Linked To!

I’ve been linked to by a blog that’s obviously much more popular than mine, Michael Rivero’s What Really Happened? Thank you Michael! This has resulted in some additional places linking here, and generating even more traffic!

He linked to my recent post on the possible link between the disappearing bees and GM crops. This is causing a tenfold increase in traffic to this blog, and generating a discussion unlike any other here. Regular readers of this blog may want to go over and have a look.

To all new visitors, welcome! Please have a look around. I hope you add this blog to your bookmarks or RSS readers, and come back soon. You are just the kind of people I would like to have here, and I will try to write some more posts soon along similar lines as this one. This is not just a gardening blog!

Green Hosting

For some time now I have decided not to have banner ads on this blog. I think sites with banner ads look cluttered, and for the small amount of money they could generate I think it’s nicer for the people who read this blog if I don’t have them. As a rule, I also don’t provide commercial links with places I don’t have some relationship with or places I don’t believe are good to do business with. With banner ads it’s hard to be this selective.

Today I put up my first ever ad, for my hosting provider. You can find the ad graphic on the bottom of the front page of this blog.

Apart from the food we eat, the cars we drive and heating our homes, probably one of the most energy intensive things we do is use our computers and the Internet. As a US based company, Dreamhost is not obliged to reduce their carbon emissions or purchase carbon credits under the Kyoto Protocol.

As well as trying to reduce their energy consumption, Dreamhost has voluntarily chosen to purchase carbon credits with the intention of making their business carbon neutral. As I continue to look for ways to reduce my own energy consumption, I am pleased my hosting provider is doing the same thing. I hope many more companies all over the world start doing the same thing.

A hosting provider is a company that will ‘host’ an Internet domain for you. They normally handle your email and web site as well as provide you with things like blogs, photo galleries or online shops. These are things many Internet Service Providers do, or in the case of blogs or Internet sites you can find them other places online for free, but a hosting provider will let you have all of these things in one place on a personalized domain. In addition, you can change your Internet Service Provider and still keep your email address and domains. If you are unhappy with Dreamhost, it’s also not difficult to switch to a different hosting provider.

I wish I could say I was completely satisfied with Dreamhost, but I’m not. Especially the last few months have seen several frustrating and extended outages in service with them. Searching on the Internet will show many heated discussions between customers who were very upset with them. If you sign up for service with them, don’t expect it to be trouble free! At the same time, for the price I think the service is good. I also think their customer service is excellent, and when they have a problem they work around the clock until it’s solved. I have no reason to believe another similarly priced hosting company would provide a better level of service.

I think Dreamhost’s biggest problem is more that they have a few, loud, poorly behaved customers, rather than a serious problem with their level of service.

For all but the most power users, Dreamhost has virtually no limits on disk use or bandwidth. You can have as many domains or subdomains as you want. You are allowed a very generous number of mailboxes and email addresses. You are allowed unlimited blogs or other web site installations. For most people, the cheapest plan offered is enough, for as little as US$8 per month.

And, yes, if you follow the link on the front page of this blog and sign up for an account with them, I will get a little bit of money. It’s my intention to apply any money I get from this towards the cost of running this site, and if I have any left over donate it to charity.

Don’t sign up with Dreamhost for the sole purpose of supporting this site! If you were thinking of signing up with Dreamhost anyway, consider doing it by following the link on this blog.

You Are What You Grow

Michael Pollan of Omnivore’s Dilemma fame explains just how important the upcoming debate on the Farm Bill is to all of us, here in this article for the New York Times Magazine.

The Farm Bill determines the subsidies and national priorities for food production in the US. To a large degree, it determines how half of the land in the US is used and if priority will be given to environmental issues or to high volume food production. It will determine where the massive farm subsidies go. For Americans who can’t afford to buy any food they want, regardless of price, it will to a large degree determine what they eat.

For those of us who live outside of the US, it is nearly as important, because what results from the Farm Bill will put pressure on governments all over the world who will need to harmonize their own food policies with those of the US.

New Blog!

It’s not often I get to announce a new blog that at least in part is mine! Together with Rebsie of Daughter of the Soil, we have created a new joint blog, Root Cause. Be sure to add it to your bookmarks and RSS feeds! Please visit now and have a look at our first post concerning Perennial Onions.

I don’t know about the future, but for now our emphasis is on things people do themselves. Many people have a blog they use to gather information, create a journal, have a platform in which to express their opinion, talk about products they like using or just to write about things they think are important. In the beginning at least, we are trying to offer something that is none of those things, but rather emphasizes things that people are doing themselves and want to talk about.

Rebsie and I are both gardeners, and plan to share with you what we are growing. In particular Rebsie is an amateur plant breeder, and will almost certainly be showing off some of her creations. I hope we can find people who are raising animals, farming, cooking, building things, working on self-sufficiency projects and anything else people do themselves. Of particular interest would be things of a heirloom or heritage nature, or things related to biodiversity.

Are you doing something that you would like to write about? Maybe you don’t want to go to the trouble of having your own blog, and would just like to write something one off? Maybe you have your own blog, but would like an excuse to post somewhere else as a way to promote it and interact with other bloggers? Whatever your reasons, if you would like to make a guest post on this new blog, please get in touch with us!

More on GM and Bees

The possible link between GM crops has been in the news more lately. An article in the German newspaper Der Spiegel revealed a recent study that showed an AIDS like syndrome in affected bees, and exposure to Bt caused a significantly faster progression of the disease.

Jouni Ylinen recently pointed me to a study that was done 2001-2004 which observed a similar problem, so it’s not like it’s been a secret this whole time. Note near the bottom of the page, where it says:

A chance infestation by parasites (microsporidia) resulted in more significant damage to the Bt-fed colonies. The underlying mechanism which causes this effect is unknown.

Bt works by damaging the gut on certain insects, and causing it to rupture. Until now Bt was thought to only attack very specific insects that are susceptible to it, and be non toxic to others. Apparently the toxicity of Bt may not be fully understood.

A seeming unrelated story has emerged in South Africa, on babies with HIV. Transmission of the disease is lower in breastfed babies, and the reason they think is because infant formulas irritate the gut, which more easily allows the virus to pass into the body.

Could these two unrelated news items actually be related?