Okay, late to bandwagon but this collective believes in gardening. Sure, it may not replace the global food distribution network, but everything that we grow doesn’t need to be transported, contributes to local food security and means we can feed our friends and neighbors. A🧵
First I love this book. When I was 15 years younger I had friends who lived at the food not lawns house in our town. They had torn the entire lawn out of their rental and raised piles of food. This is the only garden book that also has chapters on how to start pirate radio
These guys form the back bone of the garden they eat bugs and make lots of high nitrogen poop
All of that high nitrogen chicken straw gets mixed with free wood chips from chip drop and together turn into really fantastic hot compost that goes on all of the beds
One of our collective used to be a farmer so our garden on purpose does not resemble a farm at all. Things get tucked in wherever they fit and we use a cover crop of arugula, spinach, mustard greens and radishes to help keep the soil covered and prevent weeds.
Most of the garden beds look something like this: old mustards going to seed tiny cabbages that have just been planted, lettuces, and itsy-bitsy tiny carrots coming up. I think there might be some volunteer potatoes from last year in this garden bed?
This bed just got more seeds tossed into it and a trellis needs to be built for the peas soon but the garlic won’t be ready for another couple of months. Eventually some beans will go in here but they are growing in a seed starting tray for later
But what really makes me happy is not the sheer number of raised beds that we plant but the part of it that has been turned into a Pirma culture garden. While it gets sweetie it requires very little maintenance besides mulching and can really hold a lot in a small space.
I highly recommend anyone new to gardening really try a perennial bed. Strawberries, rhubarb, medicinal herbs, raspberries, fruit bushes, artichokes, asparagus all come back year after year and require almost no maintenance and can be beautiful to look at with almost no work.
Well, that was supposed to say “weedy”. But whatever.
At some point I may update with tomatoes and such but I actually need to plant them and keep them from dying in the tiny pots that I seated them in back in February. Anyway I love to garden share and I highly encourage people to go and play in the dirt.
Oh! I am incredibly excited about this. This experiment is trying to take a tiny shady patch and grow regional edible shade forest plants so there is Ladyfern, waterleaf, oxalis, And wild Ginger
Final note when we do weed we try to help finish the cycle out by tossing weeds and bugs back into the chicken run. The chickens get to eat lots of plants and bugs and everything starts over again.
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The civil liberties defense center has a bunch of information on grand juries. To start with here is an overview of what a grand jury is and how they work. cldc.org/grand-juries/
Here is one story of how grand jury resistance works and why.
“In a strange twist of juridical logic reserved for grand jury investigations, Koch was imprisoned for the very same reason he was freed nearly eight months later: his silence.”
May Day is Saturday, & we’re terribly excited. It’s been 2 years since we had one. A bunch of folks might not know about May Day. So welcome: May Day is one of the fun holidays. (A thread)
May Day is, legit, about as close to an Anarchist festival day as you get. It’s got all the holiday traditions: you spend time with distant relatives, you sing the traditional songs, chant the chants. Someone might ceremonially break something.
May Day (this version of it) started in Chicago in 1886. It is not an exaggeration to say that nearly every other country in the damn world celebrates it. The US doesn’t. Because the United States might be more than a little scared of what May Day implies. officeholidays.com/byday/labour-d…
Lots of grocery stores all over the country lost power in the last few days, so literal tons of perfectly usable food are getting thrown in dumpsters and compactors.
Be wary of anything that’s not cold, or inflated packages. If you wouldn’t eat it, don’t donate it.
Dumpster diving is illegal-ish in lots of places. Which is, of course, very dumb, since at worst you’re removing garbage for free.
Food not Bombs would never have existed without dumpstering. And there’s a pandemic and a societal collapse on. People might be hungry.
On the other hand, if you’re not already an anticapitalist, and want to get radicalized real quick: pay attention to the steps which corporations take to prevent people from picking through their literal garbage.
Anyway, gonna go drink some fancy coffee drink i found somewhere.
Some of y’all weren’t around for the Green Scare, or the raids before the RNC protests in 2008. This is what it looks like: a Trump-appointee just listed “eat the rich” memes in arrest documents for a leftist vet, to paint him as a leftist terrorist. 1/ reason.com/2021/02/16/fbi…
Even the FBI probably doesn’t think that posting memes, or calling for community self-defense, or posting info on protest medicine, makes you a terrorist. The point is to make everyone a little more paranoid about even being willing to say those things in the open. 2/
(Before anyone points it out: yes, this account has done all of the above. Also don’t eat rich people, they’re full of Goop™️ products and apathy. That shit’s bad for you.) 3/
Hey portland: How many times have you seen a plow since the snow started? how many of those plows were actually plowing?
have a theory, trying to see something.
seen 2 so far. neither plowing.
To clarify:
"Plowing" means the edge of the plow is in contact w/the road along most its length, continuously moving snow.
We clarify, because most PDX snow plows seem to feel that the above practice is too violent, and instead prefer to delicately hover 10" above the snow.