A Selection of DIY Projects From Dan “The Glassman” Garduno
Editor’s Note: Here you will find a series of Dan the Glassman Garduno‘s “Do It Yourself” projects.
1. Chicken Wire Compost
The simplest way to compost!
2. 55 Gallon Drum Upcycled into an easy DIY Compost tTumbler
Construct this for under $100! Save $100’s
3. Gatorade Bottle Upcycled Into Self-Watering Container
Simple DIY wicking system!
4. “TheGlassman’s” Aquarioponic System
Convert any aquarium into an aquaponic grow system.
Editor’s Note: We have greatly enjoyed publishing Dan’s work on Sustainability! To find out more about Dan and the step by steps instructions, please visit his website.
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Growing up during the 1980’s and 1990’s I admit to listening to the radio a fair amount. The radio with its weekly top forty countdowns and coast to coast talented gene pool gave me a sense of what a lot of great artists were up to. And of course you still had to suffer through the commercials but somehow even that was tolerable. You could slide along dial and engage a real culture in a very efficient way. The radio was the first World Wide Web, the first means of sharing information with mass amounts of people throughout the world. It was generally wholesome and promoted mostly good music…
Then along came Clear Channel. A company that quickly absorbed the radio industry, made radio its’ b%#&h thus degrading the very fabric of that once brave beacon.
Now that once green pasture has become a barren wasteland of talentless hacks, info-morons, blowhards, studio gangstaz, mediocre entertainers and commercial interests. This egregious misuse and misrepresentation of the radio waves has sparked a nationwide debate. This social movement is defined by the power to #KTR, or #KillTheRadio.
Bandwidth No Name
Fast forward to 2015. A talented funk-hip-hop-soul group called Bandwidth No Name http://www.bandwidthnoname.com also known as #BNN began working on a new song. A song that would one day change the face of history, a song that would spark the movement leading the people away from corporate greed and cookie cutter boy bands. This was bigger than disc jockeys, bigger than global warming (sort of) and it all began with the idea that we should kill our radios and stop the evil frequencies from penetrating our minds. The radio has become a symbol of conditioning and mediocrity and it must be stopped.
In June of 2015 released the single for the song “Kill the Radio” https://soundcloud.com/bandwidth-no-name/kill-the-radio which has become a prophetic anthem of the people. Kill the Radio is both a well composed social diatribe and a rootin,’ tootin,’ funky good time.
Following the release of the single, the MUSIC VIDEO for Kill The Radio has become a huge success reaching near cult status in a short span of time. See the MUSIC VIDEO here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yjIouRqpR0g
This video was conceived and developed conceptually by Bandwidth No Name with a singular goal in mind to spread the word world wide that we must all sever our ties and stop the negative radio influence by using some force.
Nick Speak To Radio
BNN front-man/emcee Nick Furious had this to say about the radio and the culture surrounding the radio:
“Yo I came out and said it, and do not regret it what goes on the airwaves is fully pathetic filled with bad rhetoric and no real aesthetic, it’s a bad epidemic in need of a medic disc Jockeys are monkeys, corporate spoke models, selling a product to increase them ad dollars. The songs are all pointless like A Little Wayne banger, we like substantive music that doesn’t breed anger confusion and pain are the aim of their game, I support NPR but the rest are so lame put a flame to your boom box, smash your receivers, it’s time to take back from you under achievers no more Toby Keith or Justin Bieber, catch the fever, fear the reaper surround all stereos, murder your radio, let art catalyze naturally in local groves.”
The video for Kill the Radio was fortunate to have director of photography Tim McClelland to bring their thoughts to life in a way that is visually stimulating and also story telling. The video had an excellent editor in BNN band member Alexander Wilson, who worked tirelessly, and for free, to piece together a fabulous story. Lastly, the video was directed by Band member and front man Nick “Furious” Meyers in attempt to truly convey frustration in an artful and intelligent way. Meyers directed this masterpiece, his second directing attempt, with a Tarantino esque ferver. The final product is a video to die for, so to speak. This video is one worth watching a few times and sharing with your circles.
So get out there, take back the underground and help Bandwidth No Name #KillTheRadio for once and for all by supporting your local powerhouse music makers.
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Nick “Furious” Meyers
Nick “Furious” Meyers is a longtime veteran of the New Mexico Music scene. Nick has worked with Community Publishing in the past, having served as the Audio Engineer on the multimedia children’s book, Fiona the Funkadelic Freckile Fairy. Nick is currently working working as the Audio Engineer on the Animated multimedia book, Bella the Caterpillar (written by 7yr old Marisol Paramo) to be published in the late Fall by Community Publishing: From the Community For the Community!
In recent years I’ve learned quite a few different ways on how to garden. Some ways are very traditional with simple compost to soil and then planting seeds in the ground. And some ways are more modern with a twist of simplicity and ingenuity. Today I’d like to share with you a simple growing method known as self-watering containers or wicking beds/containers.
The idea of these systems is to make growing plants and starting seeds so simple just about anyone can do it. And keeping them alive in these systems is just as easy. These systems basically have a water reservoir underneath a grow bed and a wick to absorb the water up into the soil and directly into the roots.
Plants grow by taking up water through their roots and taking up nutrients from the soil around the roots. Constantly watering the plants from above ground eventually washes the nutrients out or down into the earth deeper. By using a wick to absorb water from underneath, just like a root does already, it helps to keep all the nutrients in the soil around the root without ever flushing it out as well as it allows the right amount of water naturally absorbed up into the soil and into the roots. The roots will only absorb as much water as the plant needs. The wick will never puddle/pool or over water your soil or your plant. It regulates a perfect constant moisture control for the roots. Some plants such as chile peppers tend to flourish in drier soils so these systems won’t work for some drier soil plants. However, these are excellent for tomatoes, basil, lettuces, non edible house plants, and so many more!
Make a simple self watering seed starter out of a plastic water bottle
You will need:
Water bottle
Scissors, knife, or razor blade to cut bottle and make a hole in cap
Absorbent material for wick such as organic hemp string or twine, shami cloth material, yarn, or even strips of T-shirt. (Cotton T-shirt wicks tend to form mildew and will have to be replaced always)
Organi Soil
Organic Or Heirloom Seed
Water
Step 1: You simply take an empty water bottle and cut it horizontally in half. Somewhere between half way and about 2/3 up the neck. Any size bottle will do; 12oz, 16oz, 1ltr, 2ltr, 3ltr, half gallon, full gallon. We will eventually use the top part of the bottle to add soil and grow in upside down inside the lower part of the bottle after we attach a wick through the cap. The lower part of the bottle will hold water.
Step 2: We then cut a hole into the cap while its tightly screwed on the bottle still. Be extremely careful not to cut yourself! You van also try using a hammer and nail and remove cap and hammer through top of cap to make a small hole good for twine. Also try using a hot tent stake or phillps screw driver and melt a bigger hole through the cap by using a candle to heat tip and melt through cap when really hot. Ventilation is needed and should be done outside. But you then release fumes and probably shouldn’t be melting plastic at all.
Step 3: Once you have a hole in the cap for the wick you simply shove the wick into the cap and into the bottle neck. The idea is to have a long enough wick so it will reach all the way to the bottom of the water reservoir as well as into the neck a good inch or two to saturate the soil and pull water up into the seed and eventually the roots.
Step 4: Add soil into the upside top part of the bottle around the wick into the cap and neck of the bottle fill this to the top. The wick should be hanging down from the cap now. You then fill the bottom of bottle with water and put the wick side of bottle with cap down into the water. You only need to fill water until the cap is just barely submerged into the water. You don’t want the soil to be sitting in the water.
Step 5: Add the seed into the center of the soil about 1/2″-1″ deep by using your finger or a pencil to make a hole to drop the seed in. Then cover with soil and place your new self watering planter in a windowsill or somewhere it will receive a good amount of light.
You will only need to water it once a week and maybe even once every two weeks. Its so simple to take care of many seed starts like this without worrying about letting the soil dry out too quickly and kill the seedling. That is the main reason most people don’t try to grow their own plants. They forget to water them only once and the plants are lost. And its so frustrating.
That is why this is such a simple and easy way to starts seeds and grow plants as well as helping to keep our own waste/plastic bottles out of the landfills as well!
Try to make one today!
Thanks for getting BACK TO NATURE with “TheGlassman“!
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Community Publishing brings local artists of all mediums together in creative collaborations for distribution as multimedia eBooks while promoting literacy in our communities.
Curated by Mary Ann Gilbreth, Ed.D., Department of Teacher Education, Educational Leadership and Policy, at the University of New Mexico. This collections includes the work of her students from several of her Reading Methods Classes, promoting cultural diversity in the classroom.