An Interesting Dream

Had an interesting dream last Sunday. As a result of which I realised I am a dealer.

Not a drug dealer who sells drugs to overcome emotional of physical pain.

Not an arms dealer who sells weapons to wage war.

I am a Solutions Dealer. I point people to solutions to problems.

You got a communication problem?
I got a course I can recommend to fix that!

You got a relationship problem?
I know a course that will fix that!

Got a friend with a drug problem?
I know a program that will fix that!

Got a child with a study problem?
I have a solution for that too!

Got a moral dilemma, an ethics problem?
Got something for that too!

Lack purpose or direction in life?
Even have a blog post for that one!

Lonely?
Got that one totally taped!

Now I read somewhere that sanity is the ability to create problems and intelligence is the ability to solve them. If you have too few problems you overly fixate on one. I even know how to solve THAT one too!

(I didn’t solve all the problems I know how to solve, I am not the smartest man who ever lived! I just know where to find the solutions.)

But that puts me into a sanity related problem. To stay sane I need to invent some more problems!

So I have decided my problem is how to help as many people as possible live a better life!

You want to improve something in your life? Call me! Your local Solutions Dealer!

Net Zero Activists Stumped By Shock New Evidence Showing No Link Between CO2 & Temperature Over Last Three Million Years

Scientists Examining Ice Core Sample

The climate science world (‘settled’ division) is in shock following the discovery in ancient ice cores that levels of carbon dioxide remained stable as the world plunged into an ice age around 2.7 million years ago. Levels of CO2 at around 250 parts per million (ppm) were said to be lower than often assumed with just a 20 ppm movement recorded for the following near three million-year period. In addition, no changes in methane levels were seen in the entire period. Massive decreases in temperature with occasional interglacial rises appear to have occurred without troubling ‘greenhouse’ gas levels, and this revelation has caused near panic in activist circles.

https://www.zerohedge.com/weather/net-zero-activists-stumped-shock-new-evidence-showing-no-link-between-co2-temperature-over

Tomato Growing Made Simple

Tomato Plant Tips

Tomatoes reward small, smart habits. A few simple steps can turn average plants into strong, productive ones.

1 Feed the soil first
Add compost or organic matter at the bottom of the planting hole. A little wood ash can also boost nutrients.
Relatable mistake – planting straight into poor soil and expecting miracles.

2 Trim before planting
Remove the lower leaves a couple of days before transplanting. This encourages deeper rooting and helps reduce disease risk.

3 Water wisely at the start
Avoid overwatering early on. Slightly drier conditions encourage roots to grow deeper and stronger.

4 Pinch the suckers
Remove side shoots when they’re about 5 cm long. This helps the plant focus its energy on fruit production instead of extra foliage.

Simple, consistent care leads to healthier plants and a more generous harvest. Small actions, big tomato rewards.

How To Prune Rosemary

How To Prune Rosemary

Rosemary hides its problems well — it still smells good even when half the base is dead. Annual pruning prevents the point of no return from arriving unannounced.

The rule that governs rosemary is the same as for lavender: below the green zone lies grey wood that does not regenerate. Without annual pruning, the shrub lignifies from the base upward, and within three years you have a bare trunk topped by a green tuft at the tips. At that point there is no recovery — old rosemary wood does not carry dormant buds capable of breaking back into growth.

How to manage it through the year in the Northern Hemisphere:
— Late February to early March: formative prune. Cut back the green stems by roughly a third, keeping carefully above the visible junction between the soft young growth and the rigid old wood beneath. That junction is the line that must not be crossed.

— April and May: leave the plant completely alone and enjoy the flowering. This is the main pollinator window — early bumblebees and honeybees depend on rosemary as one of the first substantial nectar sources of the year.

— June: a second light trim to remove spent flowerheads and encourage new lateral growth.

Two rules that never change:
— The dry grey bark at the base is a no-cut zone. Cutting into it leaves permanent stubs that will produce nothing.

— Remove stems that cross through the centre of the shrub. Without airflow, the interior stays damp and fungal problems develop.

After six to eight years, even the best-managed rosemary thins at the base. Replacing it with a rooted cutting taken in summer is a better option than trying to force recovery from an old plant.

The line between green and woody is the only secret to a compact rosemary for years.

For the Southern Hemisphere (e.g., Australia)

Seasons are reversed, so shift the timing by about 6 months to match the equivalent part of the seasonal cycle:

  • Main formative prune: Late August to early September (your late winter/early spring).
  • Leave alone for flowering: Roughly October–November (your spring flowering window for pollinators).
  • Light trim after flowering: December (your early summer).

Fruit Tree Helpers

Fruit Tree Helpers

Each plant at the base of your fruit trees has a specific role: feeding the soil, deterring pests, attracting pollinators, or covering bare ground. Together they form a self-sustaining ecosystem that works for the tree throughout the year and progressively reduces the maintenance it demands.

Comfrey — deep roots that draw up calcium, potassium, and phosphorus from subsoil layers. Cut the leaves five or six times per year and leave them as a free mineral mulch directly under the tree.

Chives — sulphur-rich foliage that deters aphids and limits fungal disease around the trunk. Self-maintaining once established.

White clover — a living mulch that fixes atmospheric nitrogen in the root zone and provides continuous nectar for pollinators from spring to autumn.

Yarrow (Achillea millefolium) — flat flower clusters that attract hoverflies and parasitic wasps, both significant predators of aphids and caterpillars.

Daffodils — toxic bulbs planted in a ring near the trunk to deter voles and other burrowing rodents that target fruit tree roots.

Calendula — root exudates that reduce harmful soil nematode populations, and a strong scent that disorients flying pests.

Sweet alyssum — a dense mat of tiny flowers that draws hoverflies, lacewings, and parasitic wasps in large numbers throughout the season.

Borage — one of the best bee plants in the British garden, improving fruit tree pollination significantly. Self-seeds reliably from year two onwards.

Nasturtium — the most effective aphid trap plant available. Aphids gather on nasturtiums in preference to almost everything else nearby, drawing them away from the tree.

The more this system matures, the less you need to intervene.

The Plastic Detox

The Platic Detox

Jack Seale, The Guardian:

“Get up, after a restless sleep. Shower, using products that contain plastic and are in plastic containers. Fix your hair and deodorise your body using sprays smoothed by plastics, before putting on clothes woven from synthetic (plastic) fibres, picking up your plastic phone and heading out, sipping water from a plastic bottle. Chew plastic gum. Buy a snack wrapped in plastic and receive a receipt printed on plastic-covered paper. Come home, take food out of its plastic packaging, cook it with plastic utensils, then store the leftovers in plastic tubs and clean up with detergents that contain plastics and come in plastic bottles. Clean your teeth with a plastic toothbrush and plastic-infused toothpaste. Go to bed.

The list of ways in which humanity is committing species suicide may be long and growing, but The Plastic Detox is here to suggest that room should be found for the overwhelmingly widespread use of petrochemical-derived plastics.

That’s the main concern of this documentary’s protagonist, epidemiologist Shanna Swan, whose 2021 book Count Down claimed that chemicals in plastic are a factor in falling sperm counts. Swan, a vibrantly bustling grandmother of six and great-grandmother of a precious one, hooks us in with an experiment flavoured by reality TV. Visiting Florida, California, and Idaho, she finds six couples who are struggling to conceive, and challenges them to live for three months with their exposure to plastics dramatically reduced.”

After all this doom, Swan’s final visits to the six couples reward us with happy tears: her admittedly small-sample experiment has produced startling results, including some that go beyond being pregnant or not.

Source: https://organicconsumers.org/the-plastic-detox-review-a-film-so-terrifying-you-will-want-to-change-your-life-immediately/

An Open Sourced Full 3D Building Editor

3D Building Editor

An Open Sourced Full 3D Building Editor

Someone just open sourced a full 3D building editor that runs entirely in your browser.

No AutoCAD. No Revit. No $5,000/year licenses.

It’s called Pascal Editor.

Built with React Three Fiber and WebGPU — meaning it renders directly on your GPU at near-native speed.

Here’s what’s inside this thing:

A full building/level/wall/zone hierarchy you can edit in real time
An ECS-style architecture where every object updates through GPU-powered systems
Zustand state management with full undo/redo built in
Next.js frontend so it deploys as a web app, not a desktop install
Dirty node tracking — only re-renders what changed, not the whole scene

Here’s the wildest part:

You can stack, explode, or solo individual building levels. Select a zone, drag a wall, reshape a slab — all in 3D, all in the browser.

Architecture firms pay $50K+ per seat for BIM software that does this workflow.

This is free.

100% Open Source.

Click to view the video: https://x.com/heygurisingh/status/2035674710005187065?s=20

Adverse Event Risk from Repeated mRNA Booster Vaccination

This source article is filled with medical terminology related to the immune system and for most of us would need to be studied in conjunction with a medical dictionary in order to understand it.

A lay person summary of it (thanks to Grok) is that:

  • 1. mRNA COVID vaccines work differently from some other types (like certain DNA-based ones mentioned for comparison). After several doses, especially boosters, they can cause the body’s antibody response to change in a specific way—shifting toward antibodies that mainly block the virus from entering cells but are less good at rallying other parts of the immune system to actively destroy infected cells and clear the infection.
  • 2. This change means the protection from infection isn’t as strong or complete as what you get right after the first doses or from natural infection. The antibodies still help stop the virus to some degree, but the overall immune defense against catching or spreading the virus may weaken over time with repeated shots.
  • 3. Regular antibody blood tests that doctors usually do won’t show this change. Those tests just measure overall antibody levels against the virus spike protein—they don’t reveal how the “style” of those antibodies has shifted or how well they activate the full immune attack. Special, harder-to-get lab tests are needed to spot it.
  • 4. Giving boosters too close together makes this immune shift more likely and stronger. When shots are spaced out (like waiting a full year or more), the body has time to reset, and the unwanted change is less pronounced or may even reverse.
  • 5. Kids can experience this shift after fewer doses than adults (sometimes just the initial two shots in studies of children). Since children generally have a very low risk of serious COVID illness, any potential downside from this altered immune response could matter more for them than for older or higher-risk adults (where calming down overactive inflammation might actually be helpful in some cases).

https://open.substack.com/pub/rwmalonemd/p/igg4-class-switching-immune-tolerance