The Man Out of Time

Some stories refuse to die because they might just be true.
Others refuse to die because they’re too beautiful to let go.
Javier Pereira belongs somewhere between those worlds.
In 1956, a man walked into Cornell Medical Center in New York City and broke every assumption doctors had about human aging.
He stood just 4 feet 4 inches tall.
He weighed 77 pounds.
He had no teeth left.
And he claimed—calmly, matter-of-factly—that he had been alive since 1789.
Javier Pereira was an indigenous Zenú man from Colombia.
When the world discovered him in the 1950s, he wasn’t just old.
He was impossibly old.
He said he’d outlived five wives.
He’d buried all his children, all his grandchildren, and according to some accounts, even great-grandchildren who had died decades earlier.
The last known descendant in his family line reportedly died in 1941—at age 85.
Javier stood alone, the final ember of a bloodline that had burned through two centuries.
If his claims were true, he’d been born when George Washington became America’s first president.
He would have lived through Napoleon’s rise and fall, two world wars, the invention of the airplane, the atomic bomb, and the moon landing.
He would have been older than every country in the Western Hemisphere except the United States.
Could any of it be real?
🔬 What Doctors Found
In 1956, Ripley’s Believe It or Not brought Pereira to New York.
The world wanted proof.
At Cornell Medical Center, physicians conducted extensive examinations.
The results unsettled them.
His hair remained brown, not white.
His arteries showed remarkable elasticity—no significant hardening, no severe calcification.
His reflexes were sharp.
He climbed stairs unaided.
He walked without assistance.
He moved, reacted, and functioned in ways that defied his claimed age.
One doctor allegedly remarked—though never in official published records—that Pereira appeared to be “well over 150 years old” based purely on physical markers.
Not 80. Not 100. But something beyond the known scale of human aging.
No one could verify he was 200.
But no one could explain what they were seeing, either.
😄 The Punch That Stunned the Room
At a press conference in the Hotel Biltmore, reporters gathered expecting a frail relic.
What they got was a revelation.
Pereira, laughing with mischievous energy, suddenly threw playful punches at four people in the room—journalists, doctors, onlookers.
The room froze.
Then erupted.
This wasn’t a man barely clinging to life.
This was someone still fully alive.
A reporter asked the question everyone wanted answered:
“What is your secret?”
Pereira smiled.
“I chew cacao, drink coffee, and avoid worries.”
No exotic herbs. No mystical rituals. No fountain of youth.
Just simplicity. Just lightness.
Just a life lived without the weight of anxiety.
📜 Memories That Shouldn’t Exist
Pereira didn’t just claim age.
He claimed memory.
He spoke of the Siege of Cartagena in 1815, a brutal Spanish reconquest that reshaped Latin American history.
He described famines, wars, and upheavals that belonged to textbooks, not living testimony.
He recalled a Colombia that had vanished—colonial towns, indigenous traditions erased by modernization, landscapes transformed beyond recognition.
Were his memories perfect? Likely not.
Human memory distorts, blends, reshapes across decades.
But the specificity of his accounts—the details no one his apparent physical age should possess—left scholars and journalists unsettled.
How could someone remember what they’d never lived?
🇨🇴 A Nation Remembers
When Javier Pereira died in 1989, Colombia didn’t dismiss him.
They didn’t call him a liar or a curiosity.
Instead, the nation issued a commemorative postal stamp in his honor.
Not to validate his age.
But to preserve a story that had become part of Colombia’s soul.
Because sometimes, legends matter more than facts.
🧬 What Science Says
Let’s be clear:
No human has ever been verified to live beyond 122 years.
The oldest confirmed person in history was Jeanne Calment of France, who died in 1997 at 122 years, 164 days.
Pereira had no birth certificate.
No baptismal records.
No documentation that could withstand rigorous verification.
Modern gerontologists and demographers are unanimous: his claim of 167-200 years is biologically implausible given current understanding of cellular aging, telomere degradation, and metabolic limits.
And yet.
The doctors who examined him found something they couldn’t categorize.
The people who met him witnessed vitality that defied explanation.
The memories he carried seemed to reach back further than one lifetime should allow.
🌌 Why Javier Pereira Still Matters
Was he truly 200 years old?
Almost certainly not.
But here’s what matters:
Javier Pereira challenged certainty.
He reminded us that the world still holds mysteries science hasn’t fully mapped.
He lived simply, laughed easily, and carried himself with a lightness that modern life has forgotten.
He walked between worlds—indigenous tradition and modern spectacle, folklore and medical examination, memory and myth.
And in doing so, he left behind something more valuable than proof:
A reminder that not every truth lives in documents.
Some truths live in witness.
In wonder.
In the quiet defiance of a small man who climbed stairs unaided at an age when most humans are dust.
Javier Pereira may not have lived 200 years.
But the idea of him—the possibility he represented—will live far longer than any of us.
And maybe that’s the real secret to immortality.

Germinating Seeds

Germinating Seeds

A glass of water on a windowsill does what most beginners think requires a greenhouse, a heat mat, and a seed-starting kit.
It sprouts fruit seeds where you can watch every root emerge in real time.
– Avocado — suspend the pit with toothpicks, flat end down, roots crack through the base in two to six weeks
– Lemon — peel the seed coat for faster germination, roots in one to two weeks
– Pomegranate — fresh seeds from the fruit germinate in shallow water within two weeks
– Cherry — needs 60 days in the fridge first, then roots emerge in water fast
– Fig — stem cuttings root more reliably than seeds, place a six-inch cutting in a tall glass
Apple, peach, plum, grape, and hazel all germinate the same way — extract the seed, cold-stratify in the fridge, then transfer to water.
The windowsill is the nursery. The glass is the greenhouse.

Harvesting Herbs For Growth

Harvesting Herbs For Growth

You grew the herbs. They looked perfect. You cut what you needed for dinner and the plant stopped growing back.
You didn’t underwater it. You cut it in the wrong place.
Basil is where most people learn this the hard way. The plant wants to grow one tall stalk and flower. When you pinch the tip just above a leaf pair, it splits into two stems. Pinch those two and you get four. Within a month of regular pinching, one leggy seedling becomes a dense bush producing far more leaves than it started with.
Pull individual leaves from the bottom instead, and the plant races upward, flowers early, goes bitter, and finishes weeks ahead of schedule.
The same idea — cut with the plant’s growth pattern, not against it — applies to almost everything in the herb pot.
🌿 Quick rules by herb:
– Basil — pinch stem tips above a leaf pair, starting when the plant is six inches tall. The more you pinch, the bushier it gets
– Cilantro — cut whole outer stems at ground level, leave the center rosette intact. It bolts on a heat timer no pruning can override, so sow a fresh round every few weeks
– Rosemary and thyme — cut only into green growth where leaves are visible below the cut. Cutting into bare brown wood on rosemary removes that branch for good
– Mint — the opposite of everything above. Cut it hard and often. Aggressive harvesting keeps it compact and flavorful. Neglected mint gets leggy and loses its punch
– Parsley — same approach as cilantro but on a longer timeline. Cut outer stems at the base, leave the inner crown growing, and it produces well into fall
The herb didn’t fail. The cut was in the wrong place

Elderberries vs Pokeweed

Elderberries vs Pokeweed

Elderberry picking goes wrong when the bag comes home full of pokeweed instead.
The berries look similar at a glance. The stems give it away before the berries ever could.
– Elderberry — tiny, BB-sized, in broad flat clusters that fan out like an umbrella. Thin woody stems with visible bark
– Pokeweed — pea-sized, hanging in long drooping lines like a grape cluster. Thick fleshy stems stained magenta-red with no bark at all
– Elderberry leaves are compound with multiple leaflets branching opposite each other — pokeweed leaves are large, simple, and alternate along the stem
If the berries hang in a long line off a thick red stem, that’s pokeweed. Don’t eat it — the plant is not edible at any stage.
Check the stems first. The berries can fool you. The stems can’t.

Perennial Vegetables

Perennial Vegetables

Plant once. Harvest for a decade.
These nine perennial vegetables skip the annual cycle of buying transplants, prepping beds, and starting over.
Asparagus produces for 20+ years from a single crown. Rhubarb delivers 15+ years of stalks. Walking onions replant themselves when their topsets bend over and root into the ground.
Jerusalem artichoke yields around 10 lbs per plant with almost no maintenance. Sorrel and lovage come back each spring. Good King Henry works as a spinach substitute. Sea kale produces blanched shoots for a decade.
Horseradish is the one to contain — it spreads aggressively. Give it a buried barrier or its own bed.
The two-year wait for most of these is the price of not buying starts again.

Tomato Pruning

Tomato Pruning

You pruned the suckers off your Roma and wondered why it produced less fruit. You didn’t prune your Brandywine and it became a tangled mess that rotted from the inside.

Same plant family. Opposite pruning rules. The tag on the transplant tells you which.

The two types that matter most:

Determinate tomatoes (Roma, Celebrity, Rutgers) grow to a set height, produce most of their fruit in a concentrated window, and stop. Every sucker on a determinate becomes a fruit-bearing branch. Removing suckers removes fruit. Don’t prune them — just take off the lowest leaves where they touch the soil to reduce splash-borne fungal contact. Cage them. Let them bush out.

Indeterminate tomatoes (Brandywine, Cherokee Purple, Sungold, most cherry types) grow and produce continuously until frost. Left unpruned, each sucker becomes a full secondary stem that produces its own suckers — and the interior becomes dense, shaded, and damp. Prune the suckers. Train to one or two main stems on a tall stake or string. Pinch new suckers when they’re small. Check twice a week in warm weather — they appear fast.

The quick guide:

– Determinate (bush) — don’t remove suckers. Remove only the lowest leaves. Cage it. Harvest comes in a concentrated flush — good for canning and preserving

– Indeterminate (vining) — remove suckers regularly. Stake or string trellis. One or two leaders. Harvest is continuous small batches through the season — good for fresh eating

– Semi-determinate (Better Bush, Mountain Magic) — remove suckers below the first flower cluster, leave everything above. Short stake or sturdy cage

– Dwarf (Tiny Tim, Micro Tom) — minimal pruning. Remove lower leaves for airflow. Small stake if it leans. Container-friendly
The Roma you pruned like a Brandywine lost fruit it was never going to replace. The Brandywine you didn’t prune needed the airflow you never gave it.

Read the tag. Match the type.

My Cousin Vinny

My Cousin Vinny

It was 1992, and audiences were howling with laughter.
On screen, Joe Pesci stumbled through an Alabama courtroom as Vinny Gambini—a Brooklyn personal injury lawyer who’d failed the bar exam six times, never tried a criminal case, and showed up wearing a maroon velvet suit that made the judge’s face turn purple.
It was a comedy. A farce. Entertainment.
Nobody expected law schools to start teaching from it.
But that’s exactly what happened.
Within a few years of My Cousin Vinny’s release, something strange started appearing in law school syllabi across America: a comedy film listed alongside Supreme Court cases and legal textbooks.
Criminal procedure professors assigned it. Evidence courses screened it. Trial advocacy instructors made it required viewing.
Because buried inside this slapstick comedy about an incompetent lawyer was something almost impossible to find in Hollywood: perfect legal procedure.
The discovery happened gradually. A defense attorney watched it on cable and paused mid-scene. “Wait—that cross-examination is actually correct.” An evidence professor noticed the impeachment technique was textbook-accurate. Trial lawyers realized the expert witness sequence was flawless.
By the late 1990s, legal scholars were writing academic papers about it. The American Bar Association was recommending it. Judge Joseph Bellacosa of the New York Court of Appeals called it “particularly rich in its use of the Constitutions, rules of evidence, civil and criminal procedure.”
A Joe Pesci comedy had become the gold standard for courtroom accuracy.
Here’s why that’s remarkable:
Most legal dramas sacrifice accuracy for drama. A Few Good Men features a climactic speech that would get you disbarred. The Verdict has procedures that make real lawyers cringe. Even prestige courtroom films choose compelling storytelling over legal reality.
My Cousin Vinny did both.
The plot seems simple: two college kids are wrongly accused of murder in rural Alabama. Vinny Gambini—their cousin who just passed the bar after six attempts and has never set foot in a courtroom—shows up to defend them.
He’s a disaster. He insults the judge. He doesn’t know basic procedure. He wears ridiculous outfits. Every scene suggests his clients are doomed.
Then the trial actually starts, and something shifts.
The prosecution presents two eyewitnesses who claim they saw the defendants’ car fleeing the murder scene at high speed. In most movies, the hero lawyer would give a passionate speech about reasonable doubt.
Vinny does what real lawyers do: he destroys their testimony using physical evidence and logic.
The first witness claims he saw the car while cooking breakfast. Seems solid—until Vinny cross-examines him about the grits. How long were they cooking? What type? Instant or regular?
Through relentless, methodical questioning, Vinny establishes that regular grits take twenty minutes to cook properly. The witness’s timeline is impossible. He couldn’t have seen what he claimed.
The courtroom erupts when Vinny asks: “Were these magic grits? Did you buy them from the same guy who sold Jack his beanstalk beans?”
It’s hilarious. It’s also perfect impeachment technique—using specific details to expose impossible testimony.
The second witness is an elderly woman who claims she saw the car clearly. Vinny doesn’t call her a liar. Instead, he establishes through gentle questioning that she needs thick glasses to see distances, wears them inconsistently, and couldn’t possibly have identified a speeding car from her window at that distance.
He uses her own testimony to destroy her credibility. No drama. No shouting. Just methodical cross-examination.
Then comes the sequence that law professors obsess over.
Vinny calls his girlfriend, Mona Lisa Vito, as an expert witness on automobiles. The prosecutor immediately objects—she’s not qualified.
The judge demands her credentials.
What follows is two minutes of textbook-perfect expert witness qualification. Mona Lisa lists her father’s career as a mechanic, her childhood working in his shop, her training, her certifications, her specific expertise in American automotive engineering from 1963 to 1972.
It’s exactly how expert witnesses establish credibility in real trials.
Then Vinny examines her about the tire marks at the crime scene. He asks open-ended questions. He lets her explain the technical details. He builds logically to the conclusion: the tire marks physically could not have come from his cousin’s car—the vehicle lacked the mechanical specifications to make those marks.
When the prosecutor tries to cross-examine her, he fails spectacularly. She knows more about cars than anyone in that courtroom, and it shows.
Legal experts point to this scene as a masterclass in expert witness examination. The qualification. The direct examination. The failed cross-examination. All of it tracks exactly how real trials work.
Even the comedy comes from accurate legal procedure. Judge Haller holds Vinny in contempt repeatedly—for inappropriate clothing, for addressing the judge incorrectly, for procedural violations. This isn’t exaggerated. Real judges enforce these standards exactly this way.
The voir dire sequence where Vinny questions potential jurors? Accurate. The discovery violations? Correct. The objections and their legal basis? Precise.
Screenwriter Dale Launer wasn’t a lawyer, but he spent months researching. He interviewed defense attorneys, studied trial transcripts, consulted legal experts. He wanted the legal framework to be bulletproof so the comedy could work.
He succeeded beyond imagination.
Marisa Tomei won an Oscar for her performance. But the film’s legacy extends far beyond entertainment.
Today, it’s cited in legal journals and continuing legal education seminars. Harvard Law School has screened it. Trial advocacy courses use clips to demonstrate proper technique. The National Institute for Trial Advocacy references it in training materials.
A 2008 survey of lawyers ranked it the seventh-best legal film ever made for accuracy—ahead of prestige dramas and documentaries.
Because My Cousin Vinny understood something most legal films miss: real trials aren’t won by dramatic speeches. They’re won by mastering procedure, understanding evidence, and methodically building a case.
Vinny Gambini looks like a buffoon in his leather jacket and attitude. But watch carefully, and you see him doing everything right: he studies the evidence, he identifies inconsistencies, he prepares his witnesses, he follows proper examination technique.
The joke isn’t that he’s incompetent. The joke is that everyone—including the audience—assumes he’s incompetent because he doesn’t look like their idea of a lawyer.
Thirty years later, law students still watch Vinny stumble through that Alabama courtroom, laughing at his mistakes—until they realize he’s been building an airtight defense the entire time using flawless legal strategy.
It’s a comedy about an underestimated lawyer who wins through actual competence.
And accidentally, it became the most legally accurate courtroom film Hollywood ever made.

Official Release Notice of ‘Cultivating Life: Growing Food Sustainably’

OK, drum roll please! I finally felt I had enough good material in a logical and useful sequence to release version 1 of ’Cultivating Life: Growing Food Sustainably’

The whole sits at over 1,800 pages so is reasonably comprehensive. The first section of it, about 80 pages, is on preparedness planning and actions to take in a SHTF situation. It is so important I hold the view that everyone should own it and that money should not be a barrier to doing so. So I am releasing it for $1. That’s right, a single solitary dollar.

And not just for you. For you, your family, friends, co-workers, neighbours, in fact, anyone with whom you wish to share the link.

Why? Because in a worst case scenario, the more of us who have predicted the possibility and prepared for it, the better the survival potential of all of us.

So head on over to seedtotable.com.au, pay a dollar and set aside some time to read it over a cuppa.

And yes, I would love to hear your feedback. Good, bad, indifferent, suggestions, all welcome.

Cheers!