Riley O'laska

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since May 02, 2025
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Recent posts by Riley O'laska

Hi Everyone,

I'm a homesteader in Southeast Alaska. My family and I have been on our land for about 7 years and I'm starting to experiment with integrating gardening, grazing (goats) and agroforestry. I've got a slight slope to part of my land and want to make some huglekulture berms on contour that I plant trees and berries into a la Mark Shepard/Paul Wheaton/Sepp Holzer fusion, but I have a very practical question. Do trees go uphill of the berm, on the berm, or downhill of the berm. What parts of the berm grow what things the best? We're between zone 3 and zone 4. We get about 50" of rain per year, our summers can be highly variable but I find that I usually have to water seedlings for the first year during dry spells before they can fend for themselves. I like to plant alot of trees from seeds though and my thought is that getting them in the right spot in the system I can stop doing this chore and still have some survivability. The berms consist of cottonwood logs, brush and dirt. I'm experimenting with alot of different species: apples, hazelnuts, chestnuts, pine nuts, locusts, siberian pea shrub, pie cherries, plums, maples (cause they're purdy),  raspberries, salmon berries, blue berries, thimble berries. Probably more stuff honestly, I plant a lot of things... Thanks ahead of time!

-Riley
3 days ago
I found this post while I was trying to help an older neighbor get quills out of his really strong bite-y dog. I live in a remote town in Alaska with no resident vet options, and after trying to pull them free hand and getting bit, we resorted to ratchet strapping the dog to a strong hog panel fence. We started with three ratchet straps (one around his waist, one around his chest and one around his neck) and ended up with about 4 more before he couldn't wiggle and bite (some were to hobble his feet and I think one more around his chest and one more around his head). We then slipped my belt around his muzzle to hold his mouth closed and pulled that tight to the fence too. It was only then that we could start to pull the quills. That dog was seriously strong. He left the satanic dog equivalent of a snow angel dent in my fence. It was a little rough on the dog, but he was fine afterwards and it was the only way that we could help him. We had hemostats, which worked really well once we could use them. If I were doing it again, I might try draping some blankets over the dog to cushion him from the fence and the straps a little more.

Just wanted to toss this idea out there to any other desperate souls out of range of a vet.
2 months ago