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hierochloe's avatar

Yes! Potatoes are lovely, just don't eat any of the green parts. Good for you guys. Growing one's own food has a large spectrum of benefits that are hard to define, including just respecting the true value of food production labor. Highly recommend getting big time on your own compost processes - cuts out a lot of the trash and unknown sources. Probably a wood chipper too, if the bushes and trees at your place grow like I suspect. Deep mulch food forest.

I wonder how long it will be before the mammalian gut biome has evolved to do something beneficial with consumed plastic - that process is definitely well underway already in the oceans. Once it really picks up, it might be a big deal, like when they figured out how to eat lignin and cellulose.

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Billy Masterson's avatar

Welcome to the world of garden-y goodness! And the delight of going out to the garden, doing something useful with your hands & forgetting the human instigated clusterfucks (which online media portrays as terminal & looming over us from all sides, yet somehow has not caused our extinction. Yet. Better check Substack in box right now, maybe it's going to hit us next week???).

We also made the mistake of taking "free compost" from the local yard waste drop off site about 10 years ago. And I'm STILL finding bits & pieces, everything from plastic bag fragments to whole tennis shoe soles, kids sandals & toys, golf balls, spark plugs?!, you name it, if people could lose it in their yards & rake it up with the lawn clippings, leaves and tree pruning debris, we got some of it. 150' X 50' (large!) garden, clay type soil, we accepted FIVE 12 cubic yard dump trucks of the stuff before realizing what un-earth friendly delights it contained & stopped...

Then, a local farmer told us he had a mountain of composted cow manure, we could have truck loads dropped for the price of his fuel to load it & drive over! YAY!!! So we took three 12 cubic yard truck fulls of THAT. And discovered the idiots had let all the ORANGE, NON BIODEGRADABLE, VERY STRONG PLASTIC BALER TWINE from around all those hay bales end up in that damned cowshit trove, where it wound tiller tines into impenetrable yarn balls every hundred feet or so for several years afterwards...

I worked for farmers as a kid, haying, washing cow tits, working tobacco, detasseling seed corn, weeding... My farmers would have fired my ass for letting anything like that which could tangle an implement "get away" into their fields- And the baler twine we used back then WAS biodegradable.

Gah. I'm a' go pick some broccoli now and forget my bitter memories...

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