Tuesday, May 25, 2010

BostonSkillShare!!

If you happen to be in the Boston area this weekend you should attend the boston skillshare. This is a two day event, running saturday and sunday, with a sliding donation entry fee.
you can learn about new skills such as basic auto-mechanics, how to date lesbians, how to find edible wild plants, how to avoid GMO and additive filled foods, how to do home tattoos, how to network, how to navigate the Mass. Health system, how to embroider, dance lessons, growing heirloom seeds, neo-luddism, etc.

this is an excellent opportunity for us all to learn from one another and acquire new skills and knowledge.
Come if you can!!!!!

click on the link above for more specific info

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Filter your own water

Drinking Water: One of the things we take heavily for granted. But do we know how to filter our own water? We rely on a water system that is completely beyond our control. We are lucky if we know where it originates from, let alone what contaminants are present, or how the water is treated, before it comes out of our faucets.
Recently, high levels of nitrates have been found in California drinking water, a result of waste water treatment systems and farm fertilizers contaminating ground water. Intake of nitrates in large amounts have been known to cause "blue baby syndrome" which causes an infants oxygen supply to be cut off. In addition, high levels of nitrates have been linked to certain forms of cancer. Those who live in agricultural areas are more susceptible to a high intake of nitrates, as fertilizers seep into the ground water, and contaminate both municipal water supplies and private wells. While some larger communities have been able to filter nitrates from their drinking water, for the most part, this contaminate spreads unchecked to an increasingly large number of communities throughout California due to lax water filtering regulations.
A few weeks earlier, in Massachusetts, a main water pipeline broke, releasing millions of gallons of water into the Charles river. roughly 30 towns and cities were affected by this leak, causing millions of people to boil their water, as completely unfiltered water ran from their taps. Drinking unfiltered and untreated water would result in diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, and headaches, or worse for those with compromised immune systems. This water leak lasted only four days, long enough for bottled water to become a scarcity, and drinking water a precious commodity (this lasted only four days too).
Putting aside other recent events involving contaminated bodies of salt water, this was enough to convince me that we cannot rely on the powers that be to deliver us with our means of survival. As our nation begins to lack the means of supplying large amounts of safe water to every community, we should take our own initiative to learn how to filter our own water, should we ever need to.
Filtering your water is fairly easy, and requires few supplies, many of which can be found in nature (such as sand and gravel). Knowing how to filter your own water, therefore is not only a handy skill should your water supply become contaminated, but is also great to know for camping purposes, and purifying fresh running water.
You can make a complete filtration system with a variety of supplies. Basically you need two containers (one on top of the other), the top one to hold the dirty water, and the bottom one to hold the filtered water. There is a small hole in the top container which drains the dirty water into the bottom container. In the bottom container are layers of filtering substances, such as charcoal, sand, grit, cotton, fibrous materials, and rocks. These materials should be layered from the coarsest materials to the finest, and then a layer of coarse rocks at the bottom. From the bottom of this bucket a pipe or tube should run out. This acts as a spigot from which clean filtered water will flow.
It might also be a good idea to boil this water, in addition to filtering out any sediment or large matter. This will kill any existing bacteria that were not filtered out by the charcoal.
Follow the link for a more exact, technical explanation of how to filter your own water. It may help you someday, when our current water system cannot.

Economic collapse?

Dmitry Orlov has unique insight into the nature of our political and economic systems. He spent much of his childhood in the Soviet Union during the collapse, but has also lived in the United States, and traveled widely. His familiarity with both Soviet and American economics, politics, and culture has allowed him to provide us with a warning of the possibilities of a soviet style collapse in the near American future.
Our resources are dwindling, our "free economy" is faltering, our monetary system is weak and bloated, yet we keep treading on the same path towards our own eminent destruction. We all want "change", but we don't want our lifestyles to change. The reality of it, though, is that oil, water, gas, electricity, food, necessities, etc. do NOT exist in infinite availability, and never will. We need to adjust our lifestyles to fit our available resources now, or we will be forced to later, as our society as we know it, runs itself into the ground.
Orlov discusses in his essay "Thriving in the Age of Collapse" what he imagines to be plausible scenarios for individuals in American society, should we collapse in a similar manner to the Soviet Union. While things may or may not play out the way he describes, Orlov's instructions on survival, post collapse serve as good advice for us (collectively), who up until now have relied so heavily on credit, debt, consumerism and the federal government.
It would serve us all well to reassess our skills, and how they would assist us, should our money, our professions, our appliances and possessions, no longer mean anything. Perhaps we should all be learning new skills, should modern society fail us.
We live in a nation of false optimism. Nations have fallen before and picked themselves back up. We are no exception. We cannot constantly gain, constantly expand, constantly profit. If not now, then later, but some day we will reap what we have sown. If we are lucky, we will be prepared, and will adapt well to the changes, whatever they may be, but should we continue to ignore what is in front of our face, we will pay the consequences.