is your food disposer stuck? or is your food disposal stuck? it might be because you put potato skins in it and it became a big ball of glue.
today on GardenFork Radio, we hear how to fix your stuck food disposer disposal from monica, and how to make simple roast pork shoulder. Then we move on to closed system green public bathrooms what use plants to filter and clean the waste water. which prompts eric to talk about his plan to use greywater from his clothes washer to supply water in the toilet in his workshop. and from here the discourse devolves into Rick making potty jokes.
But Rick aslo talks about the Oom writing software he is using for a book project, as we talk about productivity, with an audio clip from the ASAPscience channel on YouTube.
We learn the best way to finish a project is to start it. Humans have a built in compulsion to finish things, we are told.
eric realizes dishwashers have disposers in them
here is the public urinal on instructables http://www.instructables.com/id/PPlanter-urinal-sink-planter/
here is the productivity video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lHfjvYzr-3g&list=UUC552Sd-3nyi_tk2BudLUzA&index=6
eric uses Remember The Milk for his daily to do list
finally Rick starts to talk about the meyers briggs test and that he is an INTP, which i think means he's an introvert, except when he's on the internet...
photo by lifeisgood
Myra
Back in the late 70s, we had a Sears washing machine (automatic, not a wringer washer) with a drain hose that went into a tub and when you set the proper button, sucked the grey water back into the machine for the next wash. We'd wash whites first and progress through the laundry with the dirtiest items being the last things washed. We could reuse the "old" water a couple times on washday. Great since we had a well that filled slowly. Great idea, Eric, to reuse the water for your workshop toilet. As we build our log cabin (by ourselves), we still have a mind to conserve water. We have gone the composting toilet route. I’m not sure what brand of toilet Rick is thinking about emptying the tray once a year, but for the 2 of us we empty the tray about once a month. Ours is electric. We dump the compost into a pile and after 2 or 3 years of nature taking its course with it, we should be able to safely use it in the garden or around fruit trees. Keep up the good work, Eric!