Three quarters of a year has gone by and no launch yet.
Somehow the web development took a shit all over us. The uncanny speed of the conception has been hamstrung by a series of inept programmers and companies that apparently don't give a shit about their reputation so long as they can make an extra buck today.
Not to mention the partners don't live in the same state anymore.....
Having no timetable is alternately a lot of fun and severely frustrating. Just depends on the mood I'm in. No shortage of surprises though, wouldn't want to get bored.
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Thursday, May 28, 2009
Fun + Work = Tasty...
It looks like the initial stage is nearing completiong and we've certainly pieced together an interesting company. Two adventure junkies and a web designer working out of a shanty in taiwan are set to take the world by storm and show it just how nutritional supplements ought to be sold.
This venture is boot-strapped to the extreme. Our office is currently in a house that won't be accessible in about 40 more days and neither of us have incomes beyond the alms that are slipped to us out of pity by our families. Not that that's getting our spirits down. If anything we're all the more happy for it. Just thinking about the alternative of returning to the existence of a student slaving away at reproducing manuals on how to get round objects through round holes makes my head swim. How I ever thought that spending any portion of my life working as a paper pusher would be fulfilling is beyond me.
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
New Adventures
The blog is revived, this time I'm starting a business instead of moving to a farm so we'll see how this goes.
Friday, May 16, 2008
Off the farm...
Well, I'm sad to say the farm adventure has come to an end. I decided the isolation was a bit much and am now hanging around Ft Wayne looking for something useful to do with my time. This blog will most likely keep going as I'm sure my adventures will continue in one fashion or another, perhaps even as an OTR trucker. I spent my 21st in lafayette monday night, one year older, hurray!
Thursday, May 8, 2008
Fun with poop
Time for some do it yourself, ever wondered about a better way to dispose of your own excretions without wasting all that water and scrubbing that toilet every week? Well, here is humanure to the rescue! That's right, all you need is yourself, a five gallon bucket and some shredded junkmail. One crap + one scoop shreddings/sawdust = fertilizer! I've been crapping in a bucket since I got here and I've got to say it's actually better than using a normal western toilet. There's amazingly no smell or flies and when it's full it goes right onto the compost heap, ready to fuel that next round of tasty garden vegetables. Interested yet? This man wrote a whole book about it and it's available free online:
http://www.weblife.org/humanure
I'm beginning to realize just how far removed society is from the natural cycle of things. For a little bit of planting and weeding the garden supplies most of our food out here, a bit of feed and some attention gets you fresh milk and cheese without chemicals and the chickens cover eggs for very little work. I'll never look at lawns the same way again, all that wasted time and effort for a useless patch of green when the average backyard could supply a family of four with food for the entire year. Instead of those rebate checks ol' George should have sent everyone a gardening book and a bag of seeds, hand to mouth! If anyone in this country ever goes hungry it's out of laziness and stupidity, not for a lack of potential food.
A thought on housing, ever heard of cob? Basically just sod, gravel and hay. All you have to do is mix, mold into place, put a decent roof over it (choose a living roof and there's more garden space!) and it lasts for generations. Absolutely amazing stuff, you can have curved walls, build benches, bookshelves and even a stove right into it. Completely negates the need for a wasteful and expensive construction industry as you can build even a small cottage out of it for less than 500 bucks. If you don't like the shape of it you can just re-wet, re-work and voila, a new nitche or add on.
Civilization is just seeming more and more like a big pile of retarded glued together with a lack of foresight and a love for wage slavery. Just gaze beyond that iPod and a whole world opens up.
http://www.weblife.org/humanure
I'm beginning to realize just how far removed society is from the natural cycle of things. For a little bit of planting and weeding the garden supplies most of our food out here, a bit of feed and some attention gets you fresh milk and cheese without chemicals and the chickens cover eggs for very little work. I'll never look at lawns the same way again, all that wasted time and effort for a useless patch of green when the average backyard could supply a family of four with food for the entire year. Instead of those rebate checks ol' George should have sent everyone a gardening book and a bag of seeds, hand to mouth! If anyone in this country ever goes hungry it's out of laziness and stupidity, not for a lack of potential food.
A thought on housing, ever heard of cob? Basically just sod, gravel and hay. All you have to do is mix, mold into place, put a decent roof over it (choose a living roof and there's more garden space!) and it lasts for generations. Absolutely amazing stuff, you can have curved walls, build benches, bookshelves and even a stove right into it. Completely negates the need for a wasteful and expensive construction industry as you can build even a small cottage out of it for less than 500 bucks. If you don't like the shape of it you can just re-wet, re-work and voila, a new nitche or add on.
Civilization is just seeming more and more like a big pile of retarded glued together with a lack of foresight and a love for wage slavery. Just gaze beyond that iPod and a whole world opens up.
Monday, May 5, 2008
Baby Goats!




Got to see two baby goats come into the world about an hour ago, man are they cute! Zoomer's the mother and Isac and Elsa are the new goats, whole thing took less than a half hour. I'm starting to like the goats around here, good milk, tasty cheese and they're fun to talk to. Enjoy the pictures!
Went to the library in Neosho this morning and got a few books, was surprised to find some descartes and spinoza, maybe I'll get to catch up on some reading tonight. Anderson and Neosho have nice little down town strips, mostly locally owned stores and a few good places to eat although I haven't tried them yet. Seems to me these towns are better than that hellhole Naperville with it's four starbucks within spitting distance of each other, I'm glad those'll be the first on the chopping block when the economy really starts tanking. I've got to say I don't mind being out in the middle of nowhere, last night I brushed my teeth under the stars and there was no light pollution, ain't nothing in civilization I'd trade for that view!
Should have some pictures up this week, supposed to rain the next two days so maybe I'll be driven indoors and work on getting unpacked a bit more. Hope everyone has a good week!
Oh, and oil is at 120, yeeeeehaaaaawwww!!
pictures will be added hopefully later today, meant to post yesterday but the goats didn't want to pose, maybe today.
Friday, May 2, 2008
I'm here!
Well, here I am, three days on the farm and pretty much set up. The wireless network reaches out to my little napping house so at least for now my umbilical cord to the 21st century remains intact! Got to see the closest town yesterday, little place named Joplin. Just like everywhere else it's mostly just strip malls and sprawling subdivisions, 600 miles from where I started and I couldn't outrun the commercial tracts, oh well.
Leaned quite a few things the first couple of days. First, don't buy packaged cigarettes, why you ask? Well, when you're right next to an indian reservation a full months supply of rolling tobacco only runs about 8 bucks and there are no chemicals added to it! I got to find out what a rocket stove was, drive a few fence posts, plant some corn by hand(my poor back!), meet all the animals, eat several completely home grown meals and meet the new family. Lots of things to keep straight in my head but I'm catching on pretty quick. There's a nice little stream on the property and plenty of woods to go exploring in although I haven't had the time to do it yet, maybe next week I'll swing down the road and rent a canoe and see where the waterways around here go.
My host family turned out better than I expected. Comrade and his wife are nice people, they've been developing the whole place with sustainability in mind and have a great son who's seven and is just about the smartest seven year old I've ever met, not to mention that he's far better behaved than I was at that age. Life around here is a bit more lax than normal and most of the day is spent outside either working or just sitting in the shade, far more agreeable than being stuffed up in an office all day! This'll be my first summer spent AC free, not too hot around here yet but I guess I'll see how it goes.
It's just too nice out at the moment to spend too much time punching the keys so I'm headed outside to read a bit and maybe go exploring, aurevoir!
Leaned quite a few things the first couple of days. First, don't buy packaged cigarettes, why you ask? Well, when you're right next to an indian reservation a full months supply of rolling tobacco only runs about 8 bucks and there are no chemicals added to it! I got to find out what a rocket stove was, drive a few fence posts, plant some corn by hand(my poor back!), meet all the animals, eat several completely home grown meals and meet the new family. Lots of things to keep straight in my head but I'm catching on pretty quick. There's a nice little stream on the property and plenty of woods to go exploring in although I haven't had the time to do it yet, maybe next week I'll swing down the road and rent a canoe and see where the waterways around here go.
My host family turned out better than I expected. Comrade and his wife are nice people, they've been developing the whole place with sustainability in mind and have a great son who's seven and is just about the smartest seven year old I've ever met, not to mention that he's far better behaved than I was at that age. Life around here is a bit more lax than normal and most of the day is spent outside either working or just sitting in the shade, far more agreeable than being stuffed up in an office all day! This'll be my first summer spent AC free, not too hot around here yet but I guess I'll see how it goes.
It's just too nice out at the moment to spend too much time punching the keys so I'm headed outside to read a bit and maybe go exploring, aurevoir!
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