Esther Norine

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since Jan 14, 2024
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Biography
Hi!!

Early 20s girl that lives in the twin cities and is ecstatic about permaculture!

I like indigenous thought, Murray Bookchin, Hayao Miyazaki, and many others.

"Permaculture is an international grassroots network founded in Australia in the late 1970s that focuses on the sustainable design of human settlement. This decentralized and little institutionalized movement disseminates a distinct worldview, design system, and set of associated practices. Permaculture's central concept is that humanity can reduce or replace energy and pollution-intensive industrial technologies, especially in agriculture, through intensive use of biological resources and thoughtful, holistic, design, patterned after natural ecosystems. To create autonomous, resilient, and equitable living spaces permaculture proposes pragmatic methodological principles informed by scientific ecology, traditional indigenous knowledge, observation, and experimentation. In the design of farming systems, permaculturists promote complex multistrata polycultures involving perennial plants, crop-animal integration, high levels of habitat diversity, whole-landscape water management, and sustainable on-site energy production. Beyond scientifically-informed ecological design, permaculture encourages practitioners to develop emotional and subjective links with the earth, and develop their imagination and creativity as valuable parts of the design process."
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Twin Cities, Minnesota, United States, USDA Zone 4B
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Recent posts by Esther Norine

Is there a way to contribute to this as a local and get in touch?
3 days ago
Hi guys!

Just another Minnesotan checking in.

I was wondering if anyone in the Twin Cities area has any apprenticeships for Permaculture or opportunities like that?

I'm in my early 20s and I'm just trying to get out of the rut I find myself in since I was part of the Lost Generation that dealt with covid in their teen/high school years.

I was 3 months out from graduating high school when it hit and I don't think I've been able to get back on my feet since.

Thank you!!
4 days ago
Hello all! I know I posted this thread and then basically disappeared, but I am thankful for your replies anyways.

Unfortunately, the situation at that house has deteriorated and I have had to move away for a mid-length time.

I'd love to make major changes and help remediate the place into a permaculture paradise, but it's not really up to me.

I hope to be posting more in this forum again soon!
Hey ya'll,

I live in a neighborhood that has, since the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency published a report on it three years ago, has understood to have a water table polluted by 1,4-Dioxane.

I live in a home that had to get water delivered for about three years until they hooked us onto city water, and in the mean time all of our water that was using a private well was contaminated, including the showers, sinks, etc. The 1,4-Dioxane is probably from the landfill that we live nearby leaking into the groundwater, but the damage is already done. I've been interested in Permaculture for years, and I love watching videos and reading about it, but only recently have I started to very barely touch certain aspects of it in practice. I tried a diy micro-wicking bed made out of a plastic jug I cut in half to grow some tomatoes with a paper towel wick and put some stock store soil on it, and the seeds were so virulent we had to find spaces in pots for them outside. I've been wanting to stop my family from harvesting the Fall leaves every fall and collecting that to compost at a composting site, and instead compost it here either with a vermicomposting system or otherwise, finally regenerating nutrients instead of bleeding them.

But my question is; how do I bioremediate the 1,4-Dioxane that exists in our groundwater on the property, before I try to create a kitchen garden or food forest in it? I don't want to expose myself to more of the toxic gick.
I've found some papers and stuff on it, like this one Advances in bioremediation of 1,4-dioxane-contaminated waters, this one, Phytoremediation of 1,4-dioxane-containing recovered groundwater , and this one Using Phytoremediation to Remove 1,4 Dioxane from Groundwater in Ann Arbor, Michigan, I've even seen a bacterial solution in the form of this Allonia, but I'd really like to hear from the permies about it.

Despite the fact the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency was responsible for the pollution, it wasn't legally required for them to do a long-term health test of the residents affected, including me. How cool is that?
Anyways, enough doom and gloom, can you help me out?
Thanks!
I've been listening to this recently
1 year ago