Thanks for letting me know! I’ll absolutely check it out right away
I could be wrong, but I don’t think you can grow all plants in hydroponics. For example, anything that grows on trees(large root systems) as well as grain crops (where you need a lot of plants together, rather in individual pods like in most hydroponics).
The only alternative I can think of is a greenhouse system. Like what indoor botanical gardens use for trees, but instead designed for farming. That would be expensive(more than farmers could afford), but it would also weather-protect crops.
But you are right about hydroponics or aquaponics for a lot of produce, though!
Some do! The food forest method is very popular with fans of permaculture, and companion planting (like The Three Sisters) is sometime brought up in the community.
I haven't tried petting a bumblebee, but I believe you! They are the gentle giants of the bee world
I’m not sure about the lime, but I just want to thank you for that great explanation!!
I tried looking it up, and most sources still say that cold-weather heat pumps only work until -30c, which still isn't cold enough when parts of my province reached -50c. I am not saying I don't believe you, just that I would like to know more haha. According to this, Norway is pretty comparable climate wise to the Canadian averages, but Canada does get colder, so I hope it's not just that.
Heat pumps are gaining in popularity here, just not on their own yet.
I agree that solar and heat pumps are better! However, heat pumps and electric vehicles lose effectiveness as the temperature drops. So, when it reaches -40c here, the people who own heat pumps still need their furnace as a backup. Most the time heat pumps are fine, but right now backup heat is still needed for those cold snaps or they risk the cold and their pipes freezing and bursting.
So the idea is to use a renewable source of methane as that fuel until it’s no longer needed(and stopping waste pollution while doing it).
These do originate from very hot and dry climates, so I agree there might be a leak in yours, or perhaps you are trying to water too large of an area with too few of Olla's.
I am in Alberta(Canada), and it did work here during our droughts when we were also dry and hot last summer, with temperatures comparable to Texas (at least according to your averages online).
However, drip lines are a good choice, too! I quite like them paired with rain barrels and battery-operated faucet timers(for automatic watering). Though I don't know if rain barrels are legal where you are? I have heard they are illegal in some places in the USA.
That reminds me of Chinmapa from Mexico! A chinampa is a floating garden built on a freshwater lake, made by making a raft of woven reeds, with stakes to keep it in place. Soil was placed down until it was above the waters surface.
This system eliminates the need for watering, and was successful in growing maize, fruit, tomatoes, amaranth, beans, chile, and flowers.
If anyone wants to learn more, there is a good video here: https://youtu.be/HJiTRh4EeTs
Well for apartment buildings and empty balcony rules, yes, its the landlords.
For the outdoor laundry, its bylaws. Basically what happens is nosy neighbors report you, then a bylaw officer comes by and tells you someone made a complaint. It's called a "Nuisance and unsightly premises bylaw."