- 15 Posts
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relianceschool@slrpnk.netto Climate - truthful information about climate, related activism and politics.@slrpnk.net•Trump uprooted a major climate effort. Scientists are fighting back.8·1 month agoAmidst all the horrible news about data purges and erasures, this is a glimmer of hope. The real losers (as usual) are the American people, who stood to benefit massively from clear, understandable data on climate risk at a local level. I’ve been pre-emptively archiving federal climate resources for the past 6 months, as it all seems to be on the chopping block.
relianceschool@slrpnk.netOPto Climate - truthful information about climate, related activism and politics.@slrpnk.net•What US climate resources should we be archiving?8·1 month ago2x on local hard drives, 2x in the cloud. Not taking any chances with this.
relianceschool@slrpnk.netOPto Climate - truthful information about climate, related activism and politics.@slrpnk.net•Scientists just found a way to break through climate apathy3·3 months agoI think about this a lot when we’re talking about animal, bird, and insect populations, because all those massive declines we’re hearing about are measured from 1970 onwards. By that point industrial civilization had been chugging away for a full century, and ecosystems were already severely degraded. Then I think about how settlers clear-cut the Eastern US with just hand-powered axes and saws, and that was a hundred years before that.
In most areas we’d have to go back over 10 generations to encounter a truly healthy ecosystem. Shifting baseline is absolutely a real thing.
relianceschool@slrpnk.netOPto No Lawns@slrpnk.net•'Meadowscaping': The people turning their lawns into wild meadowsEnglish1·3 months agoTicks move into lawns as well, and while I haven’t found studies comparing the density of ticks in shorter grass vs. flower beds, I would assume it’s a wash; even if there are less ticks in turfgrass, you’re walking/lying on that grass, allowing more opportunities for them to latch onto you. Whereas you’re not walking through flower beds, so even if there’s a greater tick population, you’re not coming into contact with them as much.
relianceschool@slrpnk.netOPto No Lawns@slrpnk.net•'Meadowscaping': The people turning their lawns into wild meadowsEnglish3·3 months agoRead the article; it’s not abandonment, it’s intentional cultivation. The former is more beneficial to wildlife than maintaining a pristine yard, but in most cases it’ll just end up with your yard being taken over by invasives. The latter is managing your yard in a way that encourages native, pollinator-friendly (and beautiful!) plants.
relianceschool@slrpnk.netOPto No Lawns@slrpnk.net•'Meadowscaping': The people turning their lawns into wild meadowsEnglish4·3 months agoMy yard used to be hard-packed clay where only the most tenacious weeds could survive (field bindweed, burdock, thistle, dandelion), so my first step was putting down multiple layers of heavy cardboard to smother them, then covering that with about a foot of wood chip. That killed the latter three and helped to start softening up the soil (worms move in when organic matter is present), but bindweed just pushed through the cardboard and wood chip, so I had to hit that with (selective, judicious) applications of herbicide. It was a hobby for the first year, but now my yard is weed-free and the soil is turning more rich and loamy!
I’ve mostly used starts/seedlings to fill in my beds, but now that the weed pressure is lower I’ve started putting soil & compost over the mulch to encourage my plants to self-seed. I’m also filling in all the “blank spaces” with ground cover, to provide an additional barrier against weeds. A mature garden will require a little weeding now and then, but for me that’s something I enjoy (it’s a break from work, and time in the sun), and it’s definitely not as intensive as vegetable gardening.
I’m personally focused on climate change, but where did you post that? And is there any way to archive that information? (Archive.org most likely saved a snapshot of the page.) The vast majority of the stuff I post gets single-digit upvotes, I think part of it is just a userbase issue. Even main page posts only get a few comments, I don’t think we’ll see real traction and engagement until the number of total users goes up by 10x.