I am getting tired of seeing that unflattering pic…

March 26th, 2007

I am getting tired of seeing that unflattering picture of myself….. Doesn’t anyone have anything interesting to say these days?

P.S. The pictures The Farm sent Sim & Janelle for their birthdays were extremely lovely. Who took them? How can I get one?

Back at home, feeling good

March 5th, 2007


(This picture is of Pinhead and me, s/he is starting to make her presence known. We are at the bottom of month three, and I am starting to show just a little.)

Well I spent the weekend in Albuquerque at Stephany Nisly’s wedding. The event was lovely, and all the Byler relatives were delighted to realize my connection to “that Louise Schlabach who used to come up to the store with a whole string of kids in tow and buy all sorts of natural foods, my weren’t they so dear.”

I got a frightful case of pregnancy/altitude sickness, and am quite happy to be home again with my guts firmly attached. Thanks to all those who made recommendations on my treatment. It wasn’t bad enough to keep me from marching down the isle in the wedding, but it did prevent me from being able to stand up the whole time, and caused a certain degree of trepedation about the misfiring of bodily functions, which thankfully (for all) proved to be unfounded.

I got home yesterday to find Aram and Priska very happy and the house spick and span. I suggested to Aram that we permanently switch roles–since he has concluded that all one can do with children in tow is cook and clean, he has started applying his “spare” energy to those functions, with striking results.

I was also delighted to find my indoor broccoli has sprouted, and the basil is starting to peek it’s head out of the soil. The ground outside is still frozen, hopefully they’ll be happy inside with us for awhile yet.

Old Iron and New Carbon

March 4th, 2007


Start up the old gas-guzzling pick-up, grab the chain saw! We’re out to reduce global warming! My neighbor has a 40+ acre wood lot next to us. He harvested the mature hardwood and the tops are still lying out there – plenty of firewood for you and me both.

In about an hour, and driving less than a mile, the guys and I can bring back a truckload of red and white oak – over 12 million BTU’s worth and enough to heat the house for up to a week.

The calculus: 0.1 gallon of gasoline for the pickup, at 12,400 BTU, about 0.2 gallon gas/oil mixture for the chainsaw = 24,800 BTU consumed. Spending an additional 0.8 watts for 168 hours (per week) for the water circulation pumps with 3413 BTU per kWh (which = about 500 BTU) brings the BTU cost for a week of heating to 37,700, say 40,000 BTU. With a modest 50% efficiency burn (it’s probably better than that), we’ve used that 40,000 BTU expenditure from fossil fuel sources to deliver 6,000,000 BTU to the house. That’s a fossil fuel multiplier of 150.

So what about the carbon dioxide emissions from the wood being burned? Trees are solar batteries capturing CO2 from the air and storing it in cellulose. They incidentally release the O2 which we kind of need for breathing. When they are cut down, the usable timber, with its accompanying carbon, is stored for decades in furniture and houses. This takes that carbon temporarily out of the cycle.

Old Iron and New Carbon- Continued

March 4th, 2007

The unused part of the tree just decomposes, with the respiration of the saprophytes (I love big words!) recombining the same amount of O2 released by the solar energy storage from the trees’ photosynthesis with the carbon in the wood, netting a zero CO2 gain for the atmosphere, with some of that postponed as long as the houses with the hardwood floors and couches stand. So burning the waste wood in our wood furnace just speeds the release of the same CO2 which would have returned to the atmosphere anyway as the tree rotted. The energy now available to heat my house, by the way, is some portion of the sunshine stored as the trees made cellulose. A solar-heated house!

So, if you live in an economically depressed carbon-rich area like us, heat with wood, and save the planet. All of this doesn’t even touch on the physical benefits from working up a load of wood. Maybe I’ll act the pedant on that some other time. I gotta go load the wood stove.

pictures

February 26th, 2007

so we have the after picture, for the strong stomached here is a before and a treatment picture. call me if you burn yourself.. and thanks to debbi who braved the ‘’bowels of amishland” as she said, to find the miracle salve that soothed and healed…and if you are really interested in gore i could compile an album of pictures of our burn victim..


Look at the attached photo and you will see that y…

February 26th, 2007
Look at the attached photo and you will see that your prayers have been answered! Isaac is doing super well. His face still looks a bit sunburned after 2 weeks and half of his forearm is normal looking and the other half is coming along quite nicely.. We are all recovering well from the excitement and are very thankful that all is well..
thank you , Louise for all of us
p.s. the rocket launched beautifully and quite impressively, on Friday

“There’s a shortage of perfect faces…”

February 26th, 2007

“There’s a shortage of perfect [faces] in this world; tis a pity to ruin yours” as is the line in the American classic, Princess Bride, spoken by dear darling Wesley to his betrothed as she–believeing he is dead–is about to kill herself. Anyway, I thought the sentiment could apply here as well, to Issac, that is, about his face. Once it was verified that he was going to survive, my first thoughts were to the prognosis of his face. It would be a shame for mankind to lose such a face; I think it has very high potential for being quite stunning.

Are there any more recent pictures? I’m thinking of something a little more redeptive and less grotesque than the last one.

Why does cooked spinach make your teeth gritty?

Debbi

should dis have a website?

February 15th, 2007

I was wondering if anyone has any thoughts on whether the DiGennaros should have their own domain name. Blogging has worked pretty well for sharing info and pics, but with our diverse interests, it might be useful to have www.digennaros.com, and then (If I understand correctly, we could all have pages like simanelle.digennaros.com, savethewhales.digennaros.com, dangerrocketfuel.digennaros.com, etc. Along with accompanying email addresses, of course.

Now, if our parents had trained us to uncritically adopt any new technology that comes along, this would be a no-brainer. Maybe a blog serves our purposes ok. But it might be interesting . . . . and I could think of benefits like having a digennaro presence on the web. This could be a platform for networking, creating an interesting place where our relatives could meander in DiGennaro-land for a while to find out how they are related to us, which continent who is on, or how they can support our causes. It could also be a platform for self-expression: showcasing artwork or essays, providing information on how to build a straw house, what books to read to learn about Dietrich Bonhoeffer, which vaccinations to avoid, etc.

What do you all think?

Do not put in mouth: put on ground, run away

February 12th, 2007

If you want to make rockets, you can go to a store and pick up a little cardboard tube with a plastic cap, and a little parachute for not much. Then you get some other tubes filled with propellent, and light them, and watch the entire kit fly up into the air, pop out a parachute, and drift back to earth, getting caught in a tree. No big deal, that cardboard tube didn’t cost much—it really is the engine (now used up) that was pricey. Another way, is to make your own.

Here is a website that tells how to make rocket fuel out of common household products:
http://www.jamesyawn.com/rcandy/index.htm
It shows how safe and easy it is, but has a page of warnings that are a must-read:
http://www.jamesyawn.com/rcandy/safety.htm

Now, you are going to need some pointers on how to construct a rocket, and how to make the engine. This will take practice, calculation, and careful planning, but some previous experience from other people can really help things along:
http://www.inverseengineering.com/Pages/2006/1230/1230%20Static.html

And, should you wonder why you are adding water, and the cooking it out again, here is some information about the dangers of trying to do this by melting the mixture:
http://yarchive.net/explosives/rocket/caramel_haz.html

Maybe you too think making rockets could be fun! You are right, but you have to realize that while rocketry is pretty safe, there are some precautions that need to be taken because things do go wrong. Isaac found that out for us, but he seems to be recovering quite well.

question

February 1st, 2007

Sim and I are having an on going conversation about the treadmills. Is it really the same to run 3 miles on a treadmill as it is to run 3 miles outside where the ground is not already moving underneath you?
We welcome feedback.