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Brisket
96c87765d900b169f5fdd8bc19bf97bd8c6d163ff416a89d45cbb7cac48c9433
I live my life in accordance with the 4 Agreements: - be impeccable with your word - make no assumptions - take nothing personally - always do your best I'm a sovereign soul choosing unconditional love over fear. 💚

I love how Jack's explanations are getting really simple for Normies to understand.

🔥

Becoming a mother makes it hard to stop worrying.

Knowing there's nothing to worry about doesn't seem to help either.

Things will happen as they need to. Try not to worry so much.

💚🫂

Replying to Avatar Thursday 5∞

If the bacon's a hanging, assume that he's banging.

I heard that bamboo got it's name from the sound it makes on the fire. It certainly lets off quite the bang when those segments pop under steam pressure.

I grow the clumping varieties that seem to stay mostly in place. They certainly produce a lot of biomass in a small space. The char produced is very easy to crush very small (another bonus).

Best I've seen for bio char has been bamboo. It's a bit shit as a fuel though.

I planted a lot of ice cream bean for the nitrogen fixing & mulch about a year ago. They really didn't grown as quickly as I had expected. I think once they're established they'd grow almost as quick as black locust but without the spikes. They don't like frosts though, so not great if you get those.

My elderberry is due for a prune so I'll be planting cuttings from that. I was surprised by how quickly that grew in a single season. I think elderberry stems were used as straws back in the day.

Replying to Avatar Sam Magner

Nostr Vlog 8

Personal reaction to nostr:nprofile1qqs2gndun24r2utk5l20tscsdprw5zttvm0qk58w8xhl2ja2kmzt7jcpvemhxue69uhkv6tvw3jhytnwdaehgu3wwa5kuef0dec82c33x5ehsmt90q6ry7p5vd5xge3hx5mksupnwym857rpvaukk6m9dvmhqer8wa6hwepsxu6rjd35v34hj6rp89ensvnj096ns0mzwfhkzerrv9ehg0t5wf6k2qg7waehxw309ahx7um5wgkkgetk9emk2mrvdaexgetj9ehx2ap05npa2h's Vlog about the unique characteristic of Bitcoiners that you should think deeply about.

Speaking to the parents of young children here. Would your kids appreciate in 15-20 years that you went full Maxi and sold everything (including your time) to stack as much BTC as possible? Likely yes.

However, is there a point of diminishing returns where you will be giving up precious time with your young kids just for the sake of stacking sats? Absolutely. It goes without saying our kids would prefer more present, quality time with us over anything of monetary value.

Bitcoin is scarce, time with your kids is even more so. As a parent a major aspect of Bitcoin I appreciate is that I will use it to quit trading my time away from family.

You going to wait for another cycle to enjoy time with your kids? Too late, they’re grown. Think about it.

https://blossom.primal.net/cbdf3e843d7e360db411495d46a6161ba33ac262bc052c2a88f246ee487d691f.mov

Do it.

They generally want your time & attention, not your money.

When they hit about 15, they're really not that interested in you, they're looking to expand beyond the home.

Replying to Avatar Mudgestein

nostr:nprofile1qqsfdjrhvhvspvtf7h7a30qeh7tmmrrdzcllg94gn4zuhd72cjxfgvcppemhxue69uhkummn9ekx7mp0qyvhwumn8ghj7un9d3shjtnwdaehgu3wvdhk6tnpw5hsrkcp7l is the real deal though Mac

I’m not even close to being in the same shout out. (Just saying) 😊

Take nothing personally, even the good stuff.

But also,

Thanks 💚

It works!󠅄󠅘󠅑󠅤󠄐󠅧󠅑󠅣󠄐󠅑󠄐󠅜󠅟󠅞󠅗󠄐󠄦󠄐󠅖󠅥󠅓󠅛󠅙󠅞󠅗󠄐󠅝󠅙󠅞󠅣

It's really hard to move 100's of thousands of cuck bucks into Bitcoin now.

A house buyer with Bitcoin will have real purchasing power sometime in the future.

nostr:nprofile1qqstjptfa37h22hyrg5uus8unqjw3yy6v7klqnmk4zhnpmyu8fwprncpzamhxue69uhhyetvv9ujumn0wd68ytnzv9hxgtcz7mf8x - I'm wondering if someone in Cairns might be interested in this one?

Shhh - no dox ser 🤣

Replying to Avatar Cojah

We placed our home for sale online Friday night we’ve already have very keen buyers.

We would however put them aside if someone wanted to purchase with BTC

Selling to leave Australia, sad and exciting.

If we were to stay in Australia this area is beyond better than most, cheap, raw milk available, great grass fed meat ,many people with freedom ideals, sadly none that can see BTC yet.

Family Home with Cabin, Big Shed & Private Swimming Dam – 1.38 hectares - Ravenshoe – $598,000 Discover this unique family sanctuary, thoughtfully crafted from a striking blend of Rose Gum, Black Wattle, and Bloodwood timbers. With warmth, character, and lifestyle at its heart, this property is designed for those who value freedom, space, and connection to the land.

The Home & Cabin:

• 3–4 bedrooms in total, offering flexible living options

• 2 bathrooms across the home and cabin, ideal for families or guests

• Open-plan kitchen and dining in the main house, flowing onto a large verandah for entertaining or quiet relaxation

• Multiple verandahs including a generous “dog work” verandah for practical living

• Under-house space perfect for storage, workshop, or parking smaller vehicles

• Self-contained cabin/shack with bedroom, bathroom, and kitchen on a covered patio — perfect for guests, extended family, or rental income

The Extras That Set It Apart:

• Massive shed with mezzanine floor, enclosed room, and hoist — a dream for hobby mechanics, tradies, or serious shed lovers

• Additional home-built structure ready to be used as a studio, retreat, or creative project

Outdoors & Lifestyle:

• Seasonal creek with a private swimming dam – flowing at the perfect time of year when other creeks are too wild, this becomes your own natural pool

• Hugelkultur garden hills plus a large clear greenhouse — grow food naturally and abundantly

• Spring-fed bore supplying clean, highly potable water for house and gardens

Why You’ll Love It:

• Nestled where towering eucalyptus meets lush rainforest, offering privacy and natural beauty in equal measure

• A home and property designed for freedom, self-sufficiency, and lifestyle — not suburbia’s restrictions

• With not all extensions council-approved, this property is best suited to cash buyers or those who think outside the box

This is more than just a house — it’s a way of life. A place where you can work in your shed, harvest from your gardens, swim in your own dam, and live each day on your own terms. Please DM for more photos, videos or details.

📍 Located in Ravenshoe, in the heart of the Atherton Tablelands.

It's really beautiful Coj!

The Tablelands is one of the few places I'd want to own land on.

I hope you get a Bitcoin buyer. It's a good price as far as I can tell.

💚

Replying to Avatar PringleMac

The biggest shout out I could give to a pleb, I’ve never met, irl…but simply know how awesome he is nostr:nprofile1qqsfdjrhvhvspvtf7h7a30qeh7tmmrrdzcllg94gn4zuhd72cjxfgvcpzamhxue69uhhyetvv9ujumn0wd68ytnzv9hxgtcppemhxue69uhkummn9ekx7mp0n3njus he truly got me (the retard of all Laggards m) over the line.

You were patient. Kind. And giving if your previous time, Brisket Snow!

You deserve a “YUGE” shout out as you really gave me, my foot in the #nostr door. 💜💜💜

Awwww thanks Pringle 💚🫂

I've never run bitchat at home with location services on. This limits how frequently I am able to play with it.

Am I paranoid? Yeah slightly but I don't think the risk is insignificant.

Replying to Avatar StackSats.IO

Of all the content I’ve consumed in my life, 99.999% of it was produced after the Industrial Revolution.

Of all the humans who ever existed on Earth, ~95% of them lived before the Industrial Revolution.

I’ve thought about this a lot this year in my reading. The disparity indicates we moderns think humans knew little of value despite their mass existence over time. And its true they can’t inform us much of anything with regards our modern technology, but they had plenty worthwhile to say about the most important technologies that existed before we came to view only machines, as tech.

With this in mind I’ve completed my next read for #bookstr - The Spirit of the Law by Charles Montesquieu.

We are born into this world as fish in water, swimming in a sea of laws and regulations which we don’t understand the first things about other than, they apply and there are consequences if we don’t follow them. We’re never taught why they exist, or how they came to be.

And that’s what this book does a great job of doing. Ok, it’s 270 years old, so it’s not going to explain MANY things, but it covers a 2000+ year history of different societies and the laws they had, and seeks to understand why they had them.

It’s very interesting. He traces where power was diffuse through different branches (church, state, local etc.), the actual nature of “servitude” in the Middle Ages, how different peoples adopted different principles, how rulers successfully maintained order, how laws evolved, and importantly, how systems evolved.

He’s very much a “Statist”, but not in the sense we understand it today. He’s describing how order was kept across different peoples of different natures in different times and places. The intention of laws. The “spirit”. Not arbitrary governance for the sake of power, but how good and bad laws come to be and how we should understand them in historical context.

I won’t say it’s fascinating because at times its very dry and meanders through things which just aren’t interesting.

But it’s worthwhile. To understand the waters in which we swim. To understand the Chesterton’s Fence principles of why modern law is so fucked after so much was changed that really should not have been.

I wouldn’t recommend this to anyone other than nerds though. But if you really want to understand how “the system” came to be, the evolutions which laid the foundations for liberalism and communism and socialism and managerialism and everything in between, there are good foundations in here worth understanding.

I've had similar thoughts when wading through Rudolf Steiner's words.

Me either & not until 2020.

I live much more humbly than I did back then. I'm more grateful & less needy.

Check the hash tags in the unwanted notes.

Unfollow them.

Man my kids are both driving their own cars to work every day.

It's a total trip. Happened so fast!

When I don't have enough to do a proper batch of pickles, I do a quick pickle in vinegar & salt. I slice then to increase the surface area & speed things up. Add some sliced garlic & spices to make it more exciting.

It can't be too much longer surely.

How long are they saying?