ECO-Tours only purchases trees and dirt to plant them in...

Saturday, October 7, 2023

What Our Co-op Will Accomplish

Our property is just under two acres but we will sequester ate least two tons of carbon on site and we include biochar soil enhancement in all of our bedding plants. We are creating a gathering space and refuge for rest, relaxation and recovery from daily stressors. Our time signature of life is determined by what needs to be done when and as we develop more and more site specific ecotours, we also adapt them to be on-site specific as much as possible. We have been helping to teach about nature in ways that exhibit qualities that are worth mimicking. The inevitable principles that keep nature stable that can assist humans in becoming more resilient, more attuned to natures cycles so that our members can guests can thrive. In addition to sharing produce and insight, members and guests will also be invited to events through the seasons and benefit from the abundance of our land. To find out more or join, contact biocharmaster@gmail.com

Wednesday, July 26, 2023

Building Char Reserves

Carbon sequestered may have more and more value over time because it has the possibility of replacing the carbon we have so zealously burned and released into the atmosphere. In my humble opinion, Mamma Earth is trying to sequester carbon herself, the only way she can, massive charred forests. We have had them in the U.S. as well but the black ash is a gold mine for soil formation. Nature will reclaim charred logs in hundreds to thousands of years, which leads to the reclaimed forest soils. I teach how to transform lifeless and sterile char into the best emulation of soil for your location. The process is not unlike making beer or saurkraut. to be brief, it requires a host of soil precursors and enough mpoisture so that biology can literally take root in th esoil emulating pores of the biochar.
Many use the term biochar to stand in for any charred woody biomass. I dosagree. That, I call char, as in charcoal. You wouldn't want to put it in your garden, that's for sure, unless you wanted to make paths of it, intentionally. However, when you spend about six weeks, enriching and adding many and varied foods for soil life, it completely transforms the char, enlivening it, creating colonies of healthy microbial community that can be spread over a large area. A 1% concentration in soil doubles crop production, reduces irrigation needs by half, makes nutrients available in soil twice as long, and increases CEC (Cation Exchange Capacity) which helps feed pllants more appropriately. Doubling of plant biomass is a huge pay off, but the healing that is done to the soil itself will pay incalculable benefits, for generations if we treat it well. To research further, check out Gabe Brown's work restoring cabon to his soil. Armoring the soil is essential. Guarding the surface from direct Sun exposure, raindrops and wind helps the biology of the soil to stabilize and diversify. The more broad and prolific the microbiome becomes, the more stable it is as well. In this time of climate destabilization, having any soil that is resistant to both flood and drought, which again, the 1% concentration of quality biochar can achieve. Not tilling, a gentle opening of the soil with a braodfork, insertaed and leaned back on ten or fifteen degrees, just a bit to get air into tight soils, can be helpful, but keeping the majority of large and small structures in the soil intact is essential to soil health. That is why you armor as well, to protect the "little ones" in the soil profile who make it possible for both air and water to get in! When you till, the first thing to go is the large structures, and their carbon reserve in the soil gets lost. Next to go with continued tilling are the small structures and then, you just have dirt.
Just as I feel strongly about keeping the word char for sterile charcoal distinct from biochar which is alive and emulates healthy native soils. If you have ever seen dirt and know what soil is, you could not argue that those two words apply to different materials as well. I have been so dirty that I had soil on me, but the vast majority of it we prefer to leave in the garden beds. We have a preliminary hand wash prior to going in the house and that water gets used on plants often. Keeping your biochar at home becomes essential when you know how transformative it can be. Keeping living roots in the soil because they are the large structures that also help get air, moisture and sugars, when they are healthy; into the soil to feed microbes.
Fostering diversity also helps to stabilize both microclimate and helps feed a thriving soil microbiome. If you apply these five principles, your soil will revive and you can do all of this with virtually no inputs. I have and I can guide anyone through the process.

Thursday, June 22, 2023

Traitors at the Helm

I have taken the long view for over half a Century. I detest ever having to say I told you so. Now we know that the Hippies were right! I've written this before, but we now have a transgression so vile that it deserves repeating. The five Supreme Court Justices, who allowed landowners to fill and grade over wetlands, the same ones that protect from flood and contamination of the aquifer, upon which we all depend. That is a serious erosion of both the Clean Water Act and fifty years of law. Chief Justice, John Roberts, Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Neil Grosuch and Amy Coney Barrett have in one decision cast over half of all wetlands as developable, (to the wolves) leaving each of the fifty states, free to develop their own rules, or not; a vacant, unscientific, ignorant of physics, "let er rip." message to millions of private landowners who want to "develop" in wetland. What it means though, is put impermeable surfaces out there. One of the most repugnant and sad features about the case that the desision was made upon, is that the landowners were told, before they did any work, by consultants they hired, that wetlands existed there, they just ignored the professional, hauled in tons of gravel, graded it flat and began to build. Anything without a "permanent connection" to a flowing stream is now exempt from the intent and words of the Clean Water Act. If that is not treason, I'm not sure what is!class="separator" style="clear: both;">
When the Supreme Court immorrally threatens clean water for the sake of developers, there must be a mechanism for ousting the offenders. Imagine a foreign invasion that just wanted to pave over half of our most priceless real estate. We would fight, right? What else can you call "selling out" or abandoning half of all wetlands protection in one fell swoop? The last thing we need are more assaults on wetlands! Heck, the county I lived in for most of my life had drained and filled over 90% of their wetlands and flooding and sewer back ups still plague the area. The costs of building against nature's wishes lasts throughout the ages, a tax we all have to pay on future quality of life. We already know how the boom and bust cycle works and when you get rid of the water holding and carbon sequestering potential of a wetland, nothing you can do will ever get it back. The flood control and abatement potential alone in our destabilized climate can pay dividends for centuries, but instead these carpetbaggers want to sell off the potential for gain to those who hold our nation's laws in contempt. That is not the message I think we should be sending to the public at large and this desision must be over-ruled by Congress and the President. It is worse than absurd, it is an attack on the soverignty of nature! We must rally behind holding these traitors accountable!
Artwork used through creative commons with permission of Beehive Collective

Wednesday, March 22, 2023

Waxing 2-D

It seems that humanity is a bit like every other species. We cycle through time, corkscrewing through space and time, emulating phases of the moon. We seem to come into the light of awareness and retreat to dark ages and ignorance, sometimes for centuries at a time. I spent a little time this week digging around a bit to find information about a type of textile whose origins are well-documented although the process to make it was never written down. Humanity lost this luxurious type of muslin to the mists of time. The fabric is called Dhaka muslin for the city in which it was made and was so light weight that the wearer felt nude. Clothing made from it left virtually nothing to the imagination but today, not one person on the planet remebers how it was made. Simlilarly, the rediscovery of how to make biochar or terra preta, the soil enhancing material that ancient people used to double their crop production and hold nutrients for long periods of time was lost as well. Researchers noticed a single ingredient amongst those that were required to make it work and then nearly fifty years went by before someone rediscovered the findings and began their own experiments designed to learn more about this ancient black gold. It has taken decades more to find out what made this substance useful. You see, the carbon that is the substrate upon which biochar is based is the only form of carbon that is pure enough to be stable. Once vitrified, it lasts for extremely long periods in the soil, unlike most carbon that we know and understand from our daily lives, the organic kind that represents a component part of all living things. All that carbon is not elemental, stable or pure, it is the underlying catalyst for life, part of an amalgam of chemicals and can be nearly infinitely transformed into tissues of plants, food for soil microbes, birds, bees, bats, humans or trees. We have explored organic (carbon-containing) chemistry to the point of inventing about 400 new chemicals from it each and every year based primarily on the carbon atom. We have gone full bore into the unknown, often releasing these compounds into the air, water and our bodies, before they have been adequately health and safety tested and/or studied to any extent at all. It can take twenty years of research to understand a chemical and it would not be possible to test 400 such compounds every year. If one of the 400 works for our desired purpose or economic benefit, it is deemed a viable option, until, sometimes many years later, the legacy of another txoic, carcinogenic or mutagenic compound has already been released into mass production, the environment and our bodies. When we delve into the complexities of any discipline, we can be lost in a forest by ignoring the trees. In real ways, our understanding of the texture of the world, it's lumps and bumps, the vagaries of what is possible can frequently negate our understanding about whether it makes sense to even try changing things or inventing perviously unknown systems or materials. When we weigh heavily the idea of making life easier (which has been known to be a myth for over a century) or advancing the species in one specific way, say healthier for instance, by definition we sacrifice our attention to other factors. That is why so many drugs have unavoidable side effects. We have valued the outcome more highly than how we will get there. Just as when we travel, picking whether to go by foot, bicycle, train, car or plane, once the choice is made, there is no attending to the possibility of any of the other options. So too our decisions to look to future luxury and forego whatever it takes to get there cuts us off from other possible options or experiences. When choosing the title of this post, we were looking at art that was sculptural, but then, if you added energy, it would transform into something fragile and frail, until the energy stopped going in. Then, it would become a soild sculptural form again. So too, our mind has this quality, as does the collective mind of our community. We frequently charge ahead, putting energy in to whatever our persuits are and pay little attention to the wake we leave behind. Many people have been lulled into the false belief that none of that matters. A very two-dimensional view of reality. In fact, the propensity of modern thinkers to believe in duality is a good place to see 2-D thinking on display. You can't get more two-dimensional than, "Two sides to every story". It validates the experience of bullies and fools, criminals and charlatans. If every story has two sides, does that make life easier to understand? As we continue waxing into two dimensional thought, perhaps someone should be ringing alarm bells for us to wake back up!

Friday, January 20, 2023

One Year Ago

Today is the one year anniversary of our first walk through at our new property. At first look, the work required was daunting, to say the least. There were unhealthy smells coming from around two hideous bathrooms, the floors throughout were nasty and most needed total replacement. First floor windows were functionable and good for 1951, but had voids and to be best, would have needed total reglazing, paint and some new panes of glass just to get them up to 71 year old specs. The plumbing was a little sketch to say the least and it looked like it had been through at least a couple decades of not being cleaned. Our financial "resource base" was a little over 50K to invest, and the work looked like we could "afford" it if all the sweat equity was provided by our Directors and Volunteers. By the time April Fourth rolls around, the date we signed the mortgage, the home repairs should be complete and we can switch our focus to the greenhouses! ECO-Tours of Wisconsin Inc. now has a site at which we will continue to teach classes, plant and restore the land, build healthy soil. Continuing to provide the same program we were going to do in th eremote Northwoods of Wisconsin, right on th eScenic Shortcut that millions take to Door County. Tourism is up 13% over pre pandemic levels and shows little sign of levelling off.
Our initial plan was to buy a large acreage, where nearly half was lowlying natural buffer to development. The parcel we found best suited to our goals (after two years of searching mind you) was taken off the market before we could complete an offer to purchase. In fact, we had not even gotten to walk the land, although from photographs and Google Earth, we could see how a physical plant could organically develop on the high ground, far from th ebeaten path. It was expensive for what we would have gotten but that also would present an unforseen negative, long travel times for our guests to get to the site! The site we have secured can do all of the things we needed for approximately the same amount of money. We are actually able to start out several years ahead of where we would be having bought blank land and building from scratch and because we spent frugally, getting a large amount of the physical plant pre-built, we don't have to do constant fund-raising! We are ready to host our first biochar class now, we just need to plan for a time that the most people can come.
https://www.google.com/maps/place/1111+Clark+St,+Algoma,+WI+54201/@44.6076943,-87.4478729,3a,75y,347.5h,90t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1s0xA4GafyFFcwp3oBrtk5DQ!2e0!7i13312!8i6656!4m5!3m4!1s0x881d36ba58830fd1:0xd518aea10fdbec2!8m2!3d44.6080375!4d-87.4479921 Intead of having to cast a broad net over the landscape to get within reach of a million people, it would have required drives of three to five hours for many of our guests. Where we settled, we are less than an hour drive from over a million people and many millions more go by on their way to vacation!The carbon footprint of our guests will be virtually non-existent compared to what it would have been being so far out in the boonies and we can also offer fishing tour recommendations for fishing expeditions on Lake Michigan for our guests. If guests forgot anything, stores are a short walk away and the roads here may never be impassable. Up in the woods, we would have had to drive for miles on a sand road, or traverse the fields a half mile from the closest paved road just to get in or out. Settling on an existing place in the City of Algoma will serve everyone who comes and the planet far better than developing another place in the woods. We went from being virtually inassessible for many without transportation options to available to a million people within a one-day bike ride.