Sustainable Plantations and Agroforestry in Costa Rica
Emerson White wrote:
H0ow about cats and birds? I think we have far too many species of bird and could do to loose some of them, or something like that, right? </sarcasm>
Sustainable Plantations and Agroforestry in Costa Rica
Fred Morgan wrote:
Cats here in the tropics walk around scared... we have some BIG birds... Also there is boas, fer-de-lance, large cats (marguays, ocelots, jagarundis, pumas, jaguars), and many other things that like to eat cats.
Never noticed cats here trying to attack a bird - usually they are too busy hiding... I know it is a problem in the states though. There are no feral cats in the tropics - aside from the natural ones.
Emerson White wrote:
You sir have a solid point about the tropics, one that does not extend at all to any part of the USA or Canada, where most of the people on this forum are located.
Sustainable Plantations and Agroforestry in Costa Rica
Our inability to change everything should not stop us from changing what we can.
Brenda
Bloom where you are planted.
http://restfultrailsfoodforestgarden.blogspot.com/
Sustainable Plantations and Agroforestry in Costa Rica
Emerson White wrote:
You sir have a solid point about the tropics, one that does not extend at all to any part of the USA or Canada, where most of the people on this forum are located.
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
lhtown wrote:
If you are talking about human birth control, I would suggest that the world would be a better place if everyone on this forum had at least 6 kids.
Emerson White wrote:
Does that mean that all your cats were eaten? Fred mentioned the oscelot, its importance is not as a cat predator, but as a bird predator. All of the prey animals in Freds area have adapted to predation by what amounts to a big tomcat. If your area there is no such natural predator, the fact that you are in the boonies only makes the ecological damage more severe, not less severe, you are out in some of the last remaining habitat for those birds. Cats in north america eat hundreds of millions of birds every year, even with the stray dog or eagle that can go after a cat.
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
Our inability to change everything should not stop us from changing what we can.
Emerson White wrote:
Deep sea oil rigs have blowout preventers, but that only matters if they work, so were your cats eaten? Cats eating birds is a problem everywhere. Cats hunt in a way totally dissimilar from snakes and raptors, the behaviors american birds use to avoid predation leave them open to cats, Cats target their weak spots, there refuges from the other predators, cats combine an ability to climb with a tremendous ambush potential. It's not just a problem in the suburb, the less man is in the surroundings the more damage stands to be done to them; hence rural cats are worse than suburban cats environmentally, which are in there turn worse than city cats.
My solution is more subtle than "Kill the cats!" but a big part of it involves not poisoning the few wells that they have left to stop in on their journeys (I.e. not subsidizing a ravenous and alien predator in their habitat) How about, keep your pets indoors where they belong?.
Your cats bear as much similarity to natural predators as agent orange does to a grazing heard. Cats are a whole different ball game than any north american predator, and trying to conflate my argument with wiping out predators is nothing but a straw man, which is a rude and childish way to score a point when you haven't got a leg to stand on.
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
Emerson White wrote:
to be fair a human can replace a wolf in the ecosystem quite effectively.
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
Our inability to change everything should not stop us from changing what we can.
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
There is nothing permanent in a culture dependent on such temporaries as civilization.
www.feralfarmagroforestry.com
wyldthang wrote:
You know, I was thinking today, ie the other threads about Fukuoka/Gaias Garden etc on forest gardening, I've read through the two mentioned and a few other books--anyways, Fukuoka's book was the one that really TAUGHT me something new/useful/mindblowing. The others tell you how to do it, give a list of plants and where to put them etc. But FU doesnt' really do that--but he teaches you how to OBSERVE and THINK. To get away from preconceived ideas received from somewhere else and to just sit down and LOOK at what is happening on the land around you. The land will tell you what you need to know.
I dont' mean any disrespect by this, but the OP's list had mostly stuff to DO, as in, just do it(and you should know the "good" reasons why). But not a lot about learning how to think better. A lot of this permaculture stuff is thinking in NEW ways, from a DIFFERENT perspective. It is so easy to think in the same old ways and just change the terms so it sounds new.
Like blanket statements, something "is always" something. No, they're not, lots of grey in the world. Most often the WE are the problem, we dont' understand--we just want the list of plants to plant with a diagram of where to put them.
Emerson White wrote:
As far as the conversation goes, there are two groups of cats. Those that kill birds (like yours) and those that are contained indoors or in ground, and no matter how many get moved to the second group it's the first group that matters to this conversation. As far as I'm concerned any growth in the second group is germane to the issue of the damage the first group does.
bruc33ef wrote:
Here we go again with the nonsensical Romantic notion that we're somehow tainted by education. First, without a conceptual framework, how do you know what it is you're observing? Better to know and understand and make explicit the framework you're using than to proceed blindly with some unknown "innate" -- what? -- God-given framework(?) to interpret your observations. But either way you're using a framework. Fukuoka was a trained biologist and researcher who worked in a lab for many years before venturing out. He knew the rules before challenging them. Sepp Holzer also had formal education in agriculture. It's refining knowledge, not ditching it, whatever the rhetoric.
Second, the whole purpose of this thread was precisely to take the principles and see what real world effects could be derived from them for the individual alone, as a kind of an interesting, and for me at least, fruitful creative exercise. Pc certainly does inspire new ways of thinking, which is what it did for me by trying to apply it to an individual scale. If that's not somehow free enough for you, great. Why not start your own thread and then we'll all be able to benefit from all of your free and unencumbered thinking.
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
Emerson White wrote:
Personal experience is what you are going to now? I'm sorry I thought you said you had a leg, that's just a crude drawing of the leg stapled to the wall behind you. How much experience do you think the Europeans had with the Dodo? I'm pretty sure it was hundreds of years. How about the passenger pigeon? Again hundreds of years, and what happened there? How many years did farmers have with rabbits in Australia before one of them thought it couldn't hurt to let 27 grey ones go, how many millions of acres are stripped bare from that little adventure (rabbits being a plant predator)?
As far as the conversation goes, there are two groups of cats. Those that kill birds (like yours) and those that are contained indoors or in ground, and no matter how many get moved to the second group it's the first group that matters to this conversation. As far as I'm concerned any growth in the second group is germane to the issue of the damage the first group does.
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
wyldthang wrote:
What's the problem with modern education? It is not producing a THINKING product. Plenty of trained parrots.
Our inability to change everything should not stop us from changing what we can.
Our inability to change everything should not stop us from changing what we can.
bruc33ef wrote:
I would question whether there is any such thing as "natural and open observations." For observations to even be comprehended, you have to interpret them in terms of some framework, implicit or explicit. You may think your observations are "natural and open," but that's just a delusion that results in stumbling around blindly in the dark. You're not going to live long enough to learn just by doing.
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
Emerson White wrote:
Does that mean that all your cats were eaten? Fred mentioned the oscelot, its importance is not as a cat predator, but as a bird predator. All of the prey animals in Freds area have adapted to predation by what amounts to a big tomcat. If your area there is no such natural predator, the fact that you are in the boonies only makes the ecological damage more severe, not less severe, you are out in some of the last remaining habitat for those birds. Cats in north america eat hundreds of millions of birds every year, even with the stray dog or eagle that can go after a cat.
Sustainable Plantations and Agroforestry in Costa Rica
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
mos6507 wrote:
If you think something's missing in education, you can certainly supplement it as a parent. It's not really an all or nothing proposition. Think of all the kids who go to Sunday school for religious purposes. The same could be true of a permaculturalist. Eco-school on the weekends, so to speak.
I think pulling kids out of the school system as some sort of ideological protest could be highly damaging to kids in a lot of ways.
Kids go through their own process of conformity and individuation anyway. They are not necessarily as shallow and malleable as you think.
My Blog, Natural History and Forest Gardening
www.dzonoquaswhistle.blogspot.com
"Listen everybody, to what I gotta say, there's hope for tomorrow, if we wake up today!" Ted Nugent
"Suck Marrow" Henry D Thoreau
Spare the rod, spoil the child. Here, use this tiny ad named Rod:
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