Weeding the garden is like fly fishing

 

It’s all about touch.  And patience.  And perseverance.  Once you’ve connected with your target, the finessing begins.  Pull hard enough to accomplish your goal, but not enough to part the connection.  If there is a stalemate, apply patience and wait for an opening.  If necessary, vary the angle of force.  Wobble it a little for a shift in your favor.  Feel the tension.  Continue the steady pressure.  Don’t be discouraged by the occasional failure.  There is always the next weed/fish.  Lose yourself in it.  Zen.

 

We’re gonna need a bigger drum!

 

These little tumblers are super, but they don’t hold very much.  Together they have a capacity of 37 gallons.

 

It doesn’t take many clippings to fill them up.  While we’re waiting for the plant material to compost in them, all the fresh clippings pile up beside them waiting for their turn.  The problem with that is there are two basic components to compost, brown and green; carbon and nitrogen.  The recipe for productive aerobic decomposition is two parts green for one part brown.  While the fresh clipping are waiting for their turn in the drum, they’re going from green to brown.  We need to take advantage of them while they’re green!

 

Enter the 50 gallon roller drum.

 

That could work.

 

Or maybe a 100 gallon setup!

 

Two side-by-side 50 gallon drums.

 

We’re headed off on a trip soon.  Might have to look into these when we get back.

 

The motorhome

 

Our car is very efficient.  We’d rather have an electric car, but trading in the efficient car we already have for a Tesla sedan doesn’t come anywhere close to making financial sense.  (As a solution to that dilemma, we bought a share of Tesla stock and called it good.)

 

We watch for ways to minimize air conditioning.  Any water our yard needs is delivered by an efficient drip system.  We have a type of grass lawn (St. Augustine) that doesn’t require supplemental water.  What we haven’t been able to do anything about is the motorhome.  It’s a big diesel-powered thing pushing itself down the road with just the two of us in it.  When we were living in the motorhome full-time, we could go through justifications/rationalizations about how much less of an environmental footprint we had by not being in a house with higher heating/air conditioning, infrastructure, and yard requirements; and how much time we spent stationary, to offset the times we were actually driving it and burning diesel.

 

Now, we’re watching electrification take over the auto industry.  It could be mostly electrified in a decade.  The airline industry appears to be way behind the modernization curve, but I know there are companies working on short-flight electric solutions.  Hopefully the trucking and delivery industries will find short-haul solutions for vehicles that can return to home base for recharging every night, and keep working on long-haul solutions.

 

Meanwhile, we’re hoping for technological advances to trickle down to the RV Industry; some way to, at the least, provide a more carbon-neutral boost to the steady beat of that diesel engine when we actually are driving.  (I’m thinking maybe at a minimum, regenerative braking that stores energy until there is an opportunity to feed it back in the form of an acceleration boost; a little bit of hybrid technology.)  Electric cars tend to put a motor at each drive wheel.  Providing multiple sources of power, internal combustion or electric motors, to the drive wheels of a bus might be pretty expensive but maybe there could be a way to minimize the extra cost with just a single separate electric motor that operates right on the drive shaft.  That’s it.  Automatically clutch out of the loop until it’s time to engage and help with the drive train that’s already there.  Maybe I should invent that after-market technology.

 

 

Just thinking

 

We’re told cosmologists can see to the edge of the cosmic horizon 46 billion lightyears away, in every direction.  That is the farthest we can see, because looking out across the universe is looking back in time.  One might think that means that the universe is 46 billion years old, but no.  In round numbers, the universe is determined to be 14 billion years old.  My first thought would be that we couldn’t look back more than 14 billion years, past the big bang, but given the expansion of space since then, that stuff is now 46 billion lightyears away.

 

The universe is constantly expanding in every direction from where we are.  No matter where we were in the universe, if we could move ourselves about for observational purposes, the universe would still be expanding in every direction, and the cosmic horizon would still be 46 billion lightyears away in every direction.  There is no center point.  The big bang didn’t start at one point and expand from there, the entire universe expanded equally.  The universe is the same no matter where we observe it from.

 

I can say the words, and kind of understand them, but the grasp is tenuous.  I’m still working on it.