM) was invented, many feel that amplitude modulation (AM) was better. They were all wrong. So I will remain open minded.

     

    dcarch

     

     

    • Like 1
  6. Where's The Beef?!
     

    I read about an interesting plant, toona sinensis. In China it's young leaves are used as a vegetable. Not many tree leaves can be eaten.

    Interesting plant, so I decide to grow them in my garden. Interesting, to many the leaves taste like beef. That’s why some call the plant beef plant.

     

    To me, toona sinensis has a nice flavor, but it does not make me think of beef.

     

    Anyway, I made a roast beef sandwich with toona sinensis.

     

    dcarch

     

    Toonasinensis2023.thumb.jpg.7de9f261735712e3584dddb028bb3f07.jpg

     

    Toonasinensis2023a.thumb.jpg.0bbc20cd0dfdb1717de0107d53ed9d5a.jpg

     

    Toonasinensis2023b.thumb.jpg.ff3f247478478715e1073cac422635cf.jpg

     

     

     

    • Like 10
    • Thanks 1
    • Delicious 1
  7. 6 hours ago, Senior Sea Kayaker said:

    My garden has been almost pest free except for my kale and only kale. Finally ascertained it was cabbage worms. They didn't touch the collards, chard or lettuces. The photo shows the extent of the damage. Eaten to the stalks.

     

     

     

     

    Interesting for this year. I have had basically 0 leaf eaters damages in my garden, and I don't do spraying.

    The only thing that I can think of is I have built a large bird feeder, which attracted a ton of birds of all kinds to my garden. 

    I would assume many of these birds are not vegetarians.

     

    dcarch

    • Like 2
  8. 7 hours ago, Shelby said:

    Mine has electric ignition, but I can turn the gas on the burner and light it using a match.  I've never tried to do that with the inside of the oven, but I bet I could.

    I think for gas ovens, the only time you can light the gas inside the oven is the broiler, otherwise for baking the gas fire is under the oven, not inside the oven.

     

    dcarch

     

     

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  9. 1 hour ago, liuzhou said:

    酸菜 (suān cài) is literally ‘sour vegetables’, the sourness being that they are pickled. These vegetables are sometimes referred to in the west as Chinese Sauerkraut and some sources even go so far as to suggest that it was the origin for sauerkraut, having been brought west 1,000 years ago by Genghis Khan after he invaded China. Whatever the truth, there is solid evidence that suan cai was in existence 5,000 years ago.

     

    The big fight is about who invented kimchi. 🤣

     

    dcarch

     

  10. Not a beauty contest 😁 

    Just want to show you what I have been having from the garden for lunch  and dinner everyday last week. ( I don't normally eat breakfast)

     

    dcarch

     

    PXL_20230811_144855844_MP1.thumb.jpg.15fce0c346c005ac592673a04ef7deeb.jpg

    • Like 11
    • Thanks 1
    • Delicious 5
  11. 11 hours ago, Duvel said:


    I am not familiar with that name … I remember it to be cape gooseberry in English, but then again: not my native language. It is this

     

    Definitely YUM !!!

    I think those are also called tomatillos. Some small ones are called ground cherries.

    I grow them in my garden.

     

    dcarch

     

    Today's harvest

    PXL_20230812_011420965_MP1.thumb.jpg.977e1835fa8b6585871c09f48dcd502c.jpg

    • Like 1
  12. 5 hours ago, heidih said:

    If you are gardening you might want to look up New Zealand spinach a great strudy spinach like green that is heat tolerant.

     

    Careful growing New Zealand spinach.

    A spinach with new zeal which will take over your land.

    It self-seeds every year, grows like crazy, that is one vegetable I never have to worry about weeds. It crowds out even crabgrass.

     

    dcarch

    • Like 2
    • Sad 1
  13. It's a very strange year here in NY for tomatoes:

    1. Lots of rain, rain, rain, but not one single fruit has cracked. ( I have 85 plants)

    2. Many fruits 1/2 ripe red and 1/2 green. (can't tell about GWR varieties 😉

    3. Excessive green shoulders.

    4. You know those funny looking donut peaches? Many tomatoes, big and small came out flattened ?!

     

    Also, many varieties are coming out not true to the variety.  I figure that's problems of supply chain issues of the past few years. I have a computerized labeling and tracking system. I don't think those are my mistakes.

     

    dcarch

    • Like 6
  14. 1 hour ago, heidih said:

    That fragged rock remover looks like a post hole digger? I have found then effective for their intended use. Yours - good thinking

     

    Actually it's this one, made with leftover electric conduits. Very effective to deal with heavy odd shaped objects.

     

    dcarch

     

    PXL_20230715_114012702_MP1.thumb.jpg.6503d30133348abb14d5748e8025e1df.jpg

    • Like 1
  15. 4 hours ago, rotuts said:

    @dcarch 

     

    work well worth your energy.

     

    did you use a hammer drill ?

     

    hammer in some holes , then pop in the holes 

     

    some sort of splitter thing-ey  you Sledged ?

     

    nice

     

    Yes, two methods considered. Hammer drill holes deep enough for rock splitting wedges. It took a while to drill granite at 2.5" spacing, 7" deep . 

     

    If that fails, I would drill (diamond core drill) 1.5" holes( 14" deep). Holes at 8" x 8", then fill holes with demolition expanding cement to crack the boulder.

     

    If the above two methods failed, I may go with what  heidith had suggested  dynamite!!! 😆

     

    dcarch

     

     

    • Like 2
  16. 3 hours ago, chromedome said:

    A few random photos from my garden, which is finally hitting its stride after a cold and wet start to the summer (and yeah, I'm in the midst of another week of sporadic rain).

     

    My pumpkin has really big blossoms:

     

    20230716_091520.thumb.jpg.9d3ba70ffdd1a1310707cc9552a6933c.jpg

     

    Those were taken yesterday, when I had only male blossoms on the plant. This morning I had both male and female blossoms open, and hand-pollinated since pollinating insects aren't super-active in the rain. For those who don't know the difference, here's an illustrative example:

     

    -----

     

    Some politician may say you have small hands. 🤣🤣🤣

     

    Is that your electric fence system?

     

    dcarch

     

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