Richard Forest

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since Aug 28, 2017
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dinosaurtree.blogspot.com.au

"Wealth is a deep understanding of the natural world."-Bill Mollison
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South East Queensland Australia
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Recent posts by Richard Forest

Hi Everyone,
Looking for a lady to respect, build a relationship and share life with.

I'm creating an off the grid farm in SouthEast Queensland, Australia(West of Brisbane) with large orchards, vegetable gardens and dams.
I'm at 600m above sea level, living in the clouds, with beautiful views of mountains, surrounded by colourful birds, thousands of acres of state forest, national park and rock pools to swim in close by.
I'm a Machinist, Diesel Fitter and Blacksmith and enjoy using my hands to build and repair things.
I love permaculture, syntropic agroforestry, ancient trees(my blog- dinosaurtree.blogspot.com), regular trees, plants, beekeeping, ecology, learning about and photographing wild birds and animals, culture, anthropology, history, astronomy/star gazing, philosophy, swimming in wild places, through hiking, exploring(I've travelled globally), all types of music/collecting records, vintage hifi, motorbikes, four wheel drives and I also play guitar.

I was born in 1981 and was once an Australian soldier(serving at times in various idiotic oil wars). Now that's all behind me, I work as a Mechanical Fitter in heavy industry every now and then(in power stations, on trains etc), to pay for the things that I can't produce myself. I plan to run my own business at some stage. I hope to have chickens, ducks(I have a duck deficiency) and pigs one day too.

My instagram is richard_forest_
6 foot 2. British/Austronesian Background.

Cheers, Richard

Values-

I guess one of my main values is the use of inquiry, knowledge and lived experience to evaluate what others say, and using those tools to form my own opinions about a subject before readily accepting someone else's. That goes for centre left, right and mainstream media. I guess it's what some would call exercising a level of objectivity.

I aim to hold truth and knowledge as paramount above any sort of political correctness. I think if more people wanted to learn more about everything in their world as well as each other, the human sphere would be a much happier, less violent place.

Without nature, we have nothing and are nothing. A world in which the best financial decision is aligned with the best ecological one could really be something. Especially on a planet with finite resources and a dominant species living the lie of unlimited financial growth.

Apart from that, love, friendship, family, treating others(humans, trees and animals) as you'd like to be treated, respect for each other and creating a society where people can live free of needless violence and persecution are some other ideals worth pursuing.

Our miraculous world and existence, with it's platinum sunrises, sunsets, towering forests, colourful birds and butterflies, soaring clouds, lightning, and the glow of an ancient cosmos above really is something. I feel very lucky to have eventuated and to have been born, out of every other possibility. Being grateful for that is important.

Hello Everyone.
I'm creating an off the grid farm in SouthEast Queensland, Australia with large orchards, vegetables and dams.
I'm at 600m above sea level, living in the clouds, with beautiful views of mountains, surrounded by colourful birds, thousands of acres of state forest, national park and rock pools to swim in close by.
I'm a Machinist, Diesel Fitter and Blacksmith and enjoy using my hands to build and repair things.
I love permaculture, syntropic agroforestry, ancient trees(my blog- dinosaurtree.blogspot.com), regular trees, plants, beekeeping, ecology, learning about and photographing wild birds and animals, culture, anthropology, history, astronomy/star gazing, philosophy, swimming in wild places, through hiking, exploring(I've travelled globally), all types of music/collecting records, vintage hifi, motorbikes, four wheel drives and I also play guitar.

I was born in 1981 and was once an Australian soldier(serving at times in various idiotic oil wars). Now that's all behind me, I work as a Mechanical Fitter in heavy industry every now and then(in power stations, on trains etc), to pay for the trees and seeds I plant, manure for the trees, the mulch I can't grow myself and fuel for the 4wd. I plan to run my own business when the food orchard is established. I hope to have chickens, ducks(I have a duck deficiency) and pigs one day.

I've met some wonderful women, but many seem to be obsessed with pseudo scientific medical pursuits like kinesiology, various shades of woo woo or other strange conspiracy like ideas. It seems that for many people, a love of nature and a love for spurious drivel or pseudoscience seem to be a co-occurring phenomenon.
This is highly unfortunate, as I think a life enjoyed with a person who doesn't follow the teachings of witch doctors, flat earthists, homeopaths and star sign oracles would really be a hell of a lot of fun!!

My instagram is richard_forest_ if you'd like to check out some of my photos.

Regards and Best Wishes to All, Richard

Some of my Values-
I guess one of my main values is the use of inquiry, knowledge and lived experience to evaluate what others say, and using those tools to form my own opinions about a subject before readily accepting someone else's. That goes for centre left, right and mainstream media. I guess it's what some would call exercising a level of objectivity.

I aim to hold truth and knowledge as paramount above any sort of political correctness. I think if more people wanted to learn more about everything in their world as well as each other, the human sphere would be a much happier, less violent place.

We are just a small part of nature, not it's overlords. Without it, we have nothing and are nothing. A world in which the best financial decision is aligned with the best ecological one could really be something, especially on a planet with finite resources and a dominant species living the lie of unlimited financial growth.

Apart from that, I guess love, friendship, family, treating others(humans, trees and animals) as you'd like to be treated, respect for each other and creating a society where people can live free of needless violence and persecution are some other things that i value.

I value our miraculous world and existence, with it's platinum sunrises, sunsets, towering forests, colourful birds and butterflies, soaring clouds, lightning, and the glow of an ancient cosmos above. I feel very lucky to have eventuated and to have been born, out of every other possibility. It really is so much better than winning the lottery.

Hopefully not too deep. Just wanting to be straight up.

3 years ago
Nope. Only the Bunya Pine, Parana Pine and Monkey Puzzle produce a nut(seed) large enough to be worth eating.
6 years ago
Hi Windy,
Araucaria can be propagated via tissue culture. Wollemia Nobiliis, the Wollemi Pine was an ancient tree found in a deep gorge in the Blue Mountains by Park Ranger David Noble. The tree survived millions years and specifically the last 50,000 years of destructive human burning here in Australia. It is believed, that due to an extreme lack of genetic diversity in the remaining plants, destructive human fire stick farming/mosaic burning and natural fires reduced this population to maybe one or two individual trees. Due to the valuable nature of this tree to tree enthusiasts and collectors, the material was propagated extensively via tissue culture and the resulting trees sold all over the world to satisfy demand.

Of the family Araucariaceae(in the order Pinales) you have 3 remaining genuses(Araucaria, Agathis, Wollemia).
-In the genus Araucaria there is the Bunya Pine, Hoop Pine, Parana Pine, Monkey Puzzle Tree, Klinki Pine from PNG, Norfolk Island Pine, and 15 highly threatened species from New Caledonia.
-In the genus Agathis, which are commonly known as Kauri Pine, Australia has 3(Atropurpurea, Microstachya and Robusta), Australis in NZ, and there are many others(22 species in total)in the Southern Hemisphere.
-In the genus Wollemia, there is one. Wollemia Nobilis, the Wollemi Pine, a living fossil that survived the constant burning created by destructive humans.

Agriculture is around 12,500 years old.
Homo Sapiens is around 200,000 years old.
Primates are around 50 million years old.
These trees are 240 million years old, before bees, birds, eucalypts or flowers....before the emergence of almost anything we know or recognise in our current short lives.
These trees oxygenated the earth from 0.16% oxygen in the air to levels that would allow our emergence and eventual destruction of these same trees(and ourselves).
https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/offtrack/australian-rainforest-woods/9448170

I hope you find researching these trees interesting. They really are an ancient giant, and such a useful plant in the myriad benefits that they could provide us. Unfortunately, we are too short sighted to plant them en masse, eg in a strip farming agroforestry scenario. They collect fog and precipitation on their leaves due to their high leaf area and return that massive amount of water back to the soil, helping us in every possible way. They also limit evaporation in dry areas, of which Australia is one of the driest on the planet, and provide a massive nut crop every 3 years. When will we ever learn?? Only until it's too late I imagine.

6 years ago
Hi all,
I live in Southeast Queensland and love the Bunya(Araucaria Bidwillii) species. It is arguably Australia's most iconic tree. I am an hour and a half from the Bunya Mountains, which is a rare, huge subtropical rainforest of around 28,000 acres in size and the original home and genetic epicentre of these 230 million year old giants. Brontasaurus ate and spread their seed as proven by the study of copralites, and a native satellite community of these trees exists in Atherton, North Queensland.

The trees are massive and truly a sight to behold. Due to their fog catching nature and large size, the temperature up in the Bunya Mountains is cool in summer and moderate in winter.
I grow both Bunya and Parana Pine(Araucaria Angustifolia, the Bunyas cousin) here on my property in SE QLD, however am having no success with the Monkey Puzzle(araucaria Aracauna). The Monkey Puzzle enjoys a cold climate and tends to not grow and eventually dies here in the subtropics. Also, I believe Phytopthera may be an issue(root fungus), to which the Wollemi Pine(Wollemia Nobillis), it's ancient cousin is now in the process of succumbing to unfortunately.
The monkey puzzle grows extemely well in Tasmania and Victoria(and cold parts of NSW) where it frosts and snows.

I do find though, strangely that the Parana Pine(A.Angustifolia) from Brazil grows here faster and better than the Bunya!

For anyone interested, I have developed a blog to share information about these amazing trees and their relatives, including the work of experts like Ivar Wendling-

http://dinosaurtree.blogspot.com/

Happy Planting!
6 years ago