No wonder one of its names is Life Plant. One of it's medicinal properties is supposedly to help remove kidney stones
Saturday, 30 November 2019
Life Plant - Bryophyllum Pinnatum
No wonder one of its names is Life Plant. One of it's medicinal properties is supposedly to help remove kidney stones
Thursday, 28 November 2019
Tuesday, 26 November 2019
Survived a 5 day holiday
I had no idea how the plants, fish, daphnia, etc would fair. I am happy to report that they all did really well. Some thoughts in no particular order...
- the fence has to be high enough to keep the dog from sensitive areas. That is going to take some doing.
- the timer for refilling the reservoir is essential. Not enough rain enters the reservoir naturally to maintain the water level.
- the timer for watering the plants doesn't look like a high priority now because of the rain, but it will be needed by January.
The daphnia's water was clear so I guess they ran out of food. I will have to maintain a twice weekly feeding of yeast, and investigate further what conditions will allow for it to become a self-sustaining colony.
Tuesday, 19 November 2019
Water the plants project
1. Arrangement of water lines...
2. I need...
- timer
- pump
- irrigation kit
3. If the water source is the fish pond, then I might need to protect the inlet from snails, fry, etc.
4.
Friday, 15 November 2019
Kidney stone plant
Bryophyllum pinnatum - it's supposed to be good for removing kidney stones.
It's small and in pretty bad shape. I could see only one fully intact leaf. The rest were broken or eaten off. Hope it survives
Wednesday, 13 November 2019
Sunday, 10 November 2019
Wednesday, 6 November 2019
Monday, 4 November 2019
Japanese Fisheries Collapsed Due to Pesticides, New Research Says
Jordan Davidson Nov. 01, 2019 03:13PM
Japanese Fisheries Collapsed Due to Pesticides, New Research Says
Spraying chemicals on rice crop in Japan. Stockbyte / Getty Images
Scientists announced today that pesticide use on rice fields led to the collapse of a nearby fishery in Lake Shinji, Japan, according to a new study published in the journal Science.
The long-term study seems to have borne out the prophecy of Rachel Carson's seminal 1962 book Silent Spring, in which the author describes the nefarious trickle down effects of chemical pesticides that could "still the leaping of fish." While it is impossible to say that the use of pesticides caused the collapse of the fishery, the correlation is extremely strong.
The researchers looked at the degradation of the food chain around rice paddies after the introduction of the pesticide neonicotinoids in 1993 in Japan. The study showed an immediate decline in insect and plankton populations in Lake Shinji after the pesticide was sprayed in nearby rice fields, as The Guardian reported.
The decline in insects and plankton then led to the collapse of eel and smelt populations, which rely on the tiny insects for food. The scientists looked at other possible causes for the collapse of the smelt and eel fisheries, but those were all ruled out. The scientists say there is "compelling evidence" that neonicotinoids are the culprit, as The Guardian reported.
The pesticide has previously been linked to declines in pollinator populations. Researchers have found that it lowers the sperm count of bees and shortens their lifespan, as EcoWatch reported. Its role in colony collapse disorder and in declining butterfly populations caused the European Union to ban the world's most popular insecticide for all outdoor use in 2018, as Reuters reported.
Previous studies have also linked ripple effects of the pesticide's application to cause collapses of mayflies, dragonflies and snails. A Dutch study found that bird populations declined where the insecticide was sprayed. In that case, the absence of swallows, starlings and tree sparrows does not mean they were dying, but possibly moved to riper feeding grounds.
By contrast, the study is the first time a potential link has been shown between the insecticide and its effect on other animals, including vertebrates, according to a press release from the American Association for The Advancement of Science.
The year that the insecticide was first applied, 1993, coincided with an 83 percent decrease in the average amount of springtime plankton. A year later, the smelt harvest collapsed from 240 tons per year to just 22 tons in a single year, according to the study. Additionally, the midge, Chironomus plumosus, which smelt also feed on, was one of the worst affected bugs. It vanished completely from all 39 locations sampled in 2016, despite being abundant in 1982.
The researchers noted that Rachel Carson's book was prophetic. In their paper, The Guardian reported, the Japanese researchers said how "she wrote: 'These sprays, dusts and aerosols are now applied almost universally to farms, gardens, forests and homes – nonselective chemicals that have the power to kill every insect, the 'good' and the 'bad', to still the song of birds and the leaping of fish in the streams.' The ecological and economic impact of neonicotinoids on the inland waters of Japan confirms Carson's prophecy."
"This disruption likely also occurs elsewhere, as neonicotinoids are currently the most widely used class of insecticides globally," worth more than $3 billion per year, they said, as The Guardian reported.
The German company Bayer is the world's largest producer of neonicotinoids.
"The annihilation of humble flies and the knock on effects on fish serve as further testament to the dreadful folly of neonicotinoids," said Matt Shardlow, from the charity Buglife, to The Guardian. "Let's hope this is a wake-up call for Asian countries and they move to quickly ban the chemicals from paddyfields."
Sunday, 3 November 2019
Saturday, 2 November 2019
Starry Starry Rice
Ingredients: brown rice, garlic, onion, butterfly pea water, and its flowers for decoration :) The food critics (my family) gave me 5 stars for the decoration, and suggested adding a little salt next time.
Today's Harvest - Aloe
I use the aloe when I have small cuts. It really works. Also our former parish priest Father Peter insisted that his full head of hair was the result of applying aloe vera to his scalp everyday.
There is no shortage of videos on the benefits of aloe vera. This is one of the better ones.
More worms in compost without garlic, ginger, onions and citrus
So for the past 2 months all garlic, ginger, onion and citrus scrapes went directly into the base of our potted plants instead of the compost.
Today I moved the compost heaps and I swear it worked.
Friday, 1 November 2019
Kangkung is King
I can't.
Seriously, this plant should be crowned the King of Veggies... it is indestructible! I chopped off the top multiple times since starting it from seed. Each time it has grown back. Not as big as the start but still edible and tasty. I'm curious to know how many times I can keep doing this.
These were harvested just a couple of days back and I can already see tiny new leaves popping up.
And one of the kangkungs I stopped to replace with spring onions... have a look at the roots...