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Grow Indoor Plants in Water: The Complete Houseplant Hydroponic Gardening Guide
  • Thanks for your input! That is super good to know. I won't try their suggestion haha

  • deepgreenpermaculture.com Grow Indoor Plants in Water: The Complete Houseplant Hydroponic Gardening Guide

    Indoor plants not only add a touch of greenery to your living space but also purify the air and boost your mood. While traditional soil-based planting is popular, growing plants in water, known as …

    Grow Indoor Plants in Water: The Complete Houseplant Hydroponic Gardening Guide

    > "Indoor plants not only add a touch of greenery to your living space but also purify the air and boost your mood. While traditional soil-based planting is popular, growing plants in water, known as hydroponics, is gaining traction due to its simplicity and aesthetic appeal. In this guide, we’ll explore which indoor plants can be grown in water, how to care for them, and other useful tips for successful hydroponic gardening."

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    3
    The secret robot that will disrupt fashion | Hard Reset

    > Could a 3D-robotic loom be the answer to making fast fashion faster and more sustainable? Unspun's patented loom (so proprietary that we had to blur it for the video) can create clothing that fits you seamlessly every time, with just a scan of your phone, and far less waste than other clothing production methods.

    >Unspun is pioneering a different method of apparel production out of Oakland, California. By utilizing three-dimensional weaving, the start-up is building garments from the ground up, perfectly customized for the wearer's dimensions.

    One other fact that stood out to me is that the weave uses more yarn (about 3x more, if my memory is right) than the average clothes today. That difference makes clothes more durable and last longer.

    I doubt this will make the clothes more affordable, but the tech is interesting.

    2
    Build Zigzag Patterns On Exterior Walls to Keep Buildings Cooler During Heat Waves

    >“These two directions require different properties for cool walls,” says Qilong Cheng, a postdoctoral researcher at Purdue University who worked on the study as a graduate student at Columbia University. “So we have this two-surface zigzag design, with one surface facing the sky and the other facing the ground.”

    >The angles, looking a little like the sawtooth roofs of factory rooms, can shave 5.5° Fahrenheit off average indoor temperatures.

    >Radiation coming up from the ground is reduced or deflected by one material, while heat from the sun is reflected with ultra-white paint.

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    More info in the article

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    Homegrown Luffa Spounges 🛀🧼
  • @shalafi@lemmy.world , do you have any advice by any chance?

  • “The beginner's guide to hydroponic garden, plus DIY Containers and Homemade liquid nutrients”
  • Thanks for explaining! I don't have a 3D printer, but maybe someday I will work up to a setup like yours!

  • The world's most powerful tidal turbine - but can our grid handle it?
  • Thank you so much! You and that post answered my questions perfectly

  • The world's most powerful tidal turbine - but can our grid handle it?

    Does anyone know about the environmental impact of these? I sometimes hear about boat propellers hurting wildlife, so what about these?

    I’m almost an 11h drive from the nearest coast, so this is not an area of knowledge I am well versed in haha.

    4
    Wool Dryer Balls
  • Well for apartment buildings and empty balcony rules, yes, its the landlords.

    For the outdoor laundry, its bylaws. Basically what happens is nosy neighbors report you, then a bylaw officer comes by and tells you someone made a complaint. It's called a "Nuisance and unsightly premises bylaw."

  • Wool Dryer Balls
  • My town in Alberta, Canada. It actually used to be banned in a lot of Canada, like all of British Columbia, and Ontario. Old-fashioned people think it makes a neighborhoods look "trashy" and start going on about property value.

    It's sort of like how a huge amount of apartment buildings don't allow anything on balconies because it's "unsightly."

  • “The beginner's guide to hydroponic garden, plus DIY Containers and Homemade liquid nutrients”
  • Thanks for explaining that! Your system looks great(it is even cat approved).

    I am thinking of just starting with some leafy greens (like Swiss chard, kale, or spinach) on a budget, but there are so many different hydroponic builds it can get overwhelming haha. I will look more into the DWC system!

  • Wool Dryer Balls
  • Haha sadly, hanging your laundry outdoors is illegal here(also, it would freeze in winter), and indoors it takes forever to dry ╥﹏╥

  • Wool Dryer Balls
  • I could be wrong, but I believe pilling is most commonly caused by friction (for example, where your legs rub when you walk), so one thing that would help is not washing clothes that tend to pill with clothes that have hard things like zippers or buttons. The balls might help by cutting down on the time the clothes rub together with the air-gaps they create, but I am not sure.

    I have been told before that you can remove pilling with a razor, but please look it up before you try haha.

  • Eco concerns prompt greener funeral options ⚰️💚🌎
  • I like the idea of a wicker basket coffin with natural-fiber clothes....and an added sword just to confuse future archaeologists •ˋᴗˊ•

  • "Got a Pest Problem? Call the Quack Squad" 🦆
  • Haha! I think they just mean in comparison to chickens, which will even use their claws to scratch everything up while they forage, but your duck experience made me laugh. They sound like a handful of trouble.

  • Wool Dryer Balls

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    > (Image Source)

    100% wool dryer balls are growing in popularity to the point where I have even seen them at my local dollar store, and for good reason. They can save you money in laundry costs.

    If you are someone who uses dryer sheets, these wool balls are a great alternative that removes static from your clothes and can decrease drying time by around 30-50%. So, you save money by not having to buy dryer sheets, as well as on electricity. All you do is toss them into the dryer with your clothes!

    > "Per Toner, “Dryer balls excel in reducing drying time due to their ability to create space between clothes. This separation facilitates better air circulation, leading to faster drying and potential energy savings.” | bobvila

    I have had mine for many many years now, and they are still in great shape. When or if they do ever break down to the point of being unable to use, the wool is biodegradable.

    Just make sure that what you buy is 100% wool. If you are crafty (and have access to wool) you can also make your own fairly easily.

    https://youtu.be/de644Zwtnbg

    36
    Eco concerns prompt greener funeral options ⚰️💚🌎
    www.positive.news Thinking outside the box: eco concerns prompt greener funeral options - Positive News

    As more people seek climate-friendly funeral solutions, popular options include renting a flatpack coffin to reduce your carbon footprint

    Thinking outside the box: eco concerns prompt greener funeral options - Positive News

    ! !

    > Keeping a lid on your carbon footprint doesn’t stop with your last breath. Your choice of funeral can have a significant environmental impact. In a recent report by the US-based National Funeral Directors Association, 60.5% of those surveyed expressed their interest in greener options including resomation (water cremation) human composting and natural burials.

    https://www.positive.news/society/eco-concerns-prompt-green-funeral-options/

    I debated for a while on if I should post this or not (rather morbid, I know) but I think it's an important thing to think about.

    13
    “The beginner's guide to hydroponic garden, plus DIY Containers and Homemade liquid nutrients”

    For those of you who are doing hydroponics, what do you think of this system? Is it a good system for a beginner on a budget? Or is there a better system?

    6
    Digging Away Droughts
  • Thanks for letting me know! I’ll absolutely check it out right away

  • Digging Away Droughts

    Did you know that simply digging a slight ditch can completely change the health of a landscape?

    In modern landscaping, any sort of hole or ditch is considered a “dangerous tripping hazard,” “unsightly,” or “a waste of space,” so everything is smoothed out. If you go to most cities and farms, the only non-flat places are designed to carry water away from cities, rather than hold onto it.

    This thought process can not only increase overland flooding and wash away topsoil, but it also gives water no place to sit and be absorbed into the soil. Without any water capture gradually trickling into the soil and creating an underground reservoir, the landscape becomes less drought resistant and more susceptible to wildfires.

    The permaculture techniques to correct this have many names and methods, including:

    They might be different shapes and use slightly different methods, but they all do all work the same on a basic level. The idea is to dig or build a shape that will slowdown and/or catch some of the movement of water. This can make the soil more absorbent (dry and hardened soil does not absorb water as easily) which promotes healthy microbiome of the soil.

    Even if the water dries out visibly during the dry season, underground, they could be making a huge difference.

    !

    It is not new science, but instead something many cultures around the world have a long history with, but many modern farming practices(mostly to make it farming machine friendly) and development flatten everything out. If people changed this point of view, it could change our landscapes.

    In cities, they look like a slight ditch in front of a house, or a creek in a greenspace.

    ! !

    (Image Sources: Image 1 | Image 2)

    For other landscapes, it could be just slight indents in un-farmable areas, or ditches dug around farm perimeters.

    They do not have to be very deep, and often do not need any fancy equipment to dig(most just take a shovel), but they can do amazing things.

    In the process of reversing landscape desertification, it is proving drastically helpful. As the underground water reserves build, so does the vegetation.

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    (Image Source: Just Dig It. An example of demi-lunes / half-moons)

    More Info:

    • https://youtu.be/RPJ9T4yAEGs
    • https://youtu.be/CG4-u1q1x3Y
    22
    Vertical Greenery

    Greenery on walls can reduce a buildings heat loss by 30%, improve air quality, help absorb sounds, and can even reduce a cities temperature, so it is no wonder so many places are considering them.

    Here are two options I think are interesting:

    Vertical Meadows:

    ! !

    There is a bit of a terminology game here. Verticals gardens are sometimes found in wealthy office buildings, but they do nothing for local eco-systems and are often non-local tropical varieties of plants. Even for those found outside, the plants are often picked for appearance alone, instead of what would help local biodiversity.

    In comparison, vertical meadows have a different goal. Vertical meadows (started in London, England) are outdoor vertical greenery walls that uses locally-grown native and seasonal plants, ensuring year-round options for wildlife like pollinators and birds.

    The main problem with these setups is that they tend to require watering systems, which (even if rainwater collection is installed) can be rather costly.

    More Info:

    • https://youtu.be/Qyi_7HCVoPM
    • https://youtu.be/OXUYZdfqq1Q

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    Moss Walls:

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    Companies like Respyre use upcycled bioreceptive concrete and a moss coating encourage moss-growth on any vertical surface without risk of damaging the buildings. Other companies(such as Green City Solutions) grow panels of moss, which can then be installed like tiles.

    Due to moss being so inexpensive to incorporate, it is becoming a popular option.

    For added benefits, moss is drought tolerant to a point, and can absorb 6x more C02 than other plants. Moss is basically a living filter, and can even filter arsenic out of water.

    More info:

    • https://youtu.be/cE02cQIVSAs
    • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7tYG3MepUu0
    • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7tYG3MepUu0

    However, moss can be hard to grow commercially(mostly due to the fact that they release spores instead of seeds), so many of the mosses people buy, especially those used for craft supplies, are illegally poached from the wild. If a little is left behind, moss typically can regenerate, but many harvesters simply roll up huge blankets of moss, leaving nothing behind. It is estimated that the mosses can take 10-20 years to grow back.

    So, please research where the moss is sourced if you plan on buying any. If the company does not grow it themselves or does not mention where they source it, do not buy any.

    7
    "Got a Pest Problem? Call the Quack Squad" 🦆

    Vergenoegd Winery(South Africa) is handling pests using a unique solution; ducks. These ducks enable the winery to be pesticide-free.

    Video: https://youtu.be/H6Ehoxu9QY8

    The reason for this is that ducks love to eat all sorts of garden pests: including slugs, snails, mosquitoes, ants, and more.

    > "You may also be wondering: Why ducks and not chickens? While it’s true that chickens can help to keep bugs at a low in your garden, they also have a habit of being a little less delicate around garden plants than ducks do. Chickens love fresh greenery and will be more than happy to eat your homegrown lettuce, whereas ducks will focus less on your hard work and more on the bugs in your yard." | The Spruce

    Similarly to the winery, ducks are also often employed to help with rice paddies. The ducks not only help with pests and fertilization, but their paddling helps both aerate the water and kick up mud(the increased oxygen and decreased light can cut down on algae or weed growth).

    As an added benefit, the eggs and/or meat can be eaten. I know that will upset many of you but the added financial benefit of that is further incentivizing farmers to switch from herbicides and pesticides, to ducks.

    > "Another study done by Practical Action2 concluded that the duck-rice farming technology led to several socio-economic and environmental benefits. The ducks were introduced into the rice fields 10-20 days after rice was planted until the flowering stages. The study also found out that this form of farming was better in rice production than others as it led to decreased production costs, high yields achievement, had benefits for the environment and led to increased income. Further, it’s stated that 20% higher yields can be achieved with the use of this system, 50% increase in income can be achieved as well as enhanced food security through the consumption of duck meat." | Permaculture Research Institute

    Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K0ISdo-b7Lk

    !

    (Image Source)

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    Robot weed killers could create a sustainable future for agriculture | The Optimist Daily
  • I could be wrong, but I don’t think you can grow all plants in hydroponics. For example, anything that grows on trees(large root systems) as well as grain crops (where you need a lot of plants together, rather in individual pods like in most hydroponics).

    The only alternative I can think of is a greenhouse system. Like what indoor botanical gardens use for trees, but instead designed for farming. That would be expensive(more than farmers could afford), but it would also weather-protect crops.

    But you are right about hydroponics or aquaponics for a lot of produce, though!

  • reasonstobecheerful.world How Four Cities Are Cooling Down Creatively

    Cities around the world are trying everything from reflective paint to underground water channels to manage the hotter days ahead.

    How Four Cities Are Cooling Down Creatively

    I grabbed some quotes for those short on time. More details on everything are in the article.

    > In São Paulo’s favelas, low-income communities are building their own green roofs. These affordable vinyl sheet roofs were created by Teto Verde Favela, a nonprofit founded by local Luis Cassiano.

    > In place of traditional air-conditioning, Seville has turned to a 3,000-year-old solution. With the help of two scientists, the city in southern Spain is reviving a Middle Eastern technology: qanats, underground channels that transport water from higher to lower altitudes and drive the coolness upwards.

    > A simple approach to heat is helping Singapore address its urban heat challenges: painting buildings and other surfaces with reflective paint.

    > Munich’s climate-friendly cooling system utilizes natural energy from underground water streams. According to the city utility of Munich, Stadtwerke Muenchen (SWM), the use of these natural cold water streams has resulted in energy savings in the city of 70 percent compared to traditional cooling technology like air conditioning. Thanks to the city’s cooling system, more than 80,000 residents in Munich receive ecological energy.

    https://reasonstobecheerful.world/cities-cool-down-creatively/

    0

    >Herbicides have a long history of negative consequences. Glyphosate and paraquat, among other pollutants, are extremely harmful to human health and the environment. These pollutants impair soil quality and destroy beneficial organisms such as pollinators. Furthermore, the widespread use of herbicides has resulted in weed resistance, making chemical management less effective.

    >Kenny Lee, co-founder and CEO of Aigen Robotics, is personally committed to reducing pesticide use. Lee, a glyphosate-related non-Hodgkin lymphoma survivor, has collected $19 million for his startup to produce solar-powered weeding robots. “We’re on a personal mission,” Lee says, emphasizing their dedication to sustainable agriculture.

    15
    Behind the Accidentally Resilient Design of Athens Apartments
  • Interesting read! Thanks for sharing

  • Rethinking Apartment Buildings
  • Thanks for sharing! I will check if my library has it!

  • www.goodnewsnetwork.org Trees Reveal Climate Surprise: Bark Removes Methane from the Atmosphere

    The methane absorption was strongest in the tropical forests, probably because microbes thrive in the warm wet conditions found there.

    Trees Reveal Climate Surprise: Bark Removes Methane from the Atmosphere

    > It’s long been thought that soil is the only effective terrestrial methane sink, as certain microorganisms use methane as a food source, but similar creatures live under a tree’s layer of bark, meaning that not only do our woody cousins withdraw CO2 from the atmosphere and store it in their roots, but also remove methane as well, about as effectively or perhaps more so than soil.

    2
    Right To Repair + Repair Cafés 🛠️
  • As far as I know (I have never 3D printed), yes. I vaguely remember a guy who tows around a 3D printer on his bike into parks, and prints parts for people. It wouldn’t be instant(I’m guessing they tell the person to come back later), but it is possible. I’ll try to find the video haha.

    Keeping in mind I’ve never 3D printed, here are some sites that look promising.

    https://www.traceparts.com/en https://grabcad.com/library

    Also, I’ve seen tutorials for 3D printing on Instructables, and people sometimes give download files in the instructions.

    https://www.instructables.com/

  • Right To Repair + Repair Cafés 🛠️
  • This one doesn't list all of them, but it has some: https://www.repaircafe.org/en/visit/

  • Right To Repair + Repair Cafés 🛠️
  • This site might help with planning!

  • Right To Repair + Repair Cafés 🛠️

    RIGHT TO REPAIR

    A big fight is happening world-wide to push governments to ensure people can repair the products they own.

    > “The right to repair refers to proposed government legislation to forbid manufacturers from imposing barriers that deny consumers the ability to repair and modify their own consumer products.” | Wikipedia

    This is happening because of:

    • Planned Obsolescence: companies are purposely building their products to break faster, so you have to pay to replace them sooner.
    • Unfixable Products: some products will have their components soldered, glued, or riveted, to stop people from being able to repair.
    • Brand-Specific Parts: These parts may cost more than buying a new product. As well as that, some companies refuse to let independent repair technicians purchase their parts to try and force costumers to only use the product company for repairs.
    • Restrictive Programing. For these, the programs refuse to let you fix your own products (a large example of this happens to farm equipment, where farmers have to hack their own equipment if they want to repair on their own).

    More Info:

    • https://youtu.be/NWQ8y3TksrQ
    • https://youtu.be/wzWU7D0S9_8?feature=shared

    !

    REPAIR CAFES

    Repair cafes are typically community-run events where volunteers gather to fix the broken items of strangers for free. My town started doing it a long time ago, and it was so popular that it now happens several times a year.

    People bring in stand mixers, vacuums, computers, items that need sewing repairs, and more. Often, the person is very willing to explain the repairs as they do them.

    In other places, repair cafes have become more permanent. For example, in Austria, the government started paying those who repair.

    Repair cafes not only save people money, but they also can greatly reduce the amount of waste produced by saving those repaired items from the landfill.

    More Info on Repair Cafes:

    • https://youtu.be/6ZrnVobXWFQ
    23
    Food Forests 🌳

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    (Image Source)

    For food forests, you do what you can to use edible plant life to mimic the ecosystems of a wild forest.

    >“A food forest, also called a forest garden, is a diverse planting of edible plants that attempts to mimic the ecosystems and patterns found in nature.” | Project Food Forest

    If done right, this system will…

    • Promote a healthy soil microbiome
    • Increase carbon-capture (no-till)
    • Prevent erosion
    • Retain water

    And more.

    Personally, I suggest using as many perennials to your area as you can so you don't have to replant everything every year.

    Here are some perennial examples that are for my specific area:

    (⚠ means you may want to container garden them to prevent spread)

    • 🥬Lovage (celery alternative)
    • 🥗 Bloody Dock (chard alternative)
    • 🥗 Good King Henry (spinach alternative)
    • 🥔 Jerusalem Artichoke (root vegetable)
    • 🥗 Sea Kale
    • 🧅 Chives ⚠
    • 🥝Hardi-Kiwi
    • 🍓Wild strawberries
    • Raspberries ⚠
    • Wild blueberries
    • Red or Black Currants
    • Haskap/Honeyberries
    • 🍇Valiant or Bluebell Grapes
    • Rhubarb
    • Saskatoons
    • Pembina Plums
    • 🍒Evans (sour) cherries
    • Manchurian Apricots
    • 🍎 Hardi-Mac Apples

    More Info on Food Forests:

    • https://youtu.be/Q_m_0UPOzuI
    • https://youtu.be/6GJFL0MD9fc
    • https://youtu.be/mdi_9o92XcU
    1
    Trees Clean Water

    !

    Years ago, I took an online course on mountains, and one fact that stuck with me from it was about how people in the USA accidentally polluted the water in New York City by cutting down trees.

    It was the 1800s, and the trees in the Catskill Mountains were cut down to accommodate growing populations, and as a result, the water quality for New Yorkers deteriorated rapidly. Yes, the agriculture pollution and sewage did play a part, but the trees were decided to be such a big problem, that they decided something had to be done.

    So, they purchased land, and planted 18000 trees to restore the natural ecosystem.

    How does this water-cleaning work? With watersheds.

    > “Watershed: an area of high ground from which water flows down to a river” | Cambridge Dictionary

    Imagine it is raining in a forest. Droplets hit the ground, and —thanks to the vegetation which slows runoff — it is absorbed into the soil like a sponge. As the water moves through the soil, microbes are actively removing harmful pollutants, silt is filtered, and plants removing fertilizers.

    Some of the water will end up in our lakes and streams, but will be much cleaner than when it started.

    > "The ability of forests to aid in the filtration of water doesn’t only provide benefits to our health and the health of an ecosystem, but also to our pocketbooks. Forest cover has been directly linked to drinking water treatment costs, so the more forest in a source water watershed, the lower the cost to treat that water. Forests provide these benefits by filtering sediments and other pollutants from the water in the soil before it reaches a water source, such as a stream, lake or river." | American Forests

    Since this intake and outtake of water is gradual, removal of these forests can even to lead to a higher chance of both droughts and floods.

    More Info:

    • https://youtu.be/QOrVotzBNto
    • https://youtu.be/OfqOOqz0RhU
    0
    Two Front Doors

    Have you ever wondered why so many large chain stores have two sets of doors? No, it is not just to store shopping carts.

    Where I live, any home that is around 100 years old (that hasn't seen any renovations) will very likely have two front doors. Putting it simply, you open one door, step into a small space, and there will be another door in front of you.

    ! !

    (Image Sources: Image 1 | Image 2)

    The space goes by many names, including: arctic entry, mud room, breeze room, vestibule, airlock, foyer, and more. For sake of simplicity, I am going to call them "entry vestibules."

    Entry vestibules create a buffer between the outside and the inside of the building, preventing drafts. This can help greatly with temperature regulation in both the winter cold and summer heat. I can't find number details on energy saving, but the fact that large chains still build them may hint of their importance for money-saving.

    In homes, this space also typically serves as the mud room ( a place for shoes and jackets).

    In the name of "first impressions," and open concept designs, vestibules are often the first thing to go during renovations, and I think that's a real shame.

    33
    Living Root Bridges

    ! !

    Have you heard of the beautiful living root bridges in Meghalaya, India? Their construction is a lesson in patience as the roots are gradually encouraged to grow in the supportive shape. They need regular care, but grow stronger with age.

    >“Once a bamboo structure has been stretched across the river, the roots of the tree, usually the rubber tree (Ficus elastica), are teased and manipulated to become entwined with the bamboo until it becomes a strong mesh. > The roots are allowed to grow gradually and strengthen over time. In the initial stages, only about 15-20 people can cross the bridge in a day. Much later, it can be as many as 50 or more, although it can take up to two decades for a living roots bridge to be finished.” | The Guardian

    Once done, the bridges can have a lifespan of several hundred years; far outliving the original creators of them.

    It is unknown when this tradition started, but they were written about in 1844, so it would be far earlier than that.

    I just thought people on here might find this tradition as fascinating as I do.

    More Info:

    • https://youtu.be/1H0qTm7wNjk
    5
    Wildlife Conservation and Protection @slrpnk.net Blair @slrpnk.net
    Beavers Protect Landscapes 🦫

    Here in Canada, beavers are often not thought of in a kind light. Yes, tourist shops sell beaver merchandise, and one of our coins even has a beaver on it, but among locals, they do not have the best reputation.

    Beavers to many are considered a pest. They clog storm drains, cut down forests, and flood farmland.

    To make them seem even more frightening, sometimes their work on building dams goes for generations. The worlds biggest beaver dam (in Wood Buffalo National Park, Alberta, Canada) is so large, it can even be seen from space.

    However, they don’t really deserve the bad reputation they are getting. Here are just some of the reasons why to love beavers.

    !

    1. They help local wildlife

    When a beaver builds a dam, it does restrict the flow of water, but it does not stop the flow completely. This creates havens for fish and other wildlife.

    > “The study found that in the pools created by beaver dams there were 37 percent more fish than in comparable stretches of the river where there were no dams.” | BBC from this article

    !

    2. They can help with flooding

    The common perception is that beavers cause flooding, and in a way, that is true. They create a dam, and that dam waterlogs habitats on a small scale. However, on a larger scale, those dams can help slow the flow of water in a network of channels, which reduces the chance of damage for people living down stream during floods.

    > The dams have slowed the flow of floodwater through the village, reducing “peak flows” during flood events. | The Guardian

    !

    3. They can help with droughts

    Thanks to the holding of water, they can create reserves of water that can last even after every other source in the area goes dry. As well as that, slowing down the water gives the surrounding soil a better chance at absorbing the water.

    > “Beaver can help lessen the effects of drought because they cause water to be stored on the surface and absorbed into the sub-surface of the land due to the impoundment of water by their dams. This can increase stream flow during drought periods and make ecosystems less vulnerable during dry periods." | Parks Canada

    !

    4. They improve water quality

    Thanks to "beaver fever," it is commonly thought that beavers dirty the water and make it undrinkable. Beaver fever is a parasitic infection of the digestive system that you can get from drinking contaminated water, eating raw meat, or even changing diapers.

    So, no, it is not only restricted to beavers, but it ended up being called that here after some hikers made the poor decision of drinking from a contaminated stream in Banff National Park(Alberta, Canada).

    Yes, drinking untreated stream water is never a good idea, but no, beavers are not all to blame for making water less drinkable. In fact, they help remove some harmful pollutants.

    > “Beaver dams and pools reduce soil erosion and retain sediment, which absorb and filter pollutants such as heavy metals, pesticides, and fertilizers. This improves the quality of water downstream used by humans and other species.” | Parks Canada

    !

    5. They help limit the impacts of forest fires

    When a beaver makes a dam, it is not just the pool that sees the benefit, but also all the earth around it. While the water does trickle down stream, it also enters the earth in an underground network, moistening the area. This creates a lush green environment that is more protected from fires.

    > When a fire ignites, that green vegetation near the beaver ponds will be more difficult to burn than other nearby dry vegetation. The fire will often take the path of least resistance and burn through the dry vegetation away from beaver ponds instead of smoldering through the wet vegetation near beaver ponds. | Emily Fairfax, PH.D

    ! > Figure from Fairfax, E. and Whittle, A. (2020),

    !

    More Info:

    • https://youtu.be/sdkZH3uM1BI
    • https://youtu.be/FR-5F9x-fmo
    • https://youtu.be/RAHvrLNe5K4
    0
    “Japan's Tiny Forests are Thriving in Britain - here's why”

    > A good place to start learning more about Miyawaki Method https://www.sugiproject.com/blog/the-miyawaki-method-for-creating-forests https://earthwatch.org.uk/program/tiny-forest/

    2
    Blair Blair @slrpnk.net

    I am not the bravest person when it comes so socializing, so I am not very forum-savvy. However, I am a nerd who loves to learn and I am going to do my best to share what I learn just in case it helps you all. ᕦ(ò_óˇ)ᕤ

    Posts 60
    Comments 82