Archive for the ‘Climate Change’ Category

Winter

4 December 2009

Winter arrived yesterday with 2 or 3 inches of snow and horrible driving conditions on the way home from work, followed by colder temps and wind today. It had to happen sometime.

And so we turned on the furnace today. For now, we just put a floor under the temp by setting it at 60°F — if we want to be warmer than that, we have to use the woodstove. I tend to become more sensitive to the cold as the Winter goes on, so we’ll probably gradually turn up the thermostat as we get into late January and February.

We could have gone longer without turning on the furnace…but we did need to know if it worked or not before it got really cold (seems like in the last 5 years the furnace hasn’t worked as often as it has the first time we’ve turned it on for the season), and I like the idea of putting a floor under the indoor temperature in case we forget to stoke the stove before bed or before going out.

I noticed that it was about 48°F in the basement this morning.

First attempt at Biochar

1 December 2009

I bought new 10-gallon and 30-gallon galvanized metal trash cans.

I put a concrete block in the bottom of the big one to raise the smaller one about 4″. I drilled 8 1/2″ holes around the bottom of the large one.

I put paper in the bottom, then filled the gap between the two cans with small sticks. The gap was only about 2″ all the way around, so not much room for the wood. I jammed in as much as I could, then put a couple of pieces of oak on the top. Next time, I think I should raise the small one another 6″ or so — that would give me more room to put larger pieces of wood underneath it, and also, since the sides of both slope outward as they come up, it would increase the size of the gap between them and make it easier to pack with wood. I’d like to get some larger pieces of oak in the bottom.

I packed the little one with small-diameter wood, mostly elm, put the top on it, and lit the paper through the holes in the bottom of the large can around 11am. I didn’t make any holes in the smaller can, trusting that gases would escape around the lid without building up enough pressure to cause an explosion.

It took a while to get burning, as the wood was right off our brush pile and not dry. I added a couple double handfuls of charcoal briquettes to the fire after maybe half an hour (of dubious merit with regards to carbon footprint, I know, but I wanted it to work). A lot of the wood had burned up after about 45 minutes, and at that point I added more 1/2″ to 1″ pieces. I put the top on it after about an hour.

I doubted the inner can got hot enough to make any char. I think raising the inner barrel and putting some oak underneath it would help quite a bit, and I’m not giving up on the system.

Four hours later, I took out the inner can and, sure enough, the wood was blackened, and some of it seemed to have become charcoal, but most not. I had put some old tomato vines on the top of the wood, and they seemed to be completely carbonized. Just not enough heat for the wood.

Later, I tried again, using the same wood in the inner can but adding more tomato vines. I raised the inner can another 5 inches with a concrete block, and made the fire with smallish pieces of oak. It got very hot, and I put the top on it after maybe 30 minutes because the steel of the outer can was glowing red and I didn’t want to burn a hole in it. There were some coals in the bottom, so it should have stayed hot for quite a while after I put the top on. I haven’t looked at the final result yet, but I’m much more optimistic this time.

Update: The second burn didn’t fully achieve the needed combination of temperature and time to turn the wood to charcoal. Only about half of it was converted to char.

Heating +

1 December 2009

STILL haven’t turned on the furnace — just amazing. It’s not only because we’re putting up with a chillier house or that we’re being especially diligent, it’s also that the weather has been exceptionally mild. I’m still harvesting collards and kale from the garden, without doing anything to protect them. Kinda weird, but hard to complain….

I took a vacation day today since it was supposed to be a nice day and I’d have a chance to work outside. So I did the biochar thing (see above) and also finished connecting the two West beds into one nice big garden space by digging up sod. Corn and tomatoes will go there next year.

Also put 10 gallons of coffee grounds on top of part of the freshly-dug sod there, then a wheelbarrow of leaf compost on top of that. That’s a good way to add coffee grounds without having to dig a trench (which is hard to do where I’ve just turned over the sod). Too bad I’m almost out of leaf compost and the county composting site is closed until April. Maybe in the Spring I’ll hire someone with a dump truck to get the compost for me — sure would save a lot of time and effort.

Turning over sod for 2 or 3 hours is hard work, and I’m fantasizing about a rototiller. I’ll need something if we get much more land under cultivation. It’s hard for me to imagine maintaining a garden even one acre in size without power tools.

Also put 10 gallons of stabilized gasoline into storage today — NOT in the house or garage. I plan to change it once a year.

More Gardening

22 November 2009

The warm November weather continues, with the high today around 60°F. I dug up another couple of rows of sod in the West beds, and am about to connect two of them. Will plant tomatoes and corn there next year, so I want to make the soil as rich as possible. I’ll do some sheet composting with coffee grounds and leaf compost and straw until it snows. Since corn and tomatoes go in pretty late, a lot of decomposition will happen in the Spring after it warms up but before planting. As I’ve mentioned before, the soil on the slope up to the house gets pretty shallow and gravelly, so it needs some help.

Dug another 5 gallons of coffee grounds into the West bed just outside the back door, so that one is done. Also moved a couple of wheelbarrows of leaf compost to the West beds and one wheelbarrow to the garden.

We still haven’t turned on the furnace and have been using the woodstove every day, so we’re making lots of wood ashes that I’m dumping on the garden beds. I’m making charcoal whenever I can, because of its beneficial effects on garden soil. I do that by shutting down the stove as much as possible and letting it go out before all the wood burns completely. It’s not always convenient to do that, but I do it when I can. I started using the old painted-on-the-inside cast iron dutch oven to carry the ashes outside, so I can do it even if there are still some live coals, which I then bury in the soil to extinguish them and make charcoal.

Reloaded the back porch with firewood. Broke up a 5-gallon bucket full of apple sticks for kindling.

Doomer Blogs

28 September 2009

I keep coming back to this same idea, sometimes it takes me weeks or months, but I always come back to it: the time spent reading about how financial/climate/peak oil doom is right around the corner is time wasted. What possible good can it do you? You’re not going to pick up on some late-breaking news story that will help you survive the apocalypse. Last-minute prep is not really possible except in a very very limited sense. You have to be living a local, sustainable lifestyle that won’t notice when the outside world goes to hell. You have to be ready all the time, because when and if a fast crash goes down, no more preparation will be possible.

I love reading blogs, but doomer blogs are a waste of time. And there are dozens of blogs that talk about people’s struggles to attain the kind of lifestyle I’m working to attain, blogs that can inspire and teach me.

And yet…I keep drifting back to the doom and gloom. Yes, there’s a part of me that wants to be told how bad it’s getting and how awful it’s going to be. And there’s a part of me that wants society to fail, that wants the world to return to a simpler, more honest place. I want all the investment bankers and other cheaters and smart guys to fail miserably. I want farming to be a high-status occupation. I want the world to be set right, and I think the way it is now is wrong in thousands of different ways.

Yes, I think I want all that, even though, truth be told, the chances of me successfully shepherding my family through that kind of breakdown are slight.

I’m hoping that writing this out and acknowledging that part of me wants the world to change in a dramatic way will help me to focus my energy, work on what is possible, and stop wasting time on doomer blogs. We’ll see.