Thursday, April 8, 2010
Hydroponics
Knowing what hydroponics have done for the home marijuana grower I obviously thought to myself "oh, I wonder what less fun things I could do with this?!?"
Hydroponics is loosely defined as the plantings grown in a soiless medium, in my case, black gravel suspended in a nutrient mix.
So about two and a half months ago I decided to dedicate one shelf in my windowless storage room as a mini hydroponics basil garden, using only a rubbermaid container, two 13W compact florescent light bulbs and six styrofoam containers perforated with a skewer and filled with gravel. This kind of hydroponics system is called deep water culture.
Thursday, March 11, 2010
Friday, February 26, 2010
Hybrid Hit-list
The animals that follow are just a few of my favorite animal hybrids.
The Zonkey
In South Africa they occur where zebras and donkeys are found in proximity to each other. Like mules, however, they are genetically unable to breed, due to an odd number of chromosomes disrupting meiosis. However, in The Origin of Species,Charles Darwin reported a case of a zonkey that apparently bred with a bay mare to produce a "triple hybrid".
The Zorse
A zorse or zebrula is the offspring of a zebra stallion and a horse mare; the rarer reverse pairing is sometimes called a hebra.The zorse is shaped more like a horse than a zebra, but has boldly striped legs and, often, stripes on the body or neck. Like most other interspecies hybrids, it is infertile.
Zorses are preferred over purebred zebras for riding and drought for several reasons, although they are still not as easily handled as purebred horses and should not be ridden or purchased by novices. Their more horselike shape, particularly in the shoulder region, makes it easier to obtain harness.
The Leopon
A leopon is the result of breeding a male leopard with a female lion. The head of the animal is similar to that of a lion while the rest of the body carries similarities to leopards. They have been bred in zoos in Japan, Germany, and Italy. The leopon has the size and strength of a lion. But, unlike the lion, they have extraordinary climbing abilities like the leopard. The female leopons may be torn between the solitary nature of the leopard and the social nature of a lioness.
The Zho
Zho are a hybrid of a yak and domestic cattle. The word dzo technically refers to a male hybrid, while a female is known as a dzomo orzhom. Alternative Romanizations of the Tibetan names include zho and zo. InMongolian it is called khainag (хайнаг). There is also the English languageportmanteau term of yakow; a combination of the words yak and cow, though this is rarely used.
As they are a product of the hybrid genetic phenomenon of heterosis (hybrid vigor), they are larger and stronger than cattle or yak. In Mongolia and Tibet, khainags are thought to be more productive than cattle or yaks in terms of both milk and meat production.
The Savannah Cat
Okay, so technically this is a INTRA-specific hybrid and not an INTER-specific hybrid, and so is much less notable. However, it's such an interesting looking animal!
Bengal breeder Judee Frank crossbred a male Serval (an African wildcat), belonging to Suzi Woods, with a Siamese (cat) (domestic cat) to produce the first Savannah cat on April 7, 1986.
The Geep
Finally, although technically not a hybrid but a chimera, the Geep, or goat-sheep is of particular interest of me. It was also featured in a 2008 radiolab podcast.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Post-it Property
This 75x75ft residential lot features a cozy 800sq ft 1960s bungalow.
The lot includes:
- Greenhouse and vegetable garden in the Southwest corner
- Compost at the lots Southern most end
- Rainwater collector
- Generous patio
- Assorted drupe trees, nestled in a bed of pachysandra terminalis in the Southeast corner
- An arid / alpine planting on the East side of the house
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
DIY Shake n' Bake
The Skinny on Skimmia Japonica

Next on my winter hit-list, this dwarf evergreen promises year-round interest with glossy almond leaves, charming pinkish white flowers and red berries (only assert themselves when a male and female plant are present.)
A home inspector came to my building the other day to evaluate its appropriateness as an Olympic rental property. He opens up my balcony and says:
"What a cheerful little balcony! Is that Skimmia Japonica? I loooooove Skimmia Japonica! You know, sometimes I bring in a few flowers into the house and it just freshens everything right up!"
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This fine new evergreen shrub, which is attracting a good deal of attention in your columns, and elsewhere, was discovered by me in the winter of 1848, and introduced to England in 1849. I met with it in a nursery near Shanghae, and it was there the rarest and most prized plant of the collection to which it belonged. The nurseryman told me that it was brought to him from a high mountain, in the interior, named Wang-shan, and consequently the plant is called by the Chinese the Wang-ehan-Kwei. The last term was given it on account of the fragrance of its flowers, which the Chinese consider as sweet as the kwei-whs or Olea fragrant. These scented flowers are produced in great profusion in early spring, and are succeeded by bunches of red berries, like those of the English holly. The plant exhibited to theHorticultural Society, in Regent street, by Messrs. Standish & Noble, a week or two ago, gave but a faint idea of the beauty of the species. The berries of that plant were scarcely ripe; later in the season they become much larger, and are then of a deeper and clearer red.
My own opinion is that this fine bush will prove perfectly hardy in this country. It cares nothing for the cold winds and sharp frosts about Shanghae, and no doubt endures a much lower degree of temperature on the inland mountains already named, where it is found wild, than in places nearer the coast Although this is my opinion, I think your reporter was perfectly justified in "erring on the safe side," and saying that more proof of its hardiness in this country is required. I recollect well when I wrote an account of Weigela rosea, some years ago, in the Journal of the Horticultural Society, I advised the possessor of that beautiful shrub to keep it in the green-house until its hardiness was proved by the Society. Well, there was no harm done in that instance, although every one knows now how hardy Weigela rosea is.
I may now notice the letter of your Liverpool correspondent, in which he tells you that Skim-mia Japonica has borne the "pelting of the pitiless storm" during the last seven years. As you justly remark, your correspondent must be writing of Skimmia Laureola. In my opinion, however, his letter goes a long way to prove the hardiness of Skimmia Japonica, as it comes from a much colder country than Dr. Wallich's S. Laureola. It proves, also, what I have long feared, that many persons in the trade will, by mistake, send out S. Laureola with the name of S. Japonica, as the names have been mixed and confused. Until Dr. Lindley set the matter right in "Paxton'a Flower Garden," an idea had got abroad that the Chinese and Himalayan plants were identical; but in reality no plants can be more different, in so far as their ornamental properties are concerned, although they may resemble each other in their stems and leaves. The Himalayan plant has been in the garden of Mr. Luscombe for Borne years, and yet I am informed by that gentleman that it scarcely ever opens its flowers, and never produces berries. The beauty of the Chinese plant not only consists in its being a nice dwarf evergreen bush, but also in the profusion of its sweet-scented flowers, and in the abundance of its holly-like berries.
The former is a plant of no value for ornamental purposes, while the latter will, no doubt, form in a few years one of the most attractive winter plants our gardens can boast of Fancy if you can our borders or parterres dotted in mid-winter with a little evergreen bush, only two or three feet high, and covered all over with bright red berries, each of which is as large as those of the common holly. In greenhouse, too, it will be invaluable for decorative purposes, where its flowers, although not showy, will fill the air with the most delicious odor, and its berries will be most attractive in the dull months of winter.
Those of your readers who wish to add the plant to their collections, have, in the description I have just given, the means of knowing when the true Skimmia Japonica has been sent them, or whether they have received the Himalayan plant in its stead. I think you will agree with me, that the discoverer of a fine, new, ornamental plant, may justly complain of mistakes of this kind. It is only a very short time since another blunder of this description, was committed with the new Cephalotaxus, discovered by me in the north of China. Sir William Hooker described and figured that plant in the Botanical Magazine, and pronounced it to be quite new, and a tree of great beauty. And yet, notwithstanding that high authority, I find that large quantities of Cephalo-taxus Harringtoni have been sent out with the new name of C. Fortuni attached to them. Nurserymen ought to guard against such mistakes, as they are not only annoying to the purchasers of plants, but tend greatly to confuse our nomenclature,
- R. F., in London Gardeners' Chronicle.
Friday, February 5, 2010
Mozart 2.0

I was listening to a radiolab podcast about a composition professor at the University of Santa Cruz, named David Cope, who developed a computer named EMI in the 80s. EMI is an acronym for Experiments in Musical Intelligence.
Apparently you can feed sheet music into this computer and it will interpret the sheet music as data. So if you, for example, feed it enough Mozart sheet music, it will be able to write a symphony in the style of Mozart.
Pretty neat hey?
I'm for sure a fan.
http://www.wnyc.org/shows/radiolab/episodes/2006/04/21/segments/58293
Hell-bent on Hellebores

- Several legends surround the hellebore; in witchcraft it is believed to have ties to summoning demons. Helleborus niger is commonly called the Christmas rose, due to an old legend that it sprouted in the snow from the tears of a young girl who had no gift to give the Christ child in Bethlehem.
- In Greek mythology, Melampus of Pylos used hellebore to save the daughters of the king of Argos from a madness, induced by Dionysus, that caused them to run naked through the city, crying, weeping, and screaming.
- During the Siege of Kirrha in 585 BC, hellebore was reportedly used by the Greek besiegers to poison the city's water supply. The defenders were subsequently so weakened by diarrhea that they were unable to defend the city from assault.
- Some historians believe that Alexander the Great died because of a hellebore overdose, when he took it as medication.











