We've done some vegetable gardening over the years, as our father did when we were young. In our last stronghold, the trees were nice, but they blocked the sun. The new place, better exposed, makes the gardening that much more fun. We built a large frame box on the lawn and grew spinach on and on, Cherry tomatoes (weeds! they are!), Japanese cucumbers (production improved when fenced from squirrels), thai chilipeppers (damn hot!), and shiso. Always shiso! Aka Perilla. Aka Beefsteak Plant.
The green onions and carrots survived over winter when we abandoned the garden to the elements. Come Spring, we remember the garden and go find giant green onions and weirdly shaped carrots!
Green onions are great. Cut the bottoms off store bought ones, stick them in the dirt and they grow. Grow, harvest, cut and repeat. Dump a pack of seeds in planter and a million of 'em will rise. Carrots are hardy too, but grow forever till a decent size. We've read they grow well in poor soil.

e have many alchemists and
magisters in our kingdome. They paint stars and moons on their
conical caps. Is it for magic, or are they watching the sky?
"Watcher of the Skies, what do you watch?"
At the Maker Faire, we heard a tale incredible and tempting!
At the Chabot Space and Science Center in Oak's Lande, as darkness falls they meet once per Freitag, and hold forth on the ways of polishing a rough glass into a Telescope by hande! Those brave enough to take up the quest can tinker even up to a 20" sky watcher that would normally cost many thousands of Coine of the Realm, all for a much lesser expense in materiele and a much time spent polishing a lens!
Me thinks his Majesty will commend us to join the Lensmen's guild!

here
are the artisans? The die makers? The lathers and punch pressers?
Men who built radios and overhauled their own engines?
Who arc welded or hammered copper sculptures in their spare time?
My country saw the fading of a once great manufacturing economy. My family was directly involved in the factory boom after World War II. I grew up around my Uncle's metal stamping factory. That factory is gone.
Service and Info economies are the new thing. Information Services are transferred at the speed of light.
But something was lost. To manufacture is to have a hidden asset: knowledge, tools, and exposure to the possibilities.
When a country outsources its manufacturing, it loses a mind-set: a culture of tools, the craft of mastering matter. The art of making. It denies generations the exposure to engineering, science, and creativity that comes of manufacturing.*
The culture of consumerism, turns custom-making into a vestigial skill, lost in favor of buying unsatisfactory things we don't need and disappointing factory food.
A consumer culture sees pre-packaged products attached to price points. The engineering of the products is inaccessible magic. The choice of what to possess: limited by lowest common appeal, cost cutting vendors, and by our income.
But there is a Renaissance afoot. Engineers, Artists, Journalists and Book Publishers are promoting a new "do it yourself" (DIY) culture.
"DIY" culture engages the mind, reconnects us to engineering as art that any one can do. Assume the role of maker, and fashion unique objects for our own needs.
We have no engineering degree, but we will be engineers. We wil find 1,2,3 instructions, and low cost parts from unexpected sources. We will recycle and repurpose weird stuff into raw materials for custom made objects.
Our Liege Lord thinks this is an idea whose time is come (nay was ever so.)
Three of us made pilgrimage to the
in the
land of San Mateo.
What wondrous werkes we did see! More reports of what we saw are to come.
Til then...Here's
a photo of Leigh popping a
balloon:
This was taken using a rig which uses the sound of the popping
balloon to activate a flash. Cameras open on long exposure in the dark, the
balloon is popped, flash!, and balloon-in-mid-pop is captured! Wonders Never Cease!
More photos of high speed balloon popping can be found via a "Flikr Photostream"
What do you think about the "do it yourself" movement? write a comment!*It was pointed out in "The Japan That Can Say No" that manfucturing is a form of creativity (this point made to counter the idea that America created all the ideas and Japan merely copies and manufacturers what others have created.) Manufacturing capability is a resource that can lead to new ideas and technologies in and of itself - The people exposed to the tools of manufacturing and the ideas and concepts of manufacturing are well placed to be inspired to think of new ways to use the tools and techniques of "making".



