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Environment @beehaw.org

India sets construction waste recycling targets with new rules

Environment @beehaw.org

Ibama aprova plano da Petrobras para a Foz do Amazonas que permite exploração de petróleo

Environment @beehaw.org

Países trópicos registram perda recorde de floresta primária em 2024

Environment @beehaw.org

New forest loss data beef up Amazon deforestation case against Casino Group

Technology @beehaw.org

We did the math on AI’s energy footprint. Here’s the story you haven’t heard.

Environment @beehaw.org

We did the math on AI’s energy footprint. Here’s the story you haven’t heard.

Environment @beehaw.org

World’s Biggest Polluters Least Impacted by Conflict and Environmental Damage: Study

Environment @beehaw.org

Soldiers raid village as tensions flare over DRC’s Kamoa mine expansion

Environment @beehaw.org

F&B packaging fuels growing plastic waste crisis in Indian Himalayas: Report

Environment @beehaw.org

As Indonesia phases out coal, what happens to people & environments left behind?

Environment @beehaw.org

Protection is only the beginning: Creating connection through Belize’s Maya Forest Corridor

World News @beehaw.org

Governors are leading the fight against climate change and deforestation around the world, filling a void left by presidents

Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org

What is your most memorable fruit harvesting experience?

World News @beehaw.org

Global Hunger Rises for 6th Consecutive Year in a ‘World Dangerously off Course’: UN Report

United Kingdom @feddit.uk

Low River Levels in UK Raise Concerns of Drought

Free and Open Source Software @beehaw.org

'End of 10' to Windows 10 Users: The Environment Wants You to Use Linux

Environment @beehaw.org

Locals Oppose ‘Insane’ Plan to Sell 500,000 Acres of Public Lands for Housing in Nevada and Utah

Environment @beehaw.org

In Colombia, Chevron has a habit of buying carbon credits from projects made behind indigenous people’s backs.

Environment @beehaw.org

Agropecuária Três Irmãos Bergamasco, multado por desmatamento, integra portfólio do fundo do agro mais rentável do ano

Environment @beehaw.org

Who Heals the Earth’s Healers? Ways to Avert Burnout for Environmental Advocates

  • Nice! I've never seen anyone cut rambutans in half like that, but you do you. Are those longans I see?

    EDIT: Citrus trees are hard to kill, so as the weather warms up, your calamondin will probably recover. It might be disfigured, but it should regain its strength with time.

  • Cow pasture accounts for about 80% of Amazon deforestation since 1970, but feedcrops like soya are still a significant contributor. Animal agriculture excluding cow pasture accounts for an additional 12% of deforestation, and part of that is soya monocultures. Perhaps the bigger problem with soya cultivation in the Amazon is the opportunity cost that is not apparent from the deforestation numbers: it is often grown on former pasture lands that could have otherwise reforested themselves.

    That said, you're right that not buying soybeans from Brazil would have little impact, as the vast majority of the soybeans produced in Brazil are fed to "livestock" animals.

  • To be clear, the vast majority of the soybeans produced in the Amazon (and elsewhere) go towards "livestock" feed, so buying edamame or tofu isn't really contributing much (if at all) to Amazon destruction, Atlantic Forest destruction, Cerrado destruction, or any other soy-related destruction in Brazil.

  • Are your avocado trees seedlings or grafted? If grafted, you might try to ID them by comparing to the cultivars featured here. Pollination does seem like the most likely issue, but sometimes trees just aren't strong enough to set fruit. Do they seem just as healthy as before? No strange weather anomalies during flowering?

    I've never heard of Lemon Meringue mango before, but it sounds interesting! I've heard of Lemon Zest which is supposed to be delicious.

  • Did your Honeycrisp survive?

    three sisters

    You might consider Fordhook lima beans and Delicata squash. I've heard good things. Do you have purslane (Portulaca oleracea) there? If you let it colonise the garden beds, it makes a weed-suppressing moisture-retaining arthropod-sheltering edible ground cover.

    Pruning hasn’t been an issue yet, but I will need to more actively manage the raspberries this year.

    Yes you will, lest they begin to manage you. I recommend growing them over a fence or some wire or some sort of trellis and then pruning the ends before they can touch the soil and tip-layer themselves. Life is easier that way.

    In the future I’m hoping to add lots more edible native shrubs, and maybe more trees if I can find good spots for them.

    Some ideas in alphabetical order:

    Last year one bin produced enough to cover about one and a half of my 4x8 ft garden beds

    So you cover the surface of your garden beds with compost? That's the way. Protect the soil from erosion while keeping the nutrients near the surface where the roots can reach them. A generous layer of mulch over the winter is also helpful, especially if the beds will be vacant.

    I don’t really expect to get fully self sufficient on compost anytime soon, but I’ll keep producing as much as I’m able.

    Do you compost your poop? Mixed with wood shavings, that could make a fair amount of compost.

  • One consideration is the seasonality of the fruits that you grow. Additional fruit-bearing plants would ideally produce during gaps between the other fruit seasons so that you have a continuous harvest for as much of the year as possible. That's something that will be specific to your area though, so I can't really advise.

    If you toss in any native plant seeds that you can find and then don't mow, the lawn will eventually reforest itself. (If you were in North America, I would recommend Robinia pseudoacacia.) Less work than mowing 1-3 times a year. In the beginning, pulling the grass at the edge of the clover can help a lot, and it only takes a few minutes every month or so.

  • Ah, of course. If you depend on the government and human-made infrastructure, New Zealand and Finland and the like are definitely more reliable than any countries at the equator. (Except Singapore? Interesting.) Governments don't grow durian though.

  • Severe weather events in New Zealand

    I know that New Zealand has the ocean to buffer it against temperature extremes, but based on this image:

    it seems that the island of New Guinea, which is also east of the Wallace Line, has experienced similarly mild warming in recent decades. Maprik (3.63°S, 143.05°E) at ~200m, for example:

    seems to have a much more durian-friendly climate than even areas at sea level on the north island of New Zealand (e.g. Ahipara).

    And that's not even Borneo. What is the advantage of New Zealand? Am I missing something?

  • My immediate concern is what a sufficiently large asteroid might do to the durian trees. Mangosteen survived Krakatoa by becoming a lesbian, but I wouldn't gamble with durian. Can't some aliens just sterilise the humans instead? (Non-violently, of course.)