Hi readers:
Eddie’s made me another generous offer of a solar collector he had lying around, complete with controller.
I have a smaller one back at Gale’s, but I think I’ll be able to just add the wires to those going into the controller.
Hi readers:
Eddie’s made me another generous offer of a solar collector he had lying around, complete with controller.
I have a smaller one back at Gale’s, but I think I’ll be able to just add the wires to those going into the controller.
Posted in America
Tagged economy, energy, environment, home, homesteading, Human Behavior, Life, lifestyle, solar collector, technology

The Cantina area of Eddie’s and Val’s home is just under 1000 square feet, uninsulated mostly. The wooden doors open to a patio and you can see daylight through them.
Hi readers. Thanks for coming by for a read.
Last year when I visited here Eddie and Val were heating The Cantina with a fireplace and a propane heater kicking in when things became uncomfortably cool. He was troubling himself about the price of having Mesquite firewood hauled here.
https://sofarfromheaven.com/2012/12/21/la-cantina/
This year it’s an entirely different matter. During the summer months Eddie researched the rocket stoves being utilized in 3rd world countries, turning out an amazing amount of heat on a few twigs. Finally, he altered the designs somewhat and built one from a scrap pressure tank for his well, mortar-mix Vermiculite for the heat concentration, and a small firebox constructed from stovepipe.
The fuel? Free pallets from the local businesses.

Total firewood requirement to keep the Cantina warm for the coldest week thus far in 2013? Three pallets.
This past week was the test. Temperatures below freezing for a week. The Cantina was toasty all week, and all week long they awoke to comparative warmth in the Cantina despite the fire having been out for hours.

That perpendicular piece of stovepipe is the firebox. Eddie’s redesigning it somewhat to make for easier cleaning.
The exterior appears fairly commonplace. It’s inside where the Secrets of fuel economy reside.
What appears to be concrete is a hardened mixture of mortar mix, vermiculite, and stovepipe ….. wood ash mixed with the mortar/vermiculite to provide stability when the pipe melts or rots from the center.
Old Jules
Posted in 2013, America, Country Life, Current Issues, Outdoors
Tagged culture, economy, environment, Human Behavior, humor, lifestyle, politics, psychology, senior citizens, society, sociology

This ominous portent from California last week: Giant oarfish washed up on the beach. Second one since I-don’t-know-when.
“Beware the feafhoref and tremble in your homef when ferpentf of the deep emerge with their mouthf miffing.” Josephus Minimus
I was fairly certain this was written down somewhere. Maybe the Bible, or Nostradamas, or Mother Shipley, or some other trustworthy source. Turned out it was Josephus Minimus. Or would be Josephus Minimus once I post this.
Old Jules
Hi readers.
I spent a lot of time on the phone with a guy I barely know last night. He called me to talk about the chronic determination he has to kill this body he lives in. Old guy, mutual friends with some friends of mine who are concerned about him, suggested we talk.
The guy lives in California, seems to occupy a situation so similar to my own it’s unsettling to me, hearing how unhappy he is with it, how much he thinks he hasn’t got that he wishes he had. Me listening as he describes it, thinking, wow, that sounds cool. Sheeze, I could stand some of THAT.
But I was lucky enough to have been where he is long enough ago so’s when he tells me about the abyss he’s looking into I know what he’s speaking of. Even though it’s foreign country to me.
I know how I climbed out of it, probably even understand why I managed it. And telling him doesn’t help him a bit so far as I can discern. The only help I can be is listening to him, same as the friends who arranged for us to talk listen to him and can’t actually help.
I am what I’d call an expert on me being happy, damned good at the job. But I do recall having a nest of demons living in my head, a self-sustaining fluctuating feed-on-itself hell that seemed to leave self-destruction as the only alternative that made sense.
Listening to the echo of that so long ago in my past from an old guy who lives so nearly to the way I live today skates along the edge of bizarre. And as nearly as I can tell there’s not one thing I can tell him that will provide a means for him to escape.
Because I came away with the feeling he’s in love with that nest of demons or gives them more room to talk with him listening than he gives anyone else who’s talking to him, cares about him. And they’re telling him the only escape is killing the body he lives in.
After we finished talking I was lying there scratching a cat behind the ears awed how he and I managed to get to opposite ends of the spectrum, how the Universe can manage having room for both of us.
Old Jules
Posted in America, Human Behavior
Tagged clinical depression, culture, depression, environment, Human Behavior, Life, lifestyle, philosophy, psychology, society, sociology, suicide
Climate change would be nice. Climate change is something we can all bite our ownselves in the ass about if we believe humans are the cause of it.
Similarly, a sort of general speculation it might be overfishing works well, so long as there’s no mention whether one particular nation is responsible more than the others. No mention, specifically of the city-sized fish factories operating year-round buying catches from any fishing boat capable of reaching them. Japanese fish factories operating in a devil-take-the-hindmost race to see whether they can get all the fish out of the North Pacific before Japanese radiation kills them. Stone deaf to the pleas of every nation on earth also depending on their fishing industries.
So yeah, maybe over harvesting of fish might be it.
Beats hell out of one other possibility nobody seems to be mentioning. The 900 pound gorilla. Personally I don’t know enough about it all to have an opinion. But I suspect the reason those fishing job related folks don’t mention the 900 pound gorilla possibility might be a desire to be able to catch and sell fish again sometime if the Pacific coast of North America ever has any again.
Maybe those radiation leaking Japanese nuke plants are being damned by faint praise.
Lost At Sea: Fishers Can’t Find Sardines and Climate Change May Be To Blame
By Clare Leschin-Hoar | Takepart.com 16 hours ago Takepart.comThe sardines off the western coast of Canada have completely disappeared.No one knows exactly what has happened to the $32 million commercial fishery, but what we do know is stunning: The region’s sardine fishermen returned to port empty-handed after failing to catch a single fish according to a report Monday.
Poof! Vanished. Gone.
Although you may not eat sardines on a regular basis, (though we think you should), the health of this tiny forage fish has had scientists worried for some time.
Sardines, along with anchovy and menhaden, form the base of the food chain for species that range from bluefin tuna to humpback whales to sea birds and dolphins. Forage fish are critically important to the aquaculture industry as well, where they’re ground up, turned into fishmeal, and fed to popular species like farmed salmon.
Geoff Shester, a scientist with conservation group Oceana says they’ve been concerned about the Pacific sardine fishery for some time and warns that effects from a collapse could last for decades.
“This is about the entire Pacific coast including the U.S. and Mexico, not just British Columbia,” says Shester. “If fishermen have stopped fishing because they’ve hit their quota, that’s one thing. But they’re stopping because they can’t find any fish. That means fishery management is failing.”
Indeed, Oceana isn’t the only group worried. The collapse was predicted by prominent scientists who said ocean conditions—including a change in temperature—and poor reproduction rates are contributing to the sardines’ decline.
At least one study has found that climate change is causing the geography of where fish are found to shift, which may be what we’re seeing in Canada, too.Fishing pressures on the ecosystem also play an important role.When sardines are in a productive cycle, they can be fished agressively and their stock can withstand it, while leaving enough for ocean predators, Shester said.
“But if you don’t respond to a natural decline fast enough by limiting fishing, you’re suddenly in big trouble,” says Shester. “It makes the crash even worse because you’ll have fewer sardines remaining. When conditions get productive again, they can’t bounce back because there aren’t enough of them to begin with.”
Canada isn’t alone in declining sardine stocks. Paul Shively, forage fish campaign manager for Pew Charitable Trusts, says we’re seeing a similar trend in the U.S. The numbers are striking. In 2007, the U.S. brought in 127,500 metric tons of Pacific sardines. In 2010, the number shrunk to 66,817 metric tons, and by 2011 that number declined to 44,000 metric tons.
“We can’t do a lot about the changing temperatures of the ocean and the natural cycles it goes through, but what we can do is to keep from fishing the bottom out of that. We don’t want to fish those last remaining fish,” he said.
Shively is worried about more than just sardines. While sardines are protected under fishery management plans, he points out that there are no such protections for other important species like smelt, Pacific saury and lantern fish.
“If someone wants to fish them, there are no limits on what they can take,” says Shively.
As for the sardine fishery, Shester says we should be paying close attention to the news coming from Canada.
“We’re in an emergency situation right now. Any fishing is overfishing when the stock is in this condition.”
Not to suggest if it’s actually the nukes doing it the Japanese are at fault in any way. Any more than they’d be at fault if it were found to be their giant fish factories doing it.
I’ve always figured climate change was what caused the Rape of Nanking, the Bataan Death March and Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It all runs together. Karma sort of thing.
Old Jules
Tagged animals, culture, economy, environment, fishing, fishing industry, forage fish, History, Human Behavior, humor, Nature, pacific ocean, psychology, radiation, sardines, Wildlife
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http://lonepinewritings.com – Lone Pine Writings by Eric Dollard is a compilation of papers written by Eric Dollard and freely posted on Energetic Forum for anyone to read – they have been there for…
00:33:03
Added on 10/15/13
119 views
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Lone Pine Writings – Eric Dollard Go to YouTube Play video http://lonepinewritings.com – Lone Pine Writings by Eric Dollard is a compilation of papers written by Eric Dollard and freely posted on Energetic Forum for anyone to read – they have been there for… 00:33:03 Added on 10/15/13 119 views
Hi Jack,
Here are a few updates about Eric Dollard and John Bedini… Eric Dollard Updates Here is a NEW interview with Eric Dollard yesterday about the Lone Pine Writings https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fh4wKUnoKtw Eric also discusses Glom and the Cosmic Induction Generator. In this video, you can see a few new pictures from Eric’s lab, which were taken a few weeks ago. It shows John Polakowski working on a transmitter for the Cosmic Induction Generator, some pics of the new Glom delivery, etc… make sure to give a thumbs up and share this video with others. Eric’s network is growing and the word is spreading – please join or subscribe to these networks that will have more of Eric’s work released soon. Eric’s Linked In profile
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/eric-dollard/83/1b2/a64 Follow Eric on Twitter https://twitter.com/EricDollard Google Plus Profile: https://plus.google.com/u/0/118409944702063559692/posts Eric’s Youtube Channel http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCymBLWJwEn9CmvDqAAGxpgg Video’s will be uploaded to Eric’s YouTube channel very soon…
Please share those links with your friends so we can get the momentum going. More coming soon! John Bedini Updates Day after Tomorrow (Thursday), we’ll be launching a new product from John Bedini. It is in * EXTREME * high demand and we’re finally making it available from Tesla Chargers. Details coming soon. Also, many people have asked us for manuals so they can see how the Bedini Chargers work so we uploaded a zip file (under 9MB) with 7 different manuals. You can get them all here: http://teslachargers.com/manuals/teslachargermanuals.zip If you do not know how to open a zip file, please search Google. Sincerely, A & P Electronic Media & White Dragon Press POB 713, Liberty Lake, WA 99019
Tagged economy, environment, John Bedini, science, technology
Had you noticed that? The dead silence until they could figure out something badbadbad happening they could yell about and pretend to investigate where the Japanese radiation wouldn’t fry their grandkids?
I’d wondered where they were on all this north Pacific stuff, them not uttering a word. But it turned out they were following their Geiger counters to the point of diminishing returns, finding something threatening the environment where it’s safe to find it.
Old Jules
Posted in 2013, Human Behavior
Tagged culture, environment, Human Behavior, humor, Life, lifestyle, society, sociology, survival, Wildlife, wisdom
Hi readers. Thanks for coming by for a read this morning.
I see over on Yahoo News I was made a monkey of by my own severely gullible nature, fretting about what the politicoists were pretending they were doing. Suckered again. Allowed myself to take them seriously. Another Gulf of Tonkin, Cuban Missile, Berlin crisis with different stage props and settings. Veterans in wheel chairs, war monuments, chunky beef-fed cops bullying, threats of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse riding in spreading plague and famine.
But oh gracious gollygee, deep sighs of relief. Seems they got sudden new ability to come to the kind of agreement allowing them to play the same tune after the short attention spans of the public wander elsewhere.
But sheeze! Gasoline prices are dropping, and we have a surplus of natural gas. Price dropping on that, too. They’ll need to devote their attentions to getting that out onto a marketplace where the prices can be jacked back up. Buy some new fleets of government vehicles that burn more fuel. The DEA, Homeland Security, Department of Agriculture, Department of Environment, you name it, employees need stretch limosines and a lot of travel to handle this crisis.
Lalalalalalalalala. And the beat goes on.
Still nobody talking about invading Mexico, though. And extending the Promised Land to the Panama Canal. Making all those people Chosen People instead of [those that come north] illegal aliens.
Likely they’ll get around to it when something’s good on television or India and China get into a world-threatening argument about Tibet. Or they manage to sell some nuclear weapons to Iran and claim it was North Korea done it.
They use Hollywood playwrites and celebrity promoters to figure this stuff out, I figures.
Old Jules
Posted in 2013, America, Current Issues
Tagged culture, economy, Education, environment, gasoline, government, Human Behavior, humor, lifestyle, natural gas, politics, prices, society, sociology
Hi readers. When something doesn’t march lockstep to scientific theory it’s superstition. So a lot of what honest-to-goodness scientists spend their time doing is finding out whether what they’re observing is superstitious or not.
I was having a plague of flies around the door to the RV because of the cat food in bowls inside the door. The neighbor told me he’d had good luck running most of the flies off by putting water in baggies and hanging them around.

Approximately 2.749% of the flies at this location are scientific, allowing them to rest in the vicinity of the RV surface.
“Hmmmm. Superstitious flies he’s got up there,” thinks I. “Wonder if it’s the same breed trying to eat the cat food.”

Though a few scientific flies do come to rest around the door, sometimes on the baggies, they appear to be stupider than superstitious flies. They’re one hell of a lot easier to swat.
So naturally I gave it a try. Swarms of hundreds of flies are darting around ten feet from the door but not approaching. These are obviously the superstitious flies.
Naturally being a scientific sort of guy I don’t pay much heed to superstitious flies. But the scientific ones piss me off enough to swat them because the theories they guide their lives by aren’t the same ones I’ve memorized to say to people.
Old Jules
Tagged animals, country life, culture, Education, environment, Human Behavior, humor, Life, lifestyle, philosophy, psychology, science, society, sociology
Hi readers.
An email acquaintance who has a mining claim on Federal land in New Mexico sent out an anecdote to his email friends about an incident this weekend.
He headed out to his claim, bypassed a barricade, and began doing what he always does there. He was spang in the midst of doing it when he looked up and a guy in a USFS law enforcement uniform wearing mirror sunglasses was scowling down with his hands on his hips. “Come out of there. You are going to jail.”
He scrambled up onto the bank and stood face-to-face with the sneering mirror sunglasses. “This is a filed mining claim. My fees are all paid, everything’s legal here. I have a right to be here. What law do you think I’m breaking?”
Mirror sunglasses ran his fingers over his holster. “This is Federal land. You are trespassing. You’re either leaving or going to jail. “
“I’m armed too. Get your hand away from that holster and don’t even think about pointing a pistol at me unless you want to shoot me. I’m not doing anything illegal. You are. Get the hell out of here, or try handcuffing me and we’ll see what happens. It’s just you and me here. Do we want to go to war?”
Mirror sunglasses stepped back and assumed a gunfighter stance, the ghost of Billy the Kid in a USFS uniform. Then he must have considered what he was doing and come to his senses. “I can have backup out here in half-an-hour. If you’re still here you’ll be in a lot of trouble.”
He backed to his vehicle, glared again, and drove away.
The miner did some thinking on his own part and decided the price of a shootout with the Forces of Darkness wasn’t the lesser of evils in this situation. Loaded his gear and headed back to civilization, figuring he’d meet the US Cavalry on the road.
But he didn’t encounter anyone. He says he hasn’t decided whether to try it again next weekend.
Claude Dallas is evidently alive and well in the boondocks.
Old Jules
Posted in 2013, America, Government, Police
Tagged culture, environment, Events, government shutdown, Human Behavior, Law Enforcement, mining claims, New Mexico, philosophy, Police, politics, society, sociology