LambentMote

joined 2 years ago
[–] LambentMote@beehaw.org 2 points 2 years ago

"The technology of plasma thrusters using metal as a fuel is a really exciting development" Awesome concept and the name Neumann Drive is pretty cool.

 

Made in the Fujigen factory in Japan at a time when they started to innovate on new designs, and compete with American-made instruments on quality. The original 'Flying Fingers' Super 80 pickups are chimey, articulate, and very versatile. It's seen some shit, but the neck is just so comfortable. It is my very favorite guitar. https://imgur.com/a/4xthEAI

[–] LambentMote@beehaw.org 3 points 2 years ago

Lovely instruments! I love thinlines for the resonance but have avoided full hollowbodies because of feedback issues, would love to try one of those. Do you find much difference in intonation between the two bridges? Here is my PRS - a 1993 CE24 faded from it's original teal-black.

[–] LambentMote@beehaw.org 6 points 2 years ago

Yep, the only reason it isn't happening for you is that the creator of kbin.social has temporarily broken federation to protect his server against DDOS attacks.

[–] LambentMote@beehaw.org 5 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (3 children)

Yes absolutely, though I find it a difficult spectrum between pure conservationism vs ecology. I want to plant as many natives as possible, but perfect is the enemy of good, and ultimately I believe creating habitat and restoring a functional ecosystem takes precedence over trying to wind back the clock on colonisation.

I live in New Zealand and am in the process of creating a 35 hectare eco-community which includes 8 hectares set aside for wetland restoration and reforestation. There are existing trusts we could ally with for support, however most of them stipulate planting purely natives, which I don't believe is practical. There's no putting the genie back in the bottle, so to speak.

Here gorse bushes imported by Scottish settlers spread rampantly on any ungrazed land, and the reccommended approach is to poison them as fast as possible and plant natives in their stead. We'd rather not use pesticides, but there are other options. Gorse is very vast growing and horrendously thorny, but that can actually be a benefit - animals like rabbits don't like to feed on it, so it can actually act as a nursery for young natives, and it requires full sun, so as soon as anything grows up from under it, it dies back.

Being able to step back and find ways for ecosystems to work together to restore themselves is the only cost effective/sustainable way to do it at the scale and speed we need to.