Mo 29 Jun 2009
Mittwoch geht`s zu Imkermeister van den Bongard
Geschrieben von Larissa unter Allgemein
[13] Kommentare
Mittwoch also geht es los “auf große Fahrt”: Von Köln aus wird sich eine Delegation, bestehend aus dem Imkerpaten nebst 4 Neuimkern, nach Willich aufmachen. Dort, bei Imkermeister Johann van den Bongard gilt es, den Imker-Betrieb zu besichtigen, dem Vortrag aufmerksam zu lauschen und, sollten noch Völker im Angebot stehen, die Wahl für das Starter-Set zu treffen.
Ligustica oder Buckfast? Holzbeute oder Styropor?
Zur Sicherheit noch ein Fachbuch einpacken, und dann wissen wir schon wieder bedeutend mehr
Es ist schon viel wert, das Rad nicht neu erfinden zu müssen. Stattdessen darf ich auf das Fachwissen erfahrener Imker zurückreifen. DANKE!
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2. Juli 2009 um 15:09[...] Die Spannung war groß. Und es war wirklich immens interessant. Einen tollen Betrieb führt er da, der Herr Imkermeister van den Bongard mit seinem Bienenland in Willich. Mit unendlich viel Honigsorten, handgeschnitzten Statuen des heiligen Ambrosius, einer hauseigenen Königinnenzucht, Met (*hmmm*), Weihnachtskerzenherstellung (in Handarbeit!!), Fachliteratur, Imkerhüten, Honigessenz für die Duftlampe… so phantastisch viel Angebot rund um Biene und Honigprodukte- für den Honigliebhaber wie für den Imker ein El-Dorado, möchte ich meinen. Speziell für interessierte Neu-Imker hat er tolle Vorträge und Lehrgänge im Angebot, die einen Besuch mit Sicherheit lohnen! [...]
19. Februar 2015 um 00:21
Danke Heidi ffcr’s Publizieren.Jedoch ist Urban Gugler die Person, welche wir ffcr disees Unterfangen gewinnen konnten (evtl. Sohn von Paul ?).Er wird mit einem Kollegen zusammen uns die Solarenergie und deren Mf6glickeiten nahe bringen.Gruss Fre4nzi
30. März 2015 um 07:25
Nrl, that does seem rather low; I wodenr if it includes the relatively low-voltage section of the grid from local transformer to end user, where losses will be proportionally higher. Still, thanks for the links!Jason, that’s good. Still, I think a lot of what gets labeled ADHD consists of the natural reluctance of children to sit still and be bored to death when adults would prefer them to do so. Dltrammel, why not just have the government and business officials have a conference call, the way they used to, and eliminate the Byzantine regulations that prevent nurses from carrying out health care procedures well within their own competence — for example, diagnosis of ordinary health conditions — without having an MD breathing down their necks? Bluebird, your grandchildren may well be fine — they’ll grow up in a world in trouble, and won’t have to contend against the delusion of perpetual progress that makes so many people in their parent’s generation sitting ducks right now. Pentronicus, excellent. Since only a very, very small percentage of jobs could be done by telecommuting anyway — you can’t farm, work in a factory, wait tables or dig a ditch over the internet, after all — attempts to claim that the internet can replace commuting are frankly rather silly. Yooper, you know, I don’t think you’ve taken the time to read what I wrote. Since there won’t be a sudden, total failure of the electrical grid, for reasons I’ve already explained in detail, there won’t be the kind of sudden, total collapse you’re predicting. If you want to argue with that, fine, but do take the time to address my arguments!Bill, granted. That’s why I’m guessing it will happen either in an emergency, when the shutoff can be blamed on whatever’s causing the crisis, or a bit at a time, as deferred maintenance and malign neglect cause random chunks of the rural grid to go dark. Twilight, refrigeration should be a big concern. One approach is to get a root cellar dug and operational sooner rather than later. (The house my wife and I bought last summer, a 1925 bungalow, had one already in place — a major point in its favor.) There are also plenty of ways to reshape your food habits so you don’t have to rely on refrigeration to anything like the same extent. Still, that does have to be addressed. Mash, I did note your original comment; you provided no justification for your claims, and no examples of what you were talking about, and I classed it as one of the common bits of handwaving on the part of software jockeys who don’t have enough experience with hardware to know just how dependent their work is on very specific technologies. Now I may be wronging you, but if you’d like to convince me of that, you do need to do something other than just insisting a second time that a scotch and soda is still a scotch and soda when you don’t add scotch and you leave out the soda. Dan, that’s a common experience these days. Tolerably often, when I’m writing, I wodenr how much of a point there is to churning out prose that has a very, very high chance of being erased permanently by the same forces that lost us most of Greek and Roman literature the last time a western civilization broke down. Still, there’s always the chance of doing something useful. Blagroll, if you have the chance, take the last sentence of your comment and carve it in stone. It would be nice if our distant descendants realized that somebody in this age noticed the reason why our civilization is about to crash and burn!
21. April 2015 um 03:08
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1. Mai 2015 um 03:38
We use mathematics for plainntg flowers. We usually have a range of dates for when it is safe to put our plants out. We adjust this based on how the season is progressing and our particular micro-climate. (Some areas get more sun than others.) Since we start our seeds in flats, then move them to small pots before moving them outside, we have an estimated indoor growing period which, with the germination time, tells us when to plant the seeds. It’s all addition and subtracting, and some range arithmetic and some probability, but we do grow some flowers.If we were serious and wanted to make money selling flowers to florists or perfume makers, we’d use more math to compute how many plants we could fit in our beds, how much fertilizer they’d need, how to run the irrigation drip lines, and so on. There are a number of trade offs, and they involve costs, yield and risk reduction. We can also use statistics to estimate our selling price and get a sense of whether we’ll be making money.In the early 80s, I worked for a company that produced the first spreadsheet program, and a lot of our customers were grain farmers with Apple IIs running our spreadsheet while they browsed farm newsletters and listened to the Department of Agriculture on the radio. They have all sorts of trade offs on spacing, fertilizer, fuel, insecticides, seed types, subsidies, futures and depreciation.I gather you can also use math for stuff besides plainntg things, but without planted food, a lot fewer of us would be doing any mathematics at all.
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