Kaffeburk

joined 2 years ago
[–] Kaffeburk@lemmy.world 8 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Is this hobby you want to start actually something you find fun or something you think you’d enjoy if you were the person you think you are?

My tricks to get going; Talk to people about it, this gives me external accountability. It then becomes ”I said I was gonna do it” and I don’t want to be someone who just talks shit. Or the person joins the activity and that makes it much harder to skip.

Think about the end goal or find a critical point. If i want to be a hobby farmer, i need to do the boring part of soil prep. Otherwise summer comes and Ill again be a shit talker. If i don’t sow these seeds now, theres nothing to farm later.

Prepare a work station and leave stuff out; In place and in the way. I make little specialised toolboxes or work stations. Its about lowering the barrier to getting started.

Simplify your ideas. You don’t need to see A-Z. Just reaching B can change circumstances and create inspiration. I employ ”donkey mode” by briefly considering the consequence of doing a bad job, how poorly others have done it but still succeeding, and repeat the mantra donkey mode donkey mode. I can deal with the consequence of my poor labour after the fact. Someone already made it worse than I did.

If things feel insurmountable; just focus on a small thing. I have many projects running in parallel and taking just a single step forward is great. When all the pieces are in place: execute. Dig that damn garden, don’t worry what gets planted.

And don’t be afraid to cut projects loose or shelve them. Having an infinite todo list where hobbies usually get knocked down, prevents the brain from feeling ”done and settled”, which keeps me from getting into something fun.

Cheers and good luck ✌️

 

Currently typing with bandaids on both thumbs so please excuse typos and missedspaces.

Did some mechanic work a few days ago and forgot gloves. I washed with a nail brush and dishsoap as always but Now im suffering from both thumbs being inflamed and sore emanating from where thenail meets the thumb. I tried sucking and scraping to clean and cut the nails as short as i can. My usual trick is to scrape hard soap in under the nail before scrubbing, which works really well most time, but no cleaning method has worked this time. I can just barely see some black at the deepest part which i assume is engine oil. I dont think its some metal shard, since its both thumbs, didnt grind anything and usually splinters hiding spots can be pin-pointed by pushing on it but idk for sure. Also no pus leaking.

How do i get it out??? 😭 Whats your secret to dealing with inflammation?

Im thinking either some hydrogen peroxide cream on bandaids or moist gloves to soak in to loosen things up before trying to get whatever gunk is still there. I usually heal very fast, two other cuts from the same time are healing well and fast.

Idk anymore and its really frustrating…

Wishing you a good day and happythumbs!

[–] Kaffeburk@lemmy.world 0 points 3 weeks ago

Just added new pictures!

[–] Kaffeburk@lemmy.world 0 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Not yet! Its been growing like crazy

 

Hi! Since liquid soap is so cheap I want to cheap out by making it cheaper. I pretty much always dilute it which extends its life but the resulting runniness lead to some soap escaping the hand washing my money straight down the sink.

This pain is unbearable and I’m thinking to add a little bit of corn or potato starch, agar or some such from the pantry to increase the viscosity How bad of an idea is this? I figure soap doesn’t really allow for microbe life and starch tends to be quite anti microbial. Same goes for dish soap. The soap is dumpstered so switching to hard soap isn’t cheaper and I haven’t found a foaming dispenser in the trash (yet). But soap is rare in the trash so I want to make last. Alternatively anyone know if a a regular pump can be made foaming or have other creative solutions?

[–] Kaffeburk@lemmy.world 0 points 1 month ago (4 children)

I would be delightfully surprised if asparagus showed up but its doubtful since this was just gravel and shrubbery two years ago. It started to open its top leafs so will take new photos tomorrow. Hopefully this mystery can be solved soon.

 

Hello! Does anyone here make their own soil mixtures without purchased materials? If you look for home made soil, its usually just a mix of bought ingredients like peat moss, coco coir, perlite etc. Peat moss is fossil, coco coir and perlite is certainly not from around here so definitely transported long ways.

Now, I’m no gardener but I can see that all the native plants around me don’t have any of that luxury, yet they thrive. Compost is the next obvious answer, but if you haven’t yet had time to establish one, what options are there?

I’ve successfully grown plants like tomatoes, strawberries, herbs and salad in a mix of gravel, local manure, topsoil and rotted wood.

I am looking for recipes and information on such mixes as I often struggle with drainage which killed my cucumbers. I need huge amounts of gravel to keep the silty manure from clogging up my pots but 3kg pots become quite silly too and the gravel makes repotting an almost sure death to any roots I want to move.

What are the consequences of using uncomposted organic materials? Some gardeners say soil acidity usually solves itself through microbes, yet the common saying is that it must be composted first.

Happy gardening Cheers

[–] Kaffeburk@lemmy.world 0 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Yea the colours aren’t there either. It did prompt me to pot some ginger in my kitchen tho :)

1
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by Kaffeburk@lemmy.world to c/plantid@mander.xyz
 

Month later pictures added! I recognise it but no idea what its called and Plantnet didn’t find it

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/45800580

Little sprout

Coming up in my garden right next to some forest (primarily oak mixed with beech, birch, maple) in southwest Sweden. Last year i dug the area out and removed (most) roots. Not much came up but this little sprout. I suppose it could be roots reaching in from the adjacent forest.

[–] Kaffeburk@lemmy.world 0 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Edit to add; i think i found something very akin to what I’m looking for. Dynamic accumulators is the new word of the week!

https://buildasoil.com/a/blog/9813606-free-spreadsheet-list-of-dynamic-accumulators-and-nutrient-content

I found some further information in pdf form. Still hoping to find some dense spreadsheet that can come along easier than a booklet tho.

Not vetted or even fully read the links yet just posting if others are curious. https://www.sare.org/wp-content/uploads/Compost-Tea-Manual.pdf

https://dn721502.ca.archive.org/0/items/the-book-of-tea_202508/The%20Compost%20Tea%20Brewing%20Manual.pdf

[–] Kaffeburk@lemmy.world 0 points 1 month ago

Thank you! By what I saw before I got served an ad I will enjoy this content (on my pc with adblock) I just suck at remembering and confidently executing all the various dos and donts from videos I’ve seen over the ye. Which is why I’m holding out hope someone compiled the mega spreadsheet of goodness. Maybe there’s a wiki out there waiting to be found.. too bad searching is impossible.

 

Hoping to find some resources for concoctions to brew for my garden. Nettle water is the classic, but there’s a lot of other options.

Does anyone know of a good resource listing what plants to brew for what nutrients? Or am i overthinking it and should just throw them together?

Generally calling out for pdfs and spreadsheets with dense information regarding what plants want and/or contain which nutrients.

 

Hello! Hope its okay to ask some questions here. I read you’re supposed to trim away the earliest sprouts on hops, as they’re usually bull bines. Bull bines are recognised by their large spacing between nodes as well as being hollow inside. These don’t look hollow to me and the nodes are rather tightly spaced I think. Should still cut them down?

1
Little sprout (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by Kaffeburk@lemmy.world to c/whatisthisthing@lemmy.world
 

Few weeks edit; new pictures attached. I recognise it but plantnet didn't seem very confident

Coming up in my garden right next to some forest (primarily oak mixed with beech, birch, maple) in southwest Sweden. Last year i dug the area out and removed (most) roots. Not much came up but this little sprout. I suppose it could be roots reaching in from the adjacent forest.

[–] Kaffeburk@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago (1 children)

There seems to be a javascript that loads from cloudfront with a url redirect thing. Also loads tonnes of third party cookies Sadly no adblock on ios :(

[–] Kaffeburk@lemmy.world 4 points 3 months ago

It seems normal for me on pc too but not on mobile. Also noticed this

[–] Kaffeburk@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (5 children)

Did you press it or any other link on the page? They show as girhub for me too but it actually takes you elsewhere

Edit: just tried on pc and it goes to github. But firefox and safari on iphone doesn’t

This one is nsfw

Tap for spoiler

[–] Kaffeburk@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago

Idk it its recent but the photogimp dot com link is rouge and directs you to spam. I believe this is the real one https://github.com/Diolinux/PhotoGIMP

[–] Kaffeburk@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Idk it its new but the photgimp dot com link is rouge and directs you to spam. I believe this is the real one https://github.com/Diolinux/PhotoGIMP

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