Hoarding is exactly what the government is doing right now by filling the SPR, and frankly it's the best thing that could happen. It drives prices up. High prices encourage demand destruction. They also finance new well development. The hoarded oil gives us a buffer to fall back on once shortages become more prevalent. High prices are what we need in order to adapt to what's coming, and the sooner they happen, the better.
Joined: Sep 16, 2007 Posts: 1003 Location: Oklahoma City, USA
Posted: Wed Mar 19, 2008 9:00 pm Post subject: Re: Today I made / bought / learnt .... (for a post oil worl
Found a lady on Craigslist selling bricks for 10 cents each so I went and got 100. They'll come in handy for all sorts of things.
Her and her husband remodel homes and rent them out, so they have a huge stash of building materials ... now I have their number/email so I don't think I'll be wanting for that stuff for a while ... they also gave me some tips as to what stores have good prices on building supplies. _________________ What, so I'm in no end game
Move my piece right off the board
Joined: Dec 27, 2004 Posts: 11397 Location: Village of Idiots
Posted: Thu Mar 20, 2008 8:22 pm Post subject: Re: Today I made / bought / learnt .... (for a post oil worl
Planted two more vegetable garden beds and planted another almond tree. _________________ "...powerdown so soft and fluffy you'll think you're living in a pillow..." - jboogy
Joined: Nov 18, 2004 Posts: 1001 Location: Central Texas
Posted: Sat Mar 22, 2008 8:54 am Post subject: Re: Today I made / bought / learnt .... (for a post oil worl
Yesterday I re-positioned the 125W PV panel that powers the Sundanzer freezer since we just past the Spring Equinox. This required cutting and mounting more aluminum footings:
At noon, (1pm DST), the sun's rays will be perpendicular to the panel. At the summer soltice, I'll attach shorter legs to the panel and one more set of feet. _________________
Joined: Jan 03, 2005 Posts: 1127 Location: western Wisconsin
Posted: Sat Mar 22, 2008 10:57 am Post subject: Re: Today I made / bought / learnt .... (for a post oil worl
PeakO, I would be concerned about putting more "feet" in my roof, with the holes involved. Around here, at least, that is too much opportunity for leakage. That looks like a standing seam roof--if it is, why not clamp the "feet" to the standing seams? Some of the commercial PV racks attach that way. Or, make telscoping supports so you would adjust the length of the support instead of moving their point of attachment. Mine are pivoted horizontally in the center of the array and adjusted by moving a support (perforated angle irontype of stuff) to a different hole, where it is held onto a bolt using a thumb nut. I found that using a tin can (nice cylinder with a square end) as a shadow device at solar noon tells me if I have it aimed right. Set the can firmly on the surface, and if there is no shadow around it on the PV surface, it is aimed at the sun.
Joined: Nov 18, 2004 Posts: 1001 Location: Central Texas
Posted: Sat Mar 22, 2008 12:20 pm Post subject: Re: Today I made / bought / learnt .... (for a post oil worl
WisJim wrote:
PeakO, I would be concerned about putting more "feet" in my roof, with the holes involved. Around here, at least, that is too much opportunity for leakage. That looks like a standing seam roof--if it is, why not clamp the "feet" to the standing seams? Some of the commercial PV racks attach that way. Or, make telscoping supports so you would adjust the length of the support instead of moving their point of attachment. Mine are pivoted horizontally in the center of the array and adjusted by moving a support (perforated angle irontype of stuff) to a different hole, where it is held onto a bolt using a thumb nut. I found that using a tin can (nice cylinder with a square end) as a shadow device at solar noon tells me if I have it aimed right. Set the can firmly on the surface, and if there is no shadow around it on the PV surface, it is aimed at the sun.
The roof this panel is mounted on is a patio roof, not the house roof, so I'm not too concerned about leaks and I'm using sealer around the roofing nuts. Also, the metal roof was put down over composite shingles and the nuts aren't long enough to penetrate all the way through the underlying plywood.
I had thought about making telescoping support legs, and I still may do that. Thanks for the suggestions though.
I still plan on getting more PV eventually, (perhaps this year), and that array will be on the house roof. I'll attach that array on angled "rails" that have the multiple holes along them for easier adjustment.
Joined: Dec 25, 2005 Posts: 525 Location: Hillsboro, West Virginia
Posted: Sat Mar 22, 2008 6:05 pm Post subject: Re: Today I made / bought / learnt .... (for a post oil worl
I planted 40 seeds of arrowhead. It's a wild herb that grows an edible tuber similar to new potato. When the seeds have become plants, I'll transplant them to my flower garden where the rain falls from the porch roof. They are semi-aquatic plants by nature, so that should be best for them.
Rural dwellers should learn to recognize wild edible plants. There are more of them than you think. Red-flowering sumacs, such as staghorn, aren't poisonous. You can eat the shoots and make a tart drink from the red flower clusters. I'm going to experiment heavily this year on eating wild, just to see how many different plants I can find and how much food I can get from them.
Hm. Yellow flowers = wild parsnip. White flowers = water hemlock. Definitely gotta remember that.
EDIT: You know, I just now imagined a hypothetical future episode of The Simpsons in which the Simpson family is hiding in their basement, sneaking a meal from hoarded food in the dark, while their neighbors are going from door to door knocking and asking each other if they have any spare food. Some of them seem to have lost their minds because they are walking around like zombies while hooting "Food fooooood!" Later, Bart has some fun by placing a bean on a sidewalk, then concealing himself in an observation post to watch people fight over the bean.
The water hemlock idea seems better. Bart ought to wrap tape around some hemlock roots and write "parsnip" on it in magic marker.
Posted: Sun Mar 23, 2008 11:08 am Post subject: Re: Today I made / bought / learnt .... (for a post oil worl
Yesterday I ordered a dozen plastic 55 gal barrels with ring sealed metal lids, for 6 bucks each. Our neighbor gets 4 of them, the rest are for grain storage, anticipating a few laying hens next year. We'll buy wheat and corn direct out of the combine this year.
Also rebuilt the carburetor on the old Wheel Horse, and plowed the lower garden today. The upper garden is in wheat, which I'll leave for another month, then mulch mow it and till it in. Organic matter in our clay soil makes all the difference. Where I plowed today, the soil is chocolate brown, and drained the TEN INCHES of rain we got last week enough to plow today! And retains moisture enough to grow, far longer than the yard.
I'll probably cut some kale to cook today, that survived the winter, and plant garlic and onions that are sprouting in the basement. _________________ Local fix-it guy..
Posted: Sun Mar 23, 2008 5:25 pm Post subject: Re: Today I made / bought / learnt .... (for a post oil worl
Also drove 2 of the 8 ground rods for our solar system-to-be, and built concrete forms for the LP tank base. Too cold to pour concrete today, as it was snowing and I ran short of ambition. Got to do the ground rods while the ground is soaked, because it is near impossible after this clay/rock stuff dries out. Sakrete tomorrow maybe. _________________ Local fix-it guy..
Joined: Dec 27, 2004 Posts: 11397 Location: Village of Idiots
Posted: Sun Mar 23, 2008 5:27 pm Post subject: Re: Today I made / bought / learnt .... (for a post oil worl
Planted another small bed of fava beans; started leveling an area for another rainwater tank. _________________ "...powerdown so soft and fluffy you'll think you're living in a pillow..." - jboogy
Joined: Dec 08, 2004 Posts: 1498 Location: Nez Perce Nation
Posted: Sun Mar 23, 2008 5:38 pm Post subject: Re: Today I made / bought / learnt .... (for a post oil worl
I've spent the last several days cleaning up the Black Walnut tree that a neighbor helped bring down this week. We'll get a lot of good lumber from this tree and with the other even bigger walnut coming down in about 5 weeks we'll have enough to floor the entire house plus make newels, posts and handrails for the stairs.
We'll also get some good firewood.
These were very old and beautiful trees but they are too close to the house. They present a danger and they create quite a mess every fall. _________________ "Modern Agriculture is the use of land to convert petroleum into food."
-- Albert Bartlett
"It will be a dark time. But for those who survive, I suspect it will be rather exciting."
-- James Lovelock
Joined: Jun 21, 2006 Posts: 1149 Location: Burgundy, France
Posted: Sun Mar 23, 2008 6:18 pm Post subject: Re: Today I made / bought / learnt .... (for a post oil worl
DomusAlbion wrote:
I've spent the last several days cleaning up the Black Walnut tree that a neighbor helped bring down this week. We'll get a lot of good lumber from this tree and with the other even bigger walnut coming down in about 5 weeks we'll have enough to floor the entire house plus make newels, posts and handrails for the stairs.
We'll also get some good firewood.
These were very old and beautiful trees but they are too close to the house. They present a danger and they create quite a mess every fall.
That's a shame. Walnuts take a long time to produce good nut crops. Couldn't you have done some remedial work or were the roots dangerous? _________________ All that we are is the result of what we have thought. The mind is everything. What we think we become. - Buddha
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