Wednesday 21 October 2020

#Composting With House #Plants



With all the green smoothies I've been chugging recently, I've been generating a fair bit of compostable matter.  Mostly this goes over to my allotment, but from time to time, when I've accumulated a couple of days' worth and haven't had time to nip over there, I bury some of it among my house plants.  So far I've noticed no negative effects and, I like to think the long term effects on the plants will be positive.  Here's what I do.


I dig a hole in the corner of the planter and remove the excess soil.  Then I fill the hole with fruit and vegetable scraps - and anything else in need of composting - and cover the hole back up with some of the excess soil.


Like nothing ever happened.

I keep the scraps as far away from any obvious roots as I can - since it seems better for the roots to be digging into the soil itself, and not the as yet un-composted matter - by digging deep and into the corner of the planter.  It's not something I do often, since I don't want to overwhelm the natural processes at work beneath the surface or disturb the balance of nutrients that have kept the plant healthy up to now; but it's something I can do repeatedly, say every few months or so.  Choose a different corner next time, and repeat in that fashion.

This leaves you with several small plant pots left off new compost mix, into which you can plant...more plants!  Win.











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Friday 16 October 2020

Surfing the #Automation Sea



ifttt.com threw a spanner in the works of the "no code" integration world this month by launching its new "pro" service, relegating all users who don't sign up by 31st October to an allowance of a meager 3 applets each.  Feelings on this development have been mixed.  Some are "happy" to pay for the service; many others are not.  (The original deadline of earlier in October has already been extended, suggesting lack of enthusiasm).  I've had - well, let's just say more than three - applets happily automating various aspects of my digital life (about half of them relating directly to this blog) for years and don't really like the idea of paying for privilege I was previously enjoying at no cost, which means that workarounds have had to be found.

Integromat seems to be one of the options standing out from the pack, and I used it to set up a link between Blogger, to an Airtable base, to my Facebook page for this blog.  With the recent launch of Airtable automations I could in turn trigger some new tweets to my various accounts: creation of a new blog post creates a record in the Airtable base, which fires the automation linked to twitter.  I strongly suspect that Airtable, fast becoming the daddy of the no/low code universe, will continue to develop to fill the gap in the market left by ifttt's strange move.  (Airtable automations, although not its other apps, are available on free accounts).

Another strong competitor is Zapier which is as functional and intuitive as Integromat, but also has limits on the number of integrations/operations allowed by free account holders: five, in Zapier's case.  I've used it to link to Tumblr and Evernote processes, but that's about it.  dvlr.it is also worth a mention, but not much more.

There's something of a "wild west" feeling to the competition that exists between providers of integration services at the moment, and it's going to be interesting to see the direction things take.  I'm a strong believer in Airtable, myself, since it's repositioning itself as a whole "develop your own software" platform, of which app integration is only one small part, and it's already doing that as well if not better than the likes of Zapier et al.  Interesting times.






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Tuesday 13 October 2020

Bidirectional Note Taking



In nature there are no boxes.  More specifically, and also more metaphorically; in your brain, there are no boxes, either.  Nothing you can think, or ever could, is unrelated to anything else you ever thought, or will.  So while outside of your brain, you may have something you need to take note of, there'll always be the question of where to keep that note for future reference, inside your brain no such problem exists. The note doesn't go into a box, it becomes part of the web.  (The web that is your brain; the brain that is your you).

One of the petty frustrations that pervades my working life is a total lack of organisation viz. the way information is processed and stored.  I'm sure this isn't unique to my employer, and is probably commonplace.  Wherever any kind of filing system is used (and particularly when that system collaborative, not just personal) unless the conventions by which what information goes into what file are clearly, objectively defined, the whole thing becomes an unnavigable labyrinth almost immediately.  

In the simplest terms, imagine you send me an important picture, and ask me to file it away for future reference:


Imagine I have a file structure on my network that looks like this:

C:/Main
        /Cats
        /Animals
        /Pictures
               /Animal pictures
        /Things that are cute
        /Email attachments

Where do I file this important picture?  It could go in any one of these subfolders.  So how to decide which one?  There is no answer to this question.  So I just have to pick one.  Looking for the file, two months later, you could just run a search of C:/ - but by now the drive is bloated and improperly formatted, with no indexing or defragmentation procedures, so the search takes forever, which you do not have.  And all you need is that picture of a kitten someone else sent someone else two months ago.  You need it now for the important meeting, because it's an important picture that's relevant to this important meeting.  Nothing is in C:/Main except the subfolders themselves.  So you look in /Pictures.  Thousands of pictures, but not the one you're looking for.  Ah - there's a subfolder for "animal pictures"...but it's not there either.  That folder is totally empty for some reason.  Somebody created it at some point, but it's not clear who, or when.

So maybe it's in /Things that are cute.  But you haven't been given access rights to this folder, so you no way of knowing.  Unlikely to be there anyway, since you don't find kittens cute.  You find them disgusting.  But the file is nowhere else to be found, so you go the meeting unprepared.  Pointless stress pervades your afternoon.

Why is this experience so commonplace, and why is it so annoying?  I don't think it's only because it is commonplace that it's annoying, though that's a factor.  A deeper aspect of the problem is that this isn't how brains work.  In your brain there are no boxes.  And no arbitrary systems either.

This, as I understand it, is the power and intuitive appeal of bidirectional note taking; a new feature of many a fledgling note-taking app, from Roam, apparently the grandaddy - which already has its own "cult", cf. #roamcult - to the all singing, all dancing Notion to a swath of (sometimes) free imitators and alternatives.

Bidirectional note taking works like this.  You make a note, and give it a title.  In the course of making that note, you realise you need to refer to an existing note.  So you create a link on the fly to that note - as with OneNote's "double bracket" function, for example; if the note already exists, you now have a link to it; and if it doesn't, one is created to a new page - and that's all very nice and useful.  With a bidirectional note taking - lacking in the bells and whistles software of the likes of OneNote or Evernote - the new note you have just created/linked to, is cross-referenced back with the note you're taking now.  Over time, you spin a web of notes.  Which means as you're looking back through them, connections made at the time are immediately to hand, and new connections can be made.  It's a very simple step forward in software terms, but a giant leap in terms of allowing your digital information universe cohere with your organic one.

I'm using Relanote - both for work and pleasure - to build my web.  It's free and feature-lite, but has everything I need for jotting down quick nuggets of information, and connecting them with the chaos of everything else that's already going on in my mind and life.  One lovely feature is the visual "graph" of all the bidrectional connections you've made in your notes, which can be navigated (and filtered, by tag or category) easily, allowing you to jump into the labyrinth at any point and out again.

Day 4 inside my head

I'm a sucker for personal "efficiency" apps anyway, but using Relanote - and internalising the concept of bidirectional note taking in general - has been a stonkingly stimulating experience, one I highly recommend.  I think this could be the beginning of something really quite important.  Not as important as a kitten, but close.








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Monday 12 October 2020

#permaculture - The Wonder of Cardboard



If you ever have any cardboard to get rid of, you should either A, feed it to your garden or allotment as explained below or B, give it to me to do the same.

I use it on the allotment for two things: making compost, and suppressing weeds.  This morning I'd reminded myself to head down there with armfuls of compost for some strategic winter work.  Here it is delineating the space between my golden marjoram on one side, and kale and thyme on the other. 


Here it is claiming some space for next year's peas:


What happens you see, is as it rains and time passes, the cardboard mulches down into soil, blocking seeds from taking root and weeds from spreading.  This is even better if, through the autumn, you dump some fallen leaves on top, and perhaps some comfrey or other green mulch.  (This is what no-dig gardening is all about).

These facts are what also makes cardboard a great compost ingredient.  As "brown matter" it's an essential ingredient in combination with "green matter" for a healthy and nutritious compost.  As winter sets in and I harvest the remaining edible plants of the year, I'm squirrelling away cardboard to mulch in their place.  One year feeds the next.






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The Art of Pottering
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Sunday 11 October 2020

Winter Weight Loss Warmer



I've been on a bit of weight loss kick this week (this month, in fact, looking back).  The centrepiece is a basic "fat burning soup" I found some years ago in a diet for people who've just had heart surgery, so it's fairly radical.  I've adapted it because, A, it's not vegan; and B, I haven't recently had heart surgery.  I've just been feeling like I need to lose weight.  This was something that happened quite naturally when I went vegan (nearly six years ago now) but for whatever reason (too many crisps, probably) I put it back on again.  

Anyway, day four or five, I recall, revolved around eating a lot of steak - but most days are fresh fruit and veg-based.  On day one, you eat only fruit; day two, only vegetables; and day three, fruit and vegetables.  Easy to do if you're already vegan.  And it's all backed up by the soup, whose ingredients are as follows just celery, onions, cabbage, carrots, and tinned tomatoes.

That may not sound very appealing, but it's surprisingly yummy.  There's no reason you can't adapt it to suit your own tastes though - I've been adding pinches of my herb salts and various other goodies, like turmeric, the anti-inflammatory wonder-spice and other things as the mood takes me: courgettes, mushrooms, spinach.


It's great slow cooker fodder, too.  One claim made by the diet, as memory serves, was that the more of the soup you eat, the more weight you will lose.  This was borne out by own experience.  So it's handy to have your slow cooker on the go through the day (or night) to keep yourself in a steady supply of hot soup for whenever hunger strikes.  And so it serves as a new incarnation of my never-ending soup idea from a few years back.  Good ideas coming back around again.







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Permanent Clipboard: A very useful Chrome extension



As part of a re-evaluation of my attitude to various things (more of which later) I'm toying with branching out on this blog to incorporate more topics: one of which is tech-related issues, large and small.  Starting with the small.

Permanent Clipboard is a Google Chrome extension that saves you the bother of having to find text you frequently need to copy and paste from other sources by allowing you to save multiple options that can be pasted straight from the context menu.  Once you've added the extension (and it works just as well in Edge, as Chrome extensions generally do).  I use it for adding headers and footers to my blog posts - since I've been going back through the archive and changing the posts from the last few years to include the various links to my social media accounts and make sure the Adsense settings are as they should be.  You can save large chunks of text, and html or other bits of code works just as well.  All you need to do then is right-click and select your ready-made option from the new "Paste" menu:


To add some new text to the clipboard, just highlight and right-click again, and select "Copy", and it'll appear in your list from then on.  Nice.







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Prayer Plant Love




I've  messed with my prayer plant far too much over the last few years, and I've only myself to blame.  Plants are patient; I am not.  So, while I hoped by now to have a whole family of them, I have only one.

 


Still, it's  a healthy specimen - it wasn't,  four months ago, believe you me - and that's due entirely to its own efforts, and to my leaving it alone. That's today's lesson, friends: leave plants alone.  Water them when they're dry, using the "finger method" of sticking your index finger into the soil about 2 inches deep and only if feels dry all the way down, adding any more water; look up some information about what sort of light and heat levels they prefer, and position accordingly - and that's it.  (Prayer Plands prefer indirect sunlight and ordinary room temperature). Wait for them to really establish themselves before attempting any propagation.  They'll thank you for it in the long run.





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