• ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
      hexagon
      ·
      9 months ago

      I know a lot of neighbourhoods in US have explicit rules of what the lawn is supposed to look like, so in a way yeah there are literal rules against gardens.

    • sooper_dooper_roofer [none/use name]
      ·
      9 months ago

      Americans (Anglos or NW Europeans in general) have a lot of weird phobias such as intensely disliking fish, lamb, goat, (none of these in a vegan way) mushrooms, irrationally scared of bugs, very easily disgusted by things to the point of overwashing their hands, or the opposite where they don't wash their hands after literally stepping out of a toilet stall, also so disgusted by stuff that they refuse to pick up their dog's excrement and/or don't wipe/wash their butts properly (also because this is gay)

      • Łumało [he/him]@lemmygrad.ml
        ·
        9 months ago

        Not just NW Europeans, there is a huge culture gap between Poles and Germans.

        While we go mushroom hunting every fall, Germans are afraid of even looking at a bolete thinking it will kill them on the spot. It's a while different world out there, just across the border.

    • FarFarAway@startrek.website
      ·
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      Both. My family lives out in the county. There's no rules as to what is supposed to done with the land.

      So...They clear cut it. They'll leave a few small scraggly oak trees which will mostly all die in a year or two. It's horrible. They turn a beautiful forest into a dry desert in a week.

      They'll misquote a local rancher, spout misinformation about certain species of trees to justify their horrible land management practices.

      And then wonder why the area has less water and is getting hotter.

      It's funny how, in my area at least, the HOAs are always stopping people from wanting to plant, and the people who can plant want to make it look like an HOAs wet dream.

        • Tak@lemmy.ml
          ·
          9 months ago

          It's a total shame because so many Americans live on massive lots compared to the rest of the world yet most of those same lots are just invasive grass. Meanwhile switch grass, a native grass to much of the US was tested by the EPA ages ago to be one of the most effective sources of ethanol that could be used for cars. It's perennial so all you do is leave it and let it grow till the city or whatever comes in and harvests then uses the biomass to create ethanol. It's also a no-mow grass so fewer lawn mowers and better water retention in the soil.

          With a bit of tuning many cars can be modified to run E85 which is 85% ethanol and while this would still have a carbon impact it would be mostly carbon already in the carbon cycle instead of sequestered carbon like NG/Oil/Coal.

          If we want to get more adventurous the ethanol would be pretty stable and able to be stored for years if needed as a backup for renewables. Pulling carbon from the atmosphere to store as an emergency reserve to generate electricity in case it's cloudy and there is no wind for an unexpected amount of time. Whether that be via generators or maybe a steam turbine? (I know ethanol creates water when burned so idk if that would make steam turbines less efficient)

          But the real kicker here... distilling ethanol for fuel is illegal in the US and you need specific permits to do so and some states don't care if it is for fuel or drinking. Land of the fucking free.