Archive for April, 2009

Oath

10 April 2009

For many people, maybe even most people, this question is meaningless or irrelevant: What is the United States of America?

But it’s a question I’ve been asking myself for years now without ever arriving at a satisfactory answer. What is it that causes that swelling of pride in your chest when you hear the star-spangled banner play or you read a news report of Americans doing something noble and good in the world? There are people out there who don’t feel anything like patriotism, and there are people out there who have never questioned and only accepted.

But for questioners such as myself: What is the United States of America? Is it the citizens? Is it the people running the show in DC? Is it the land?

I don’t think it’s any of those. But now I do think I’ve come up with my answer: it is the ideas laid out in the Declaration of Independence and the US Constitution.

And I’m starting to feel that we’ve gotten so far from the ideas contained in those two documents that it’s time for all of us to do something about it. I don’t want a revolution, but I’m beginning to believe that the government of the United States has been captured by the financial sector, and that the citizens of this country are seen as no more than slaves to the elite ruling class.

And for what it’s worth, a long time ago, I took this oath:

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I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; and that I will obey the orders of the President of the United States and the orders of the officers appointed over me, according to regulations and the Uniform Code of Military Justice. So help me God.

Hoeing

8 April 2009

Spent half an hour hoeing dandelions and quack grass in the garden. I’m cautiously optimistic about the grass situation for this year — right now, it doesn’t look so bad. But we’ll see how it looks in a month when everything is starting to grow like mad.

Also, last summer, most of my quack grass eradication efforts were spent with a shovel, digging up as much of the roots as I could find. That’s pretty hard work, not to mention that it disturbs the roots of the vegetables. This year, I want to see if using a hoe will work well enough.

Meanwhile, the tomato plants inside are getting bigger and bigger. Most of them need to move into larger pots. We’ve still got 4-5 weeks to go before we can put them in the garden, and we’re almost out of space in the house. We have to get some down in the greenhouse.

Retreat

5 April 2009

Well, it’s snowing again today, with several cold, cloudy days forecast, so I brought the two biggest tomatoes back upstairs from the greenhouse and squeezed them onto the seed-starting table. Maybe next week it will be something more like Spring….

March Electrical Usage

4 April 2009

We used only 349 KWH of electricity last month. I have no idea why it went down so much. Of course we’re trying to conserve, but we had the three two-bulb 48″ fluorescent fixtures on over the seedlings for a good part of the month, so I expected it to go up.

There were significantly fewer degree days last month than a year ago, so maybe how much we run the furnace is more important than everything else. I also suspect some sort of error on the part of our utility company, such as charging us too much for the previous month, for example.

Anyway, not knowing why we had an exceptionally low month doesn’t do me much good. It’s all guesswork. I think there may be some kind of meter that will tell me more detailed electricity usage on specific circuits — would be nice to have one of those.

One thing that stands out when looking at the electricity usage chart is that our highest electricity usage months are in the summer, which is a pretty clear indictment of central AC. We’ll have to watch it this summer. We also might consider replacing our current AC attic vent fan with a few of those solar-powered ones.

Gardening

4 April 2009

Today I transplanted eight pepper plants and the largest 4 tomatoes  into larger containers. DS6 helped me a bit, which was great. Half the reason we’re doing all this stuff is to show the boys how.

Fertilized everything with Miracle-Gro except the herbs.

Here’s a pic of all the seedlings remaining upstairs. On the right side you can see some of the tomatoes I just put into cut-off 42-oz oatmeal boxes. On the left you can see some in those newspaper pots, and in the foreground are the peppers in cardboard yogurt containers.

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I moved the two largest tomatoes down to the greenhouse. We’re going to have to remember they’re down there, to open the door on warm days, close it in the evening, and open the door to the basement on cold nights. We’ve got a low of 25°F forecast in a couple of days, which probably isn’t cold enough to freeze inside the greenhouse, but I’ll open the door to the basement just to be on the safe side.

Yesterday I got out in the garden and officially opened this year’s campaign against the quack grass. I just walked around and hoed up any weeds (with my new Rogue Hoe) that were showing their faces, mostly dandelions and grass. I think if we’re diligent this year and fight hard, we’ll have the corner turned on the quack grass. It’s awful stuff. We will never mulch with hay again.

We will also never put down any plastic or landscape cloth in the garden again. The quack grass grows right through it and once it does that it’s very difficult to either kill the grass or pull up the plastic.

I paced off the perimeter of the garden a few days ago and came up with 220′. I told CR that I would need about 25 fence posts, and he said he’d drop them off. He has some that are too short for regular fencing that should be perfect for my 28″ fencing.