edit: Don’t do this. Embrace modernity and don’t pollute the soil.

  • @reverendsteveii@sopuli.xyz
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    11710 months ago

    Boomers: Why don’t you kids go outside and play. When I was your age we played in the dirt for hours at a time.

    Also boomers:

  • @Kotsi3P0@lemmy.ml
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    6110 months ago

    Tradition is to save it and use it as a wood oil so the wood will not decay after some time on the rain. Absorbs really good, doesn’t stink or stick…

  • @Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    10 months ago

    Shit like this is why people doing home gardening, especially in areas that have been inhabited for hundreds of years, without testing the soil first give me heart palpitations. What are you eating?? I don’t know, and neither do you!

    • @June@lemm.ee
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      2910 months ago

      My neighborhood soil is laced with arsenic and lead from an old foundry that used to be nearby.

      A bunch of my neighbors grow and eat food in that soil knowing it. It boggles my mind.

      • @Ruthalas
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        1510 months ago

        While I know it’s not convenient, have you considered… telling them?

        • @June@lemm.ee
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          2110 months ago

          Yea, and the response has been ‘I’ve been eating food I’ve grown here for 20 years and I’m totally fine!’

          • @zeroAhead@lemmy.ml
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            1410 months ago

            Just like the people that love to tell their grandparents lived a long life smoking tobacco everyday.

      • @Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        710 months ago

        Almost everyone I know of that gardens at home just tills the soil they have available. Gardening soil isn’t cheap and they view it as an unnecessary expense. It’s especially hard to convince people in rural areas that just using the dirt out back can be harmful.

    • Casey
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      210 months ago

      I know you can send soil to be tested by your local university extension, but how do you test for conaminents like used hydrocarbons, arsenic, lead, glyphosate-based herbicides, etc?

      I am about to embark on a hobby of composting and would like to know.

      • @Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        310 months ago

        If your local university doesn’t test for the specific contaminants you’re concerned about you can send samples to a private lab instead, sometimes they offer more testing options. I don’t know the specifics of how each one is tested for, but on your end they usually just require you to take (and possibly dry) soil samples before sending them in.

        If you don’t have a good idea of the history of the site, it would be good to try and figure it out through your local historical society if you have one, or land records from your local records office. Whoever is testing the soil will have a better idea of what to test for if they know it used to be a mining town, or it’s 50 feet from a house old enough to have used lead paint, if it was farm land, etc.

  • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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    3910 months ago

    The first couple times I helped my dad change the oil in his car he dumped it down the storm drain which lead to the Chesapeake.

    We don’t do that anymore.

    • @mkhopper@lemmy.world
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      2310 months ago

      I think of all the times I did that working on my cars years ago.
      It was just something you did and no one ever even blinked. Old oil, gas, brake fluid, etc, right down the storm drain.

      Now I think back and shudder.

  • @w00tabaga@lemm.ee
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    3110 months ago

    My grandpa would just set the old oil filters when he would change the oil in the 3 farm tractors he owned. He did that for years and 30 years later that spot is still like blacktop. At least it’s only a 2’x2’ spot but I couldn’t imagine if he dumped the actual oil. And that’s only 3 diesel tractors twice a year.

    The thought that shops were doing it for years is sad

      • QuinceDaPence
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        2910 months ago

        Just don’t forget to take the battery out so it can be safely disposed of in the ocean.

          • @hackris@lemmy.ml
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            310 months ago

            How? Isn’t it just 12 V? Genuinely curious, because I never understood this stuff in movies…

            • @bigBananas@feddit.nl
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              310 months ago

              I don’t know for sure but I think it’s the current, higher voltage will bridge a bigger gap/higher resistance but a human body doesn’t have that high of a resistance and car batteries are capable of providing plenty of current (I think?)

              • @hackris@lemmy.ml
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                10 months ago

                Yes, but to penetrate the top layer of human skin, you need about 60 V DC, or 30 V AC. A car battery is 12 V DC…

                Edit: I got the voltages from an old ElectroBoom video and I just remembered them so I know when to use protection when working with electricity and when it’s not needed.

            • @Pinklink@lemm.ee
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              310 months ago

              That’s why it’s more likely used for fetish purposes irl, and even the maybe two in series? You’d have to ask the experts, which I’m totally not one of. Not involved in that world at all. Definitely don’t have a monthly budget for that…

              • @hackris@lemmy.ml
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                110 months ago

                I’ve heard of electric stimulation used for fetish, but none of the manufacturers state how high of a voltage the tools produce (at least I couldn’t find any info about this).

  • @imgonnatrythis@lemm.ee
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    1710 months ago

    Thanks. It nice to have a reliable source to turn to when I am inspired to follow guides published in the 1960s.

  • Big Miku
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    1510 months ago

    The modern way of doing this would involve reversing the process of dinosaur bones turning into oil. So you just put into the oil-to-bone-inator and bury those bones back into the ground where they originally came from.

      • Ignotum
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        2210 months ago

        Oh really? So how come you can use oil to make plastic dinosaur toys?

        Checkmate atheists

      • Big Miku
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        1210 months ago

        That’s what Big Non-Dino-Oil wants you to think, so they can get all of the moneys from everyone.

      • bermuda
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        610 months ago

        Then why is there a dinosaur on the gas station!?

        /S

  • @Fluffy56
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    310 months ago

    I mean, oil comes from the ground so I’m just returning it to its natural habitat.