Saturday, March 16, 2013

                                         Beeeeeeeeeeees!

Hey folks sorry for the long wait for all my original followers. Well the title says it all, I'm starting a 4 hive bee sanctuary. This Spring most of my posts will probably involve the bees. I'm putting up a Kickstarter for the sanctuary, the name is (ooo-ahhh)Laddie Long Arm's Bee Sanctuary. More updates coming soon. 

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

flintknapping

2 days ago I went to the archeology day event in a small historical town called Norskedalen and I learned about flintknapping a way to turn stone into tool by chipping small pieces of stone off (called flakes) so that it is serrated. Tools such as arrowheads and knives are made this way. Flintknapping is said to be over a million years old starting with early hominids such as homo erectus.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Monday, April 12, 2010

spring and death

Sorry I haven’t updated my blog in awhile, I have been outside farming. Today I’m going to talk about spring and its glory: COMPOSTING ANIMALS!!! If you city folk ever find a dead robin on the sidewalk, which I have seen many times, go to the sheriffs horse stables, get a bucket of horse poop, put the robin in your back yard and pour the horsecrap on top of it. In 2 weeks, look underneath the poop and you will find clean bones and nothing else.
 The connection between composting dead animals and springtime is that its really hard to compost in the winter because the animals are frozen, and most animals die in the wintertime, in summer, it is really smelly and gross and fall is acceptable because it is just like spring though there aren’t a plethora of dead animals like there would be in the spring… Most farmers have to deal with dead animals, and they have to spend their money on a big truck that comes by and scoops up dead animals it can be very expensive. A good solution to this issue is composting. In Sweden they are composting humans instead of cremation because it is more ecologically sound.
 All animals die, us included, good and humane farmers have to deal with this just as bad and abusive ones do, just maybe not on such a grand scale.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

The MOSES convention.


Hello I'm sorry I haven't updated my blog in a long time. Today I'm going to talk about my visit to the MOSES conference. For those of you who don't know what I'm talking about MOSES stands for Midwest Organic & Sustainable Education Service.  The workshop I went to was about sustainable organic apple farming. The first part was about organically killing or getting rid of pests the second part was about pruning. If you have a lot of a lot of apple trees the lecturer suggested you use "CHAINSAWS!" here is a drawing of a picture from his instructional picture slideshow: 

Monday, February 22, 2010

Winona's story.

Wild rice was what brought Winona La Duke into activism, it all began when genetic patenting was created and a man wanted to patent a particular gene in wild rice for calorie reduction and she fought this very hard, later she went and fought coal mines and patenting of maize therefore going further into activism then one day her father said "you cant free sacred crops without ever growing maize." so she went back to her reservation (white earth) and started the land recovery project. I talked to her after her speech and she told me when she was running for vice president ten years ago her son who then was a baby kept on barfing on her shirt and having to nurse. It was fun at the Maple Lag resort (where the conference was held) I played with Winona's nephew, there was great food, it was a beautiful place and the people were wonderful two of them were Bill Gartner who is a funny scientist and Joy a beekeeper/wine maker.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

White earth land recovery project /native harvest indigenous farming conference.

Today I’m going to the white earth reservations indigenous farming conference in Callaway, Minnesota this is in the northwest section of the state.
White earth is an Ojibwa reservation.
I am going because I want to learn about indigenous agriculture because I am interested in rare seeds and ancient forms of agriculture and nutrition.
I will give a full report when I am back.