A place to chat about how your summer has gone, and what you’ve been up to.

Mine’s been great. 3 vacations this summer, mostly just visiting family and making up for lost time for when I worked way, way, more, and everything was on hold all the time. Gone from just surviving to thriving the past two years.

Got to make a couple sets of good friends down the street, as our young neighbourhood starts to connect, and form a community. It’s pretty exciting.

Hope things are going well for the rest of you.

TS

  • tofu berserker (he/they)@slrpnk.net
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    1 year ago

    it’s been pretty decent here, though breathtakingly hot in the western Colorado high desert. i’ve been forced to confront my own laziness, though, which is less fun! my wife and i bought a house last year and i have all of these amazing, awesome, but also labor-intensive ideas about how to green it and solarpunk it up, and several of these ideas have just fizzled.

    that said, i have at least installed gutters and rain barrels to irrigate our garden(s), which is good… i just haven’t actually made a garden yet. oops! we do have two pounds of native cover crop seeds that we’re going to sow at the beginning of September to start healing our rough, uncared-for dirt yard.

    i’ve found a lot of joy in setting up bird feeders, too - we have seven now, all sourced locally via Buy Nothing or my mom’s cast-offs. there were almost no birds here in September last year, and now we have an absolute ton. our elderly neighbors across the street also have a lot of feeders, so we will be keeping the birds happy through the winter too.

    i started commuting by ebike in April and have really enjoyed that. i don’t know how much of an impact that really makes but it feels good, so i’ll take it.

    finally, my wife and i were able to take a vacation to Great Basin National Park in eastern Nevada. it’s relatively near to us and is also one of the least-visited national parks not in Alaska. we got to hike to groves of 3000+ year-old Bristlecone pines and past that to a snowfield below a glacier. experiencing a snowfield in Nevada in August was not something i expected!

    thanks for asking. hope the fall treats us well, collectively, and may we all grow towards liberation.

    • poVoq@slrpnk.netM
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      1 year ago

      i’ve been forced to confront my own laziness

      I feel your pain. Earlier this year I started putting a transparent roof on an enclosed place that would work well as a small plant nursery, but I never actually finished it and putting it now would just mean even more watering of the tomato plants in the same place. I just really need to finish it before the winter 😒

    • Track_Shovel@slrpnk.netOP
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      1 year ago

      that said, i have at least installed gutters and rain barrels to irrigate our garden(s), which is good… i just haven’t actually made a garden yet. oops! we do have two pounds of native cover crop seeds that we’re going to sow at the beginning of September to start healing our rough, uncared-for dirt yard

      I’d suggest doing some decompaction (if needed, and assuming you don’t have topsoil), before you seed. Add any compost or amendments you’ve got on hand (if any) too, and mix them in. as an aside, alders are super tough, and nitrogen fixing, and drop a ton of biomass (organic matter). Not sure what your objective is, but you could consider them, assuming you don’t mind taller shrubs.

      Great basin sounds cool! I’d love to see birtsle cones!