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Homestead
[Were you a mod of Homestead on Reddit? Message me if you’re interested in modding here.]
This is a community for people who are working toward a sustainable personal environment. This includes crofters, homesteaders, hobby, small, and family farmers. Hunters, gatherers, cultivators, and keepers are all welcome.
There may be discussions of animal harvesting and processing. This is part of the homesteading reality. If you don't like it leave and block the community.
You may also be interested in:
RULES:
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All Lemmy.ca rules apply here.
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Everyone (see rules 4 and 98) is welcome.
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If you've seen a question 100 times answer it the 101st time or ignore it. Even better, write a complete, detailed answer and suggest that the mod(s) pin it to the community.
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There will be ZERO tolerance for shaming, brigading, harassment, or other nonsense of those who keep, hunt, harvest, and process animals. [See rule 98.] You will be permanently banned the first time. You are NOT morally superior because you choose not to.
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If you post a picture that includes blood, gore, or a dead animal mark it NSFW. We're not going to tolerate the militant anti-hunting and anti-farming bullshit here but we're also not going to tolerate people rubbing their hunting and harvesting in people's faces. [See rule 98.] If you post blood, gore, or dead animals and don't mark it NSFW it will be removed.
[Did you actually think there were 98 rules?]
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If you present something as fact and are asked to provide proof or a source provide proof or a source. Proof must be from a reliable source. If you fail to provide proof or a source your post or comment may be removed.
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Don't be a dick. Yes, this is a catch-all rule. Yes, you absolutely can be permanently banned for Rule 98 violations.
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The mod(s) have the final say.
We're on a well and onsite tertiary waste water treatment here so the water only costs us the cost of the electricity to pump it. I still try to conserve.
The automatic filler is nice. I can close the filler valve, open the drain valve, rinse the tank, close the drain valve, open the filler valve and walk away. Standing there to fill the tank was a pain in the tookus.
I don't understand the idea of something being cheap, so it's somehow ok to be wasteful. Using city water for critters and produce when I've got a pond is already rubbing me wrong.
I might look into an automatic filler, too. I see the finger screws on the clamp. Do you leave it on or remove the valve when the pool is full? My ducks will gunk up anything that's in duck accessible height.
Especially with something like clean, safe water which is a finite resource. We try to waste as little as possible despite the fact that we pull it out of the ground for the cost of the electricity.
That one stays on the tank. It's a Miller Trough-o-Matic Stock Tank Float Valve. It's well protected because it's intended to be used on livestock tanks. When it is filling the water sprays on top of the float inside the housing which rinses everything out. I also give it a spray with the hose when I'm rinsing the pool.