Monthly Archives: March 2014
But First, a Movie!
Before we start on our adventure, let’s watch one, a movie made by the BBC about El Dorado, the Lost City of Gold in the Amazon. Sit back and watch the show in full-screen by clicking the small box on … Continue reading
Terra Preta Today
Significant current research on Terra Preta is conducted at Cornell University by a team headed by Dr. Johannes Lehmann.
It Wasn’t All Preta…
In 2009, at a workshop on biochar at the Pony Farm in Temple, NH, Hugh McLaughlin gave some history and ideas about the actual formation of the Black Earth. First, most of it was not black. There was Terra Mulata, … Continue reading
Charcoal in American History
The Tri-State area where New York, Massachusetts, and Connecticut border each other was the home of military ironworks for the Revolution, the Civil War, etc. The forests were stripped of trees for charcoal needed to produce iron. Quite a few … Continue reading
Farm Scale
Making Biochar for Farmers If we are going to reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere in order to stop the greenhouse gas effect, we must do more than conserve energy and use sustainable fuel sources. We have … Continue reading
Harvesting Goldenrod
Goldenrod is harvested with the same equipment as hay — a cutter, a rake, and then a baler. For those who are unfamiliar with this equipment, the following is a short course in Farming 101. First, the plants must be … Continue reading
The New Coal? Grass Pellets
Heat with grass not gas! Let’s visit a plant nursery in Pawling, New York, that has been using grass — made into pellets — to heat their large greenhouses. The pellets are burned in an unmodified rice-coal stove. For the … Continue reading
The Biochar Workshop at Pony Farm
This is an introduction to the Biochar Roundtable at the Lodge at Pony Farm in Temple, New Hampshire, on May 9, 2009. It was a pioneering event! Before we move on. let’s watch Hugh McLaughlin demonstrate some TLUD stoves he … Continue reading
Burning Smoke: Gasification
Let’s play with fire — and learn from it! Gasification is central to understanding the efforts to produce smokeless and safe stoves for cooking with biomass fuels as well as making biochar. In layman’s terms, it means using heat … Continue reading
Hugh McLaughlin’s Stoves
The next demonstration produced charcoal with a retort made from a recycled Cornelius keg. I’ve taken the liberty of assuming that most people looking at this site would not be familiar with the Cornelius keg unless, of course you are … Continue reading
The Stovers
“More than half of the world’s population—three billion people—cook their food and heat their homes by burning coal and biomass, including wood, dung, and crop residues, in open fires or rudimentary stoves. Indoor burning of solid fuels releases dangerous particulate … Continue reading
Low-Hanging Fruit
Low-Hanging Fruit: easy steps, things we can do that will produce some results easily and quickly. For example, spreading an inch or two of biochar on all the arable land on Earth in order to reverse and reduce global warming … Continue reading