Ben's Blog

self sustainability, wood ben September 29, 2013

Wooden bridge to more wood part 2

This Subaru has hauled anything from motorcycles, compost & chicken coops; it’s only suiting to give it another job.

 This 90° turn was a huge bitch.

Almost there.

I’m not sure what I’ll do for boards yet, probably more hemlock cuts. I can’t wait to have it ready to use!

self sustainability, wood ben September 28, 2013

Wooden bridge to more wood part 1

A stream prevents us from taking the motorized wheelbarrow to 90% of the land where good fire wood is. It’s a herculean task to carry it all back across the stream and I’m no Hercules. My landlord tells me that hemlocks take water pretty well and we just dropped 2 huge ones for a clearing. It’s time to make a bridge.

Using a come-along inch by inch; thankfully it was hauled by a car for half of the trip

Getting ready to cross the stream

The tipping point

We’ll want a vertical component on that sucker

Hurray! One more to go…

poultry, self sustainability ben September 28, 2013

Layer coming online

life in the U.S., self sustainability ben August 19, 2013

How is this not a more common mode of transportation?

agriculture, self sustainability ben July 28, 2013

Today was a good day

agriculture, self sustainability ben July 20, 2013

Blueberry time

life in the U.S. ben July 20, 2013

Hey guys…

guys…

 guys listen…

I know what this fair with children running around needs…

a FIRE!

guys, a fire… in a PIT!

 

I’m pretty sure that’s how the conversation went.

agriculture, self sustainability ben July 15, 2013

The harvests are finally rolling in

With our late start and the crazy rain, it won’t be a great year.

poultry, self sustainability ben July 09, 2013

A tough job to say the least

 

 

I.T., miscellaneous, web development ben June 26, 2013

A website to make the meal math easier on the parents

https://yum.akrin.com

List of current features:

  1. It uses the USDA National Nutrient Database as the basis for all the foods you can search (your tax dollars at work).
  2. You can add your own recipes, ingredients whatever else is not in the base database. We find that we add all the foods we use even if it’s just bread because a bread with a label is always more accurate than the generic/average bread as defined in the USDA database. It’s also nice for adding your family specials once and for all and never have to do the math again.
  3. What you add is not shared amongst users and it only visible to you.
  4. It tries to learn which foods come back to help pick them later on.
  5. It remembers which amounts you last used
  6. Calculates insulin dose on the fly
  7. Very simple & streamlined navigation for the least work for the parents

This is still very much a work in progress but has made our meals a lot more agreeable already.

self sustainability, wood ben June 23, 2013

I still don't know how to measure wood amounts in cords

But I estimate this to be around a metric shit ton.

apiculture, self sustainability ben June 22, 2013

Brood, brood as far as the eye can see

7 Frames full of brood recto verso. Looks like the queen finally took it upon herself to lay some serious egg. In the course of next week I expect the colony to triple in size which will put us on par with last season.

poultry, self sustainability ben June 21, 2013

Freedom rangers

25 of them and they all made it through the bowels of USPS. As I introduced them to their new living quarters, I dipped their beaks into the water so they knew where it was right away. They were all quite thirsty traveling all the way from Pennsylvania.

We ordered them from Freedom Ranger Hatchery (have a link), they were excellent to deal with.

agriculture, poultry, self sustainability ben June 09, 2013

Machetes have a bad rep,

but they can clear some serious bush.

This whole area was reclaimed along with the ancient logging road leading to it. This is where the chicken coop will go, rotating the fenced-in area for the chickens with the garden each season.

I wish I had a picture of what it looked like before.

agriculture, self sustainability ben June 09, 2013

The garden this year

Nothing major but pretty decent.

poultry, self sustainability ben June 09, 2013

All fixed with a few finishing touches

All it’s missing now is a window but I’ll wait until after we moved the coop to its new location in a couple of weeks.

life in the U.S., miscellaneous ben June 03, 2013

Waveless

poultry, self sustainability ben May 29, 2013

Bear

That sac of shit ripped open the coop like a can of tuna, -1 chick :

A day working in the rain later, it’s structurally sound again.

Reinforced the front panel & added extra locking throughout.

Painting will have to wait for more clement weather.

poultry, self sustainability ben May 26, 2013

New place to hang out in

The chicks still fit through the fence which is a problem since they’re getting chased by the big chickens. We can’t keep them in the coop all the time so here’s their new protection/containment.

This will be used as shelter during the warm days by the meat birds.

poultry, self sustainability ben May 19, 2013

The pecking order

We introduced the chicks to the 4 grown up chickens today. They shared the same quarters for weeks now and were able to get used to each other. Of course the big ones went immediately after the small ones to establish the pecking order.

It always breaks my heart but that’s the way it is. All I do is make sure one of them doesn’t get all the attention. Natural as it is, I’m still angry towards the big ones, especially considering they too were small before. I can’t help but grab a plastic rake and establish my pecking order if they go too hard on them. This has the double advantage of satisfying my need for justice while reinforcing my place at the very top of said order. All the chickens respect the crap out of me now and make way around me. That’s right, I’m the alpha-chicken!

Which is good because Rhode-Island reds are not shy at all which causes problems when locking them up every night among other things. It’s a healthy reminder that they are on the wrong end of the plastic rake.

No pics or video, I was too busy containing this ruckus.

all out geekery, I.T. ben May 11, 2013

Markov chains music generation

Here’s a project I’ve had on the back-burner for many years. Following the natural progression of generating stuff based on Markov chains, I decided a while ago to port the algorithm to music.

Music presents many challenges that I haven’t been able to address well so far. As a result, what the algorithm produces always had a bitter unfinished aftertaste to me, hence why I haven’t published anything about it for years.

  • Music is multidimensional, time is relevant and needs it own analysis and subsequent generation
  • The interconnectedness of different instruments from the piece is important as well.
  • Random generation even based on Markov chains fails to produce any structure. The pieces all sound like a long solo without chorus or any other repetition that would give us what we strive for: anticipation. In other words, it’s perfect for jazz.

I’m hoping that publishing this will give me the kick in the nuts necessary to keep improving it. Without further ado, here’s what I have so far.


Future improvements:

  • add to corpus
  • clean pieces analyzed of noise
  • try to infuse structure
apiculture, self sustainability ben May 08, 2013

A successful introduction

I installed 2 colonies today and everything went extremely well. Having done this once in the past really helped; I knew how to read the bees better and kept them very docile during the whole process.

The second package introduced into the top bar hive

[flv:http://ben.akrin.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_1285.MOV.flv http://ben.akrin.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_1285.MOV.flv.jpg 688 387]

The hives in all their glory

A close-up of the new Langstroth hive this season (up-side down because iPhone)

[flv:http://ben.akrin.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_1304.MOV.flv http://ben.akrin.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_1304.MOV.flv.jpg 688 387]

Busy figuring their new place out

[flv:http://ben.akrin.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_1292.MOV.flv http://ben.akrin.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/IMG_1292.MOV.flv.jpg 688 387]

The weather kept me on my toes but fortunately left us alone for a good while. The rain poured heavily a couple of hours afterwards, I hope all the bees found their way inside before.

life in the U.S. ben May 05, 2013

Spring paintings

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