"I was layin' out there for two damn hours before anyone came to check on me! Heat stroke, it turns out. Just as well it wasn't a stroke stroke, I'd be dead."
If the NPCs can lock me out of their homes at night no matter how many hearts I have with them, I can deny them access to my property at night too. Get off my lawn!
EDIT: I was backscrolling the posts on this community on my instance and did not notice the comment age. Sorry. Hope anyone else doing the same finds this comment helpful?
I lie down in my backyard. In Australia. There are ants of all kinds. The occasional little spider goes past. Midges and butterflies and dragonflies and bees. The birds have gotten used to me so they walk within feet of me too.
They go about their business and I, mine. No harm has come to me. It's nice to be part of their world sometimes.
A common practice used to be rotating the fields, but unfortunately as pesticides and fertilizers have "improved," it's less common for big farms like this.
One way to tell if you have healthy soil is to poke into the dirt and see how long it takes to find a worm. Fields like this? Good luck finding any.
Also I can see two dms from you, but in my dms section, swiping to reply (as works on Thunder to reply in any other part of the UI) does not work.
Going to your profile page yields no buttons to reply.
Maybe I have to do some kind of ... adding of lemmy.world, somewhere in the UI, as I'm from .zip, and dms follow some kind of different protocol than commenting on posts?
???
Or maybe I'll try Odyssey and its less borked?
Edit: Sync, not Odyssey, getting my FOSS apps mixed up.
Maybe you could try to restart your client. On Sync go to your inbox, click on the triangle pointing down, and a menu will open, you can switch categories there, as it doesn't show DMs by default.
Over the past several years I put a privacy fence around the back yard and built a nice koi pond to sit next to. Sitting there, because of course I have a sittin’ chair now like an old man, is both relaxing on its own and is a great time to disconnect from the hustle and bustle of modern life (even Lemmy!). I often leave my phone in the house, but even when I have it with me it’s become easier to ignore.
For those of us lucky to have the big three mental health issues, it’s a nice self-care treatment for anxiety and depression, and an opportunity to practice controlling my attention. But it’s in addition to my medications, not a replacement for them.
But obviously it’s not the solution for everybody, and not even possible for everybody either. But just getting outside to some natural sights and sounds is what really matters. I’m sure it’s even better if exercise is involved (hiking, etc) but I have legit issues with both heat and sun so I keep my oasis close to my air conditioned home.
There is no actively growing onions in the field. It looks like it's about ready to seed.
The brown rows is likely barley. It's used as a cover crop over sandy soil. Before they plant the onions they spray the field with an herbicide. The beds are cultivated and seeded leaving a few inches of the dead barley.
The rows of dead barely acts as a windbreak to reduce sandblasting of the young plants with the wind.
All farming is bad for nature. There is no such thing as environmentally friendly farming. The "less damaging" methods of farming are "it only destroying 95% of the habitat, not 98%."
We could grow everything we need with 1/2 of the land if we banned dry land farming and moved to all irrigated. What's better? less damaging farming or millions of acres re-wilded.
It's still "bad" for some values of bad. I've demonstrated on my own farm that it's possible to employ permaculture-ish principles (permies freak out when I say that) and make an adequate living. But make no mistake, you are supplanting nature and interacting with it in competitive and often adverse ways no matter how what practices you use. It's kind of a spectrum - the better the interface with nature is, the less viable it is financially and vice-versa.
You'd be right if people started permaculture in untouched Amazon, but they don't. Like easily 30%+ of soil in most countries (exceptions aside like Russia or Finland) have been exploited by humans for decades if not centuries. Biomes have been so modified in these places that nature would take insanely long times (in human timespan) to recover. Steading it and directing it with the input of humans can be a great way to accelerate that and get something for humans in return.
I wouldn't say mostly. There's plenty of BS around it since it's very prone to attracting hippies, and there's plenty of grifting around it and pseudoscience as well. But some concepts such as certain plant species working together, soil regeneration, planting pollinator-attracting plants, diversity to prevent plagues, organizing land in such a way that it's most useful to people and more intensive the closest to them and less intensive the further it is, reusing every output as much as possible and minimising artificial inputs, working with nature and not against it... There's plenty of valid themes in permaculture than can be used.
Over 70% of farmland worldwide is used to make animal feed for the ranching industry, so if you're not eating meat you're already doing your bit to reduce the environmental impact of agriculture.
By "animal feed", do you mean hay, grass or silage? That kind of animal feed is vital habitat for many species besides livestock, let's get specific, instead of making sweeping, emotional appeals. Surely, there are stronger arguments against eating meat than that.
All of the above, as well as other feeds such as corn. That percentage includes pastures and growing crops for feed. Here's a pretty good breakdown.
Interestingly enough, if someone doesn't care at all about veganism but wants to reduce agricultural land use, removing beef, lamb and dairy from their diet would be enough to get there (while continuing to eat chicken, fish, etc).
sweeping, emotional appeals
I don't think my comment was very emotionally charged.
Surely, there are stronger arguments against eating meat than that
The power of an argument is determined by the reader. There's compelling reasons in terms of zoonotic diseases and rampant antibiotic use, there's other reasons from a moral point of view, there's others in terms of environment (like this argument), there's others in terms of human health, etc. Which one is convincing to which person depends entirely on what that person cares about.
Your grandpa jerka off in his onion field under the guise of taking a nap... which is not an argument against but rather an argument for your grandpa winning at life.
Are we sure he's not having a medical emergency?
"I was layin' out there for two damn hours before anyone came to check on me! Heat stroke, it turns out. Just as well it wasn't a stroke stroke, I'd be dead."
Also looks like he rolled down that hill a bit. Don’t help, just film.
Not the onion
I'd say this is the onion
No, it's the onionS.
Or he had a heat stroke... Go help him.
And lose my chance to take the farm?
That sweet, sweet onion money.
If you’ve ever wondered what The Big Onion wants you to think and do, here’s your chance to find out.
Are you sure they're naps?
Sure! He hasn't moved for days. Must be really comfy!
It must be a box office worthy dream
Dirt naps.
Thank you for the onions.
It's My Farm I'll Pass Out If I Want To
If the NPCs can lock me out of their homes at night no matter how many hearts I have with them, I can deny them access to my property at night too. Get off my lawn!
EDIT: I was backscrolling the posts on this community on my instance and did not notice the comment age. Sorry. Hope anyone else doing the same finds this comment helpful?
This is because farming is fucking exhausting and he just couldn't make it back to the house.
Across the plants‽ Is he mad‽
Onions don't give a fuck, you can top the foliage and that shit will just grow back.
TIL onions enjoy being dominated
+1 for interrobang
He's dead
I'm not going to start using it.
Onions are part of the Allium family, along with garlic, lilies, chives, etc. It's very tough.
This is adorable, but all I can think of is bugs and spiders and ants.
I lie down in my backyard. In Australia. There are ants of all kinds. The occasional little spider goes past. Midges and butterflies and dragonflies and bees. The birds have gotten used to me so they walk within feet of me too.
They go about their business and I, mine. No harm has come to me. It's nice to be part of their world sometimes.
Just don't do that.
He got a pneumonia from laying on wet grass? Was it cold?
That's not how you get pneumonia, but he may have weakened his immune system through exposure to make him more susceptible to viruses.
Its weird, as a kid i had no problem laying/rolling around in grass.
At some point a switch flipped in my head and grass everywhere 'became infested' with biting ants, hidden poop, and mud.
You really have to listen to what the onions are saying, to get the best results.
I talk to mine.
Man youd get covered in bugs so fast.. not sure it would be as enjoyable as we think
Do onion fields smell like onions?
Yes.
Onions and field naps. This guy is living his best Shrek life.
all i can think of is Heat Stroke
He's actually laying on a giant brown trampoline
The second photo was taken a split second before he was bounced into the stratosphere.
Wheeeeee
He's actually having a stroke
I thought you were supposed to till across the incline, not down it.
Depends on the incline, too steep and you can start slipping
yep. rolling is more fun.
Well yeah, he owns a farm.
"Won at life"
Well, may if it were a nachos field.
Onions farm? Each year same plant? That's not good for soil.
A common practice used to be rotating the fields, but unfortunately as pesticides and fertilizers have "improved," it's less common for big farms like this.
One way to tell if you have healthy soil is to poke into the dirt and see how long it takes to find a worm. Fields like this? Good luck finding any.
This man has everything a man needs. Well, except a robotic combine harvester obviously.
hmm... breathing in some of the good pesticides...
I guess the fire ant problem hasn't made it there.
They don't like onions
FIREANTS DON'T LIKE ANYTHING. Even other fireants. So glad they don't live here.
And then an asian women in an orange jumpsuit with strange boots casually walks onto the scene.
She's quite exhausted as well,, doesn't talk much and is dragging some weird cube.
She sits down next to him and stares toward the dàylight moon, hoping he'll wake up soon.
Hoping he won't want her gone.
Now, I only want you gone.
Also I can see two dms from you, but in my dms section, swiping to reply (as works on Thunder to reply in any other part of the UI) does not work.
Going to your profile page yields no buttons to reply.
Maybe I have to do some kind of ... adding of lemmy.world, somewhere in the UI, as I'm from .zip, and dms follow some kind of different protocol than commenting on posts?
???
Or maybe I'll try Odyssey and its less borked?
Edit: Sync, not Odyssey, getting my FOSS apps mixed up.
Maybe you could try to restart your client. On Sync go to your inbox, click on the triangle pointing down, and a menu will open, you can switch categories there, as it doesn't show DMs by default.
I suppose I'm not even angry.
Most onion hating Frenchman.
They say onions have layers, and this man is one of those oniony layers.
Just chilling outside is an underrated activity.
Over the past several years I put a privacy fence around the back yard and built a nice koi pond to sit next to. Sitting there, because of course I have a sittin’ chair now like an old man, is both relaxing on its own and is a great time to disconnect from the hustle and bustle of modern life (even Lemmy!). I often leave my phone in the house, but even when I have it with me it’s become easier to ignore.
For those of us lucky to have the big three mental health issues, it’s a nice self-care treatment for anxiety and depression, and an opportunity to practice controlling my attention. But it’s in addition to my medications, not a replacement for them.
But obviously it’s not the solution for everybody, and not even possible for everybody either. But just getting outside to some natural sights and sounds is what really matters. I’m sure it’s even better if exercise is involved (hiking, etc) but I have legit issues with both heat and sun so I keep my oasis close to my air conditioned home.
Ruler of the Onited Kingdom. I'll find my way out...
I'm crying tears of joy.
There's layers to it though
There is no actively growing onions in the field. It looks like it's about ready to seed.
The brown rows is likely barley. It's used as a cover crop over sandy soil. Before they plant the onions they spray the field with an herbicide. The beds are cultivated and seeded leaving a few inches of the dead barley.
The rows of dead barely acts as a windbreak to reduce sandblasting of the young plants with the wind.
I mean they aren't exactly pretty, but when they aren't dead/not-yet-planted they look like this
Doesn’t matter; tastes amazing
These kindo farming is bad for the nature
Peeps saying farming bad,
like rest of world is forest area and not skyscrapers
All farming is bad for nature. There is no such thing as environmentally friendly farming. The "less damaging" methods of farming are "it only destroying 95% of the habitat, not 98%."
We could grow everything we need with 1/2 of the land if we banned dry land farming and moved to all irrigated. What's better? less damaging farming or millions of acres re-wilded.
Nope. Regenerative agriculture is absolutely a thing. I recommend you check the video series on Al Bayda's permaculture project, really worth a watch.
It's still "bad" for some values of bad. I've demonstrated on my own farm that it's possible to employ permaculture-ish principles (permies freak out when I say that) and make an adequate living. But make no mistake, you are supplanting nature and interacting with it in competitive and often adverse ways no matter how what practices you use. It's kind of a spectrum - the better the interface with nature is, the less viable it is financially and vice-versa.
You'd be right if people started permaculture in untouched Amazon, but they don't. Like easily 30%+ of soil in most countries (exceptions aside like Russia or Finland) have been exploited by humans for decades if not centuries. Biomes have been so modified in these places that nature would take insanely long times (in human timespan) to recover. Steading it and directing it with the input of humans can be a great way to accelerate that and get something for humans in return.
Permaculture is mostly bollocks.
I wouldn't say mostly. There's plenty of BS around it since it's very prone to attracting hippies, and there's plenty of grifting around it and pseudoscience as well. But some concepts such as certain plant species working together, soil regeneration, planting pollinator-attracting plants, diversity to prevent plagues, organizing land in such a way that it's most useful to people and more intensive the closest to them and less intensive the further it is, reusing every output as much as possible and minimising artificial inputs, working with nature and not against it... There's plenty of valid themes in permaculture than can be used.
I agree, but the well is so utterly poisoned.
Over 70% of farmland worldwide is used to make animal feed for the ranching industry, so if you're not eating meat you're already doing your bit to reduce the environmental impact of agriculture.
By "animal feed", do you mean hay, grass or silage? That kind of animal feed is vital habitat for many species besides livestock, let's get specific, instead of making sweeping, emotional appeals. Surely, there are stronger arguments against eating meat than that.
All of the above, as well as other feeds such as corn. That percentage includes pastures and growing crops for feed. Here's a pretty good breakdown.
Interestingly enough, if someone doesn't care at all about veganism but wants to reduce agricultural land use, removing beef, lamb and dairy from their diet would be enough to get there (while continuing to eat chicken, fish, etc).
I don't think my comment was very emotionally charged.
The power of an argument is determined by the reader. There's compelling reasons in terms of zoonotic diseases and rampant antibiotic use, there's other reasons from a moral point of view, there's others in terms of environment (like this argument), there's others in terms of human health, etc. Which one is convincing to which person depends entirely on what that person cares about.
Your grandpa jerka off in his onion field under the guise of taking a nap... which is not an argument against but rather an argument for your grandpa winning at life.
monocultures like this mean death for bees. poor things fly 300m or maybe 1000freedomfries at best...so this is a dead brown plane that will dry fast.
this man is destroying our planet. that is what he is doing.
No onions for you, then, I suppose.
exactly! when i am his age there wont be any since he fucked up nature.
Ok. I am a small farmer. I will still grow food for you to buy at the store, when you're ready.
i'd buy if you dont run those super large crops or use glypho or do GMO etc.....then i am all in for your onions. but fuck that guy on the picture.
Be the change, etc. Farming is extremely difficult.
you mean voting. but somehow a majority of people doesnt want change but conservation. and what do we usually conserve? dead things.
I mean, go and be a farmer! It's shit and everybody hates you, enjoy.