Wind Turbine Construction

Wind Turbine Construction

Ever seen the insane effort it takes to “build green”? Just watch how they pour a SINGLE wind turbine foundation: 600–1,000 TONS of concrete, massive excavation, endless rebar, and heavy machinery tearing up the land for days.
And that’s only the base. The blades? Made with balsa wood stripped from the Amazon rainforest, straight-up deforestation in the name of “saving the planet”.
Then add: • Concrete • Carbon fiber • Steel • Cast iron • Copper • Aluminum • Plus boron, chromium, cobalt, manganese, molybdenum, nickel & rare earth elements All mined, refined, and shipped with massive energy & pollution.
These things last 25 years max. By 2050 the world will be drowning in 43 million tons of worn-out blades, that’s the weight of 215,000 locomotives headed for landfills (most can’t even be recycled). Oh, and here’s the rest of the ridiculous list:
– They slaughter hundreds of thousands of birds & bats every year
– They only spin when the wind feels like it (so we still need gas/coal plants on standby)
– They chew up huge chunks of land and ruin views for miles
– They’re noisy, expensive to maintain, and require giant subsidies to even exist
This is “green” energy? We’re destroying rainforests, mining toxic rare earths, pouring planet-warming concrete, and creating mountains of non-recyclable waste… to fight climate change?
It’s completely ridiculous. A multi-trillion-dollar environmental own-goal sold as virtue.

Garden Bed Heights

Garden Bed Heights

The most common raised bed mistake happens before a single seed goes in. You pick the height that’s cheapest, not the height that matches the body using it every day for the next ten years.

A 30 cm bed — the default kit at every hardware store — requires a full forward bend to reach the soil. That’s the posture that ends most gardening sessions after twenty minutes.

An 45 cm bed cuts the bending in half. Most gardeners can work for an hour comfortably. Enough depth for carrots, peppers, and most root crops.

A 60 cm bed lets you sit on a stool beside it and work at table height. No crop is limited by depth.

A 90 cm bed changes everything:

– Zero bending. Standing-height planting, weeding, and harvesting.

– A person in a wheelchair can reach the soil from seated position.

– This is the height that turns gardening from something that hurts into something that doesn’t — the reason people who quit can start again.

A 120 cm x 480 cm bed at 30 cm needs about 172 litres of mix. If you fill the whole bed with soil, 60 cm requires double that and 90 cm, the same footprint needs three times that.

The soil budget does not need to scale with the height — plan before you cut wood.  Most annual vegetable crops develop the majority of their active root system in the top 15-25 cm (6 to 10 inches) of growing medium. The fine feeder roots that absorb water and nutrients concentrate in the upper portion of the bed where organic matter, biological activity, and oxygen levels are highest. The deeper roots provide anchorage and access water reserves during dry periods but do not contribute significantly to nutrient uptake in the same way the upper feeder roots do.

The bottom layer of a raised bed can be filled with any combination of organic materials that will decompose over time and contribute to the growing medium above. This is the hugelkultur principle applied in a simplified form.

Cardboard: plain cardboard without glossy printing or staples. Breaks down within one season. Suppresses any grass or weeds below the bed. Contributes carbon to the developing soil biology.

Small logs and branches: woody material that decomposes slowly, holding moisture and releasing nutrients over years. Fill loosely to allow settling.

Leaves: autumn leaves either fresh or partially composted. High carbon material that decomposes within one to two seasons. Free from any garden with deciduous trees.

Straw: clean straw, not hay which contains seeds, provides bulk fill that decomposes within one season contributing organic matter to the growing medium above.

Grass clippings: mixed with cardboard or leaves to prevent compacting into a dense mat. High nitrogen material that decomposes rapidly and contributes fertility.

The combination of cardboard at the very base, logs or branches above it, and leaves or straw filling the gaps produces the most biologically active bottom layer with the widest range of decomposition rates and the most significant long-term contribution to the growing medium above.

Match the bed height to the body that uses it. Not the kit that’s on sale.

Raised Garden Bed Soil Mix

Raised Garden Bed Soil Mix

The most common raised bed mistake is filling the entire depth with expensive purchased topsoil or compost. A standard 30 cm (12-inch) deep raised bed filled entirely with quality growing medium costs significantly more than it needs to and provides no growing advantage over a bed filled with a cost-effective layered approach that uses the bottom half for bulk fill and reserves the upper half for the quality growing medium where plant roots actually spend most of their time.

Understanding what plant roots need, and where in the bed profile they actually develop, changes how you approach filling a raised bed and significantly reduces the cost of establishing one without any reduction in growing performance.

Here is the complete raised bed filling framework ??

What roots actually need and where they grow:

Most annual vegetable crops develop the majority of their active root system in the top 15-25 cm (6 to 10 inches) of growing medium. The fine feeder roots that absorb water and nutrients concentrate in the upper portion of the bed where organic matter, biological activity, and oxygen levels are highest. The deeper roots provide anchorage and access water reserves during dry periods but do not contribute significantly to nutrient uptake in the same way the upper feeder roots do.

This root distribution means the quality and composition of the upper half of the bed matters enormously. The lower portion of a deep bed matters much less and can be filled with significantly less expensive bulk material that contributes primarily as a moisture reservoir and as organic matter that decomposes upward over subsequent seasons.

The layered filling approach — the cost-effective method:

Bottom layer — the bulk fill, 15 cm (6 inches).

The bottom layer of a raised bed can be filled with any combination of organic materials that will decompose over time and contribute to the growing medium above. This is the hugelkultur principle applied in a simplified form.

Small logs and branches: woody material that decomposes slowly, holding moisture and releasing nutrients over years. Fill loosely to allow settling.

Cardboard: plain cardboard without glossy printing or staples. Breaks down within one season. Suppresses any grass or weeds below the bed. Contributes carbon to the developing soil biology.

Leaves: autumn leaves either fresh or partially composted. High carbon material that decomposes within one to two seasons. Free from any garden with deciduous trees.

Straw: clean straw, not hay which contains seeds, provides bulk fill that decomposes within one season contributing organic matter to the growing medium above.

Grass clippings: mixed with cardboard or leaves to prevent compacting into a dense mat. High nitrogen material that decomposes rapidly and contributes fertility.

The combination of cardboard at the very base, logs or branches above it, and leaves or straw filling the gaps produces the most biologically active bottom layer with the widest range of decomposition rates and the most significant long-term contribution to the growing medium above.

Middle layer — the transition zone, 5 cm (2 inches).

A transition layer of finished compost between the bulk fill and the quality growing medium above introduces the biological community that begins processing the bulk material below. It also provides an anchor layer for the growing medium above and prevents settling of the surface layer directly into the bulk material below.

Top layer — the quality growing medium, 15-20 cm (6 to 8 inches).

The top layer is where the investment is made. This is the growing medium that plant roots primarily occupy and where the growing performance of the bed is determined. Two approaches both produce excellent results.

Mel’s Mix — the original square foot gardening formula:

Mel Bartholomew developed this growing medium formula for his Square Foot Gardening system in the 1970s and it remains one of the most widely used and most reliable growing medium recipes available. The formula is simple and the results are consistently excellent.

One third blended compost. One third peat moss or coco coir. One third coarse perlite.

The blended compost component

Mel’s original formula specifies blended compost from multiple sources rather than a single compost type. The reasoning is that different compost sources have different nutrient profiles and microbial communities. A blend of three to five different composts, mushroom compost, worm castings, garden compost, manure-based compost, and leaf compost, provides a more complete and diverse foundation than any single compost source.

Most gardeners cannot source five different composts economically. A blend of two or three is an adequate practical compromise. At minimum combine a mushroom or manure-based compost with a leaf or green waste compost for meaningful diversity.

The peat moss or coco coir component

Peat moss provides the moisture retention and slightly acidic pH that suits most vegetable crops. It also improves the physical structure of the growing medium, preventing compaction and maintaining the loose open texture that plant roots and soil organisms require. The environmental concern around peat extraction from peat bogs makes coco coir the preferred alternative in most current applications. Coco coir provides similar moisture retention and physical structure benefits without the ecological cost of peat extraction.

Coco coir is available in compressed bricks that expand when hydrated. One compressed brick typically produces 2 to 3 gallons of expanded coir. Hydrate fully before incorporating into the mix.

The coarse perlite component

Perlite prevents the compaction that would otherwise occur in a growing medium dominated by compost and coir. Over time compost-heavy growing medium compacts under the weight of watering and plant root development. Perlite particles maintain the pore structure that allows air and water to move through the medium and that prevents the anaerobic conditions that damage root systems.

Use coarse perlite rather than fine perlite. Fine perlite particles wash to the surface with repeated watering and provide less durable pore structure than coarse particles.

The Volume Calculation

To avoid over or under purchasing, calculate the volume of your bed in liters or cubic feet. Length multiplied by width multiplied by depth. For a 120 cm (4 foot) by 240 cm (8 foot) bed filled to 30 cm (12 inches) depth: .86 of a cubic meter (860 liters) (4 x 8 x 1 feet equals 32 cubic feet) total. The bottom half bulk fill layer represents half that volume. The top half quality growing medium represents the remaining half.

For Mel’s Mix in the top layer, half the total volume is 430 liters (16 cubic feet) divided by 3 equals approximately 143 liters (5.3 cubic feet) of each component. Purchase 150 liters (6 x 25 liter bags) (6 cubic feet) of each to allow for settling.

Settling Allowance

All raised bed growing medium settles significantly in the first season as organic materials begin to decompose and compact slightly. Fill the bed 2-5 cm (1 to 2 inches) above the top of the frame to compensate for first-season settling. Add a 2 cm (1 inch) compost top dressing each spring to maintain the growing medium level and replace the organic matter lost to decomposition.

The Economics — What This Actually Costs

As of 10 April 2026 from Bunnings in Sydney,
Compost $6-10 25l
Peat Moss $50 25l
Coco Coir $27.50 90l
Perlite $15.56 25l
Vermiculite $50 25l
Cow manure $5 25l
Chook manure $5 25l
Sheep Manure $7 25l
Potting Mix $4-11 25l

2 blocks coco coir $55
6 bags compost $48
6 bags perlite $94
Total outlay $197

So filling our garden bed with a 6-inch bulk fill layer and 6-inch Mel’s Mix top layer costs less than $200 in materials depending on local compost prices and whether bulk fill materials are sourced free from the garden. The same bed filled entirely with purchased topsoil or bagged growing medium costs $400 or more.

The layered approach costs half as much, produces better long-term growing performance as the bulk fill decomposes and enriches the bed from below, and uses materials that would otherwise go to a green waste collection.

To create a cubic meter of soil from scratch

(assuming access to compost that contains no manure)
(Prices from Bunnings.com.au, Sydney 10 April 20226)

525 litres compost (21 x 25 litre bags) $328
250 litres perlite (10 x 25 litre bags) $156
1 block coco coir (1 x 90 litre block) $28
75 litres cow manure (3 x 25 litre bags) $16
25 litres chook manure (1 x 25 litre bags) $5
25 litres mushroom compost (1 x 25 litre bags) $6
10 litres seaweed (1 x 10 litre bags) $99
Total: $638

Making your own compost halves the cost of creating soil.

Topping up established beds — the annual maintenance:

Every season the growing medium level in a raised bed drops 1 to 2 inches as organic matter decomposes. Maintaining the growing medium level by adding a 2 cm (1 to 2 inch) compost top dressing each spring maintains the quality of the upper growing zone and replaces the biological activity lost as organic matter is processed.

Do not add more perlite or coir annually. These components do not decompose and accumulate in the growing medium over multiple seasons. Add compost only for annual top ups. If you top-dress annually, complete refreshment is needed only every 3 to 5 seasons when the growing medium has significantly degraded.

A complete refresh is roughly:
35 % old soil (minerals + microbial continuity)
35 % compost (fertility + biology)
20 % perlite (drainage & air — crucial for veggies in pots)
5–6 % peat moss or coco coir (moisture without sogginess)
4 % cow manure
1 % chook manure (gentle nutrient boost)

Fill it right once. Top dress annually. The bed improves every season.

Save this. Use this formula for your next raised bed installation or potting mix.

Pruning Berry Bushes

Pruning Berry Bushes

Every berry bush in your yard follows a different pruning logic. Treat them the same way and you cut off this year’s harvest or leave dead wood choking out the productive stems.

One question settles each one: which canes carry this year’s fruit.

Blueberry
Best fruit comes from canes that are a few years old. After about six years a cane turns thick and gray-barked with sparse small berries. Remove one or two of the oldest trunks at the base each spring and let fresh shoots replace them. A mature bush wants six to eight main canes of mixed ages

Raspberry
The cane type changes the whole approach:

– Summer-bearing types fruit on last year’s canes. Those spent canes are gray and brittle by spring — cut them all at ground level. Then thin the new green canes to the four or five strongest per foot of row

– Ever-bearing types fruit on the current season’s growth. The simplest method is to mow everything to the ground in early spring and let the row regenerate for one heavy fall crop

Blackberry
Same principle as summer raspberry. Canes that fruited last year are done — gray and papery while this year’s canes are green or reddish. Remove the spent ones at the base. On upright varieties, shorten the side branches on new canes to concentrate berry size

Currant and Gooseberry
Both fruit best on two- and three-year-old wood. Remove canes older than three years each spring. Keep three or four canes of each age class so the bush stays permanently productive without losing a full crop year

The canes that fruited are finished. The canes that grew last year are loaded. The canes emerging now are next year’s investment. Three ages, three roles — pruning is just deciding who stays.

Liz Murray

Some people are stellar examples. This is one of them.

Liz Murray

Some people are stellar examples. This is one of them.

She chose the subway token over the slice of pizza. She was starving. That choice changed everything.

Elizabeth Murray stood at her mother’s grave on a frozen December morning in 1996. She was sixteen years old. The coffin was donated pine. Someone had written her mother’s name in black marker—and spelled it wrong. There was no money for flowers. No money for anything. Just a crumpled photograph in Liz’s coat pocket: her mother at seventeen, smiling, before the world took it all away.

Liz made herself a promise that day. Her life would look nothing like this.

She was born in the Bronx in 1980 to parents who loved her desperately and could not take care of her. Both were addicts—cocaine and heroin ruled the household. Her mother Jean was legally blind, which meant a monthly welfare check. The first of every month, there was food. Music. Life. By day five, the money was gone. For the next three weeks, Liz and her sister ate mayonnaise sandwiches. When the eggs ran out, they ate ice cubes. The cold, Liz said later, felt enough like eating to quiet the hunger.

She watched her parents shoot up in the kitchen. They didn’t hide it. Once, her mother stole five dollars from Liz’s birthday card—money sent by her grandmother—and used it for drugs. When Liz confronted her, Jean collapsed in tears, begging forgiveness.

Liz forgave her. She always did.

At eleven, her mother told her she had AIDS.

Everything unraveled slowly, then all at once. Her parents separated. Liz bounced between her father’s apartment, her grandfather’s house, a group home, the streets. School became impossible—not just because of the chaos, but because the other kids mocked her unwashed clothes. It was easier to disappear.

At fifteen, her world ended. Her father moved into a homeless shelter. Three weeks before Christmas 1996, her mother died of AIDS and tuberculosis in a hospital bed.

Liz had nowhere to go.

She learned how to survive. The D train was warmest at 2 AM—she rode it in circles to stay out of the cold. She slept in apartment hallways, on friends’ couches, in parks. She ate what she could find. But somewhere deep inside, something was calculating. Connecting dots. She saw the path her mother’s choices had carved, and she refused to follow it.

She went looking for a school.

One day, she reached into her pocket and counted what she had: exactly enough for either a subway token to a school interview or a slice of pizza. She was so hungry her hands shook. She bought the token.

The man across the desk was Perry Weiner, founder of Humanities Preparatory Academy in Manhattan. He listened. He gave her a seat.

Nobody at school knew she was homeless. She hid it completely—arriving early, never missing class, doing homework in subway stations by fluorescent light. She loved learning with a hunger that matched the one in her stomach. The classroom was the only place that made sense.

She did four years of high school in two. Graduated top of her class of 158 with a 95 average.

Her teacher took her to visit Harvard. Liz walked onto the campus and felt something shift inside her. Her teacher said: “It’s a reach. But it’s not impossible.”

She found the New York Times scholarship—twelve thousand dollars a year for students who had overcome extraordinary obstacles. The application asked her to describe those obstacles. For the first time in her life, she told the whole truth.

The morning her essay was published, Liz arrived at school to find the lobby full of strangers. Teachers. Students. Neighbors who’d read her story. Someone brought food. Someone brought money. Someone offered her a couch.

From that day forward, she never slept on the street again.

She was one of six students—out of three thousand applicants—to win that scholarship.

Harvard admitted her in 1999.

But the story didn’t end there. Three years into college, her father—who had gotten sober—was dying of AIDS. Liz left Harvard to care for him. She sat with him until he died in 2006. Then she went back. She finished her degree in 2009.

She became a speaker, a counselor, an advocate for homeless teenagers. She named her mentoring organization The Arthur Project, after the upstairs neighbor who was the first person to believe in her.

Oprah gave her the first-ever Chutzpah Award for women who show impossible courage. Her memoir, Breaking Night, became a New York Times bestseller, translated into twelve languages. A Lifetime movie about her life earned three Emmy nominations.

And here’s the part people struggle to understand: she never blamed her parents. She said they were good people with a disease stronger than they were. She kept that crumpled photograph of her mother—young, smiling, full of hope—in her pocket for years.

She was homeless at fifteen.

She got into Harvard at eighteen.

She did her homework on the subway.

Her name is Liz Murray. And she chose the subway token.

The Case For Organic Mushrooms

The Case For Organic Mushrooms

The Environmental Working Group puts mushrooms on the Clean Fifteen at #14 among fruits and vegetables with the lowest pesticide residues, but this doesn’t mean mushrooms don’t have pesticide residues.

The U.S. government’s Pesticide Data Program found residues of the anti-mold pesticide thiabendazole in 54.5 percent of conventionally grown mushrooms.

The EPA classifies thiabendazole as likely to be carcinogenic when doses are high enough to disrupt thyroid hormones. According to the EPA’s assessment, thiabendazole also harms the immune and nervous systems. The European Food Safety Authority determined that thiabendazole is associated with adverse effects on thyroid hormone function. If we’re concerned about the health effects on farm workers and rural communities in addition to consumers, we shouldn’t just be looking at pesticide residues per pound of produce, we should also be looking at pesticide usage per acre of farmland.

If you look at pesticide residues per pound of produce, as the Environmental Working Group does, mushrooms make the Clean Fifteen, but if you look at pesticides per acre of farmland, as the Pesticide Action Network has done, mushrooms would be #2 on the Dirty Dozen, second only to potatoes.

We need to keep in mind that the damage from conventional farming doesn’t end at our plates — even produce that tests residue-free was grown with chemicals that poison our waterways, deplete our soil, and silently devastate wildlife along the way. The organic food we purchase or grow isn’t just a personal health choice, it’s a vote for and a contribution to a food system that doesn’t gamble with humanity’s most critical medicines — or the health of the planet we all share.

https://organicconsumers.org/the-clean-fifteen-list-and-how-you-measure-pesticides-changes-everything/