Mark Beard

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since May 14, 2023
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Recent posts by Mark Beard

Hey, thanks Beau,

I took it out of by paper bag with saw dust in it a couple weeks ago.

I let it sit out for about 24hrs and i could see some very fine cracks developing… so, I’ve put it back in my bag.

I think it needs more time.

I’ve had other pieces ive dried, and if they start to develop cracks, I’d input them back in the bags, the cracks will close back up as it dries.


2 weeks ago
Seems like you’re dealing with quite a bit of water, And I imagine that your ultimate solution will be similar to that which caused this problem for you in the first place. You might not be able to build a pond on your neighbors property, but you might be able to build a series of retainment pools to hold the water and slow down its drainage.  Where I live, there’s a lot of hilly Farm ground.  Between terracing and retainment pools we control the erosion. Most of these pools are built by building earthworks at low points that make a U-shaped into the hillside. Whereas  the kind of dirt used on a permanent pond is important, it’s less important in these sort of pools where you simply want to slow drainage. As such most of these pools in my area are ephemeral And only exist during times of excess rainfall
2 months ago
Sweet potatoes are shade tolerant

Beyond that, try to identify the species of the specific trees you think you’d like to remove.
Certain trees are better for inoculating specific mushroom species.  I had a good sized Sugar Maple taken down in a storm. It’s now growing Lions Mane and Shitake…. And according to literature may support those mushrooms for the next decade based upon the size of the logs.
4 months ago
I don’t think this was mentioned yet,

But Peroxide is good for removing most stains… won’t eat holes through your clothes the way Bleach (sodium hypochlorite) can.

Peroxide is very cheap too… no need to get the name brand peroxide stain removers.
4 months ago

Scott Weinberg wrote:I have 38 foot internal and 4 external,   it is scary good.   Very seldom need to use the bypass, but always like to have it as an option.  By seldom, I mean 2-4 times in a entire season.  And it is NOT the flue causing the need, but more the climate conditions on that given day.




Tell me more please what is your bypass and when do you use it or what is its roll/purpose/need?
4 months ago
Is there such think as a flue height that is too tall?

After the combustion chamber, and lateral mass heating elements, will a flue that goes say 40ft from a basement to a roof cause too fast of an updraft and lose too much heat?

4 months ago

Tj Simpson wrote:Metal colander with drain holes. Tried mushroom hunting with paper bags while everything was wet once, didn't go well.




I think the best think for mushrooms are “laundry bags”…. Nylon netted bags, let the mushrooms breath and spores disseminate
7 months ago
Stopping (well, maybe just drastically decreasing …) caffeine helped my GERD tremendously.


Also, more anecdotal, but I think since I started making and eating a lot of yogurt my GERD has been much better too…. Hard to say. Might be just less stress in my life too. But getting rid of coffee / caffeine definitely helped a ton
8 months ago
Cut it green, and do it quickly.  Then put it in a paper sack with all your chips to dry for a few weeks.

Then apply a food safe oil like mineral
Spirits , not a food oil that can go putrid.

I don’t think cherry is all that toxic in my opinion.it has the best characteristics for easy carving. Next would be Walnut.
8 months ago

Thekla McDaniels wrote:

I can’t quite figure out why east facing may be preferable to west facing 🤷🏻‍♀️, can you elaborate?



The idea here, something I’ve only heard and accepted in passing and never sought to confirm in any studies or trials, is that early sun from eastern slopes helps to dry and warm trees quicker reducing the amount of time they’re covered in morning dew… and in turn reduce mildew or frost exposure time
8 months ago