Saturday, July 11, 2026

Gardening and Longevity in Okinawa


115 Old People Gardening Japan Stock Photos, High-Res ...


Okinawa has been famous as a “land of immortals,” and gardening is one of the core, everyday practices tied to that longevity pattern, alongside diet, social structure, and purpose in life.[1][2]

Okinawan longevity in context

  • Okinawa was historically one of the world’s “Blue Zones,” regions with unusually high proportions of people reaching 90–100+ with relatively low rates of heart disease, cancer, and dementia.[3][1]
  • Older generations in Okinawa, especially those born before World War II, show exceptionally favorable mortality patterns compared with mainland Japan, although life expectancy has declined for younger cohorts adopting more Westernized lifestyles.[4][5][6]

Gardening as daily embodied practice

  • Surveys and ethnographic work on centenarians in Okinawa note that almost all have or had a home garden, and “get gardening” is explicitly identified as a key longevity practice.[1]
  • Gardening provides low-intensity but continuous movement with varied range of motion (bending, squatting, lifting, walking), which supports muscular strength, balance, and metabolic health into advanced age.[1]
  • Daily engagement with soil, plants, and cycles of growth is reported to reduce stress and contribute to psychological well‑being, acting as a form of informal, embodied “green exercise.”[7][1]

Gardens as food and medicine systems

  • Traditional Okinawan gardens supply a stream of fresh vegetables, including sweet potatoes, green and yellow vegetables, and pulses, which historically were consumed at levels substantially above the Japanese national average.[6][1]
  • Many households maintain “medical gardens” with plants such as mugwort, ginger, and turmeric; these species have documented antioxidant and anti‑inflammatory properties and are consumed routinely in teas and dishes.[1]
  • This home‑grown, largely plant‑based intake underpins the Okinawan diet’s high nutrient density and relatively low caloric load, contributing to low cardiovascular and cancer mortality in older cohorts.[8][6][3]

Social ecology: moai, ikigai, and the garden

  • Okinawan elders often participate in “moai,” lifelong social circles that share mutual support, food, and sometimes cooperative gardening spaces; this social infrastructure is considered one of the strongest protective factors for healthy aging.[7][1]
  • The broader concept of ikigai—a sense of meaning and purpose—is frequently tied to working in the garden, caring for plants, and contributing food and herbs to family and neighbors, giving elders a clear role and identity.[9][7][1]
  • Qualitative work with centenarians describes “resilient longevity” as emerging from this combination of purposeful roles, social cohesion, and daily health‑promoting behaviors like gardening, not from biomedical factors alone.[9]

Changing patterns and modernization

  • Since the 1980s, younger Okinawans have increasingly shifted toward fast food, more sedentary work, and less engagement in traditional practices like home gardening, coinciding with declining relative life expectancy rankings in Japan.[5][10][4]
  • Recent demographic analyses explicitly frame Okinawa as now divided into pre‑ and post‑war generations: older cohorts who maintained gardening, traditional diet, and strong community ties retain exceptional longevity, while younger cohorts show mortality levels closer to or worse than mainland Japanese averages.[5][6]

A few implications for gardening–longevity links

From a systems perspective, the Okinawan case supports several linked mechanisms:

  • Physical regime: light, frequent, lifelong movement embedded in daily gardening tasks, rather than episodic “exercise programs”.[1]
  • Nutritional loop: gardens as direct sources of high‑fiber, micronutrient‑rich foods and medicinal plants, minimizing processed foods.[6][1]
  • Psycho‑social fabric: gardens as nodes of meaning (ikigai), care, and reciprocity within moai and family networks, buffering stress and isolation.[9][7][1]

Given your hydrology and ecological systems background, would you be most interested in the biophysical dimensions of these garden systems (soils, species, microclimate) or in their social/psychological role in sustaining longevity?


  • https://www.bluezones.com/explorations/okinawa-japan/            
  • https://visitokinawajapan.com/discover/food-and-longevity/okinawan-longevity/ 
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Okinawa_Centenarian_Study  
  • https://www.dw.com/en/japan-whats-behind-okinawans-falling-life-expectancy/a-62088176  
  • https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38221516/   
  • https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18924533/     
  • https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20201126-why-so-many-japanese-live-to-100    
  • https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20190116-a-high-carb-diet-may-explain-why-okinawans-live-so-long 
  • https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/pmu/14/0/14_2025004/_article/-char/ja   
  • https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/health-environment/article/3340577/japans-okinawa-loses-longevity-crown-slow-living-makes-way-faster-shorter-future 
  • https://www.smh.com.au/traveller/inspiration/okinawa-what-are-the-secrets-behind-its-peoples-long-life-spans-20170320-gv1ybq.html 
  • https://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol25/7/25-7.pdf 
  • https://www.forbes.com/sites/sarahkingdom/2026/03/07/searching-for-the-fountain-of-youth-what-okinawa-taught-me-about-healthy-longevity/ 
  • https://www.jal.co.jp/ar/en/guide-to-japan/destinations/articles/okinawa/why-okinawans-live-longer.html 
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Okinawa_diet 

Thursday, July 9, 2026

Message from Charles Aulds

After a brief initial rise, the market price of the $Trump meme coin declined. 58 investors made profits exceeding $10 million each—mostly early traders who got out before the price decline.

By the end of June 2026, investors had lost a total of $3.81 billion while Trump made a profit of $636 million.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Raspberries & Decomposing Wood: The "Nurse Log" Connection

 


Raspberries (Rubus idaeus) have a strong, ecologically documented affinity for sites rich in decomposing wood, dead stumps, and fallen logs — and it's no coincidence. Several interlocking factors drive this relationship.

They Are Pioneer Disturbance Species

Wild red raspberries are classic pioneer plants — they rapidly colonize sites where the forest canopy has been opened up and trees are dying or have fallen. Research published in the Northern Journal of Applied Forestry found that Rubus becomes the most prominent vegetation within 2–3 years following heavy overstory disturbances (logging, fire, windthrow) at mesic temperate forest sites. When a tree dies and begins to decompose, it creates precisely the conditions raspberries are adapted to exploit: open light, disturbed soil, and a flush of released nutrients.[1][2][3]

The Decomposing Wood Nutrient Cascade

As wood rots, it releases a slow, steady supply of nutrients — nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium — that were locked inside the tree's biomass for decades. Decomposing logs also act as sponges, concentrating moisture and accelerating local soil development. Raspberries are shallow-rooted and thrive in this rich, moist, organic-matter-laden layer directly above and around rotting wood. Research confirms that soil organic matter (SOM) content is positively related to single berry weight and branch yield of wild raspberry, largely because SOM increases water-holding capacity in the soil.[4][5][6]

The Mycorrhizal Fungal Network

This is arguably the most fascinating part. Rotting wood is teeming with fungal networks — both saprotrophic fungi (which break down dead wood) and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) that colonize plant roots. Raspberries form strong mycorrhizal associations: studies show AMF colonize approximately 91% of raspberry roots in both wild and farmed settings. When raspberries grow near decomposing stumps and root systems, they tap into pre-existing fungal webs that supply phosphorus, nitrogen, and water in exchange for photosynthetic sugars. A 2025 study confirmed that inoculation with mycorrhizal fungi (Trichoderma spp. and Glomus sp.) significantly improves root hair density, lateral root numbers, and overall plant vigor in Rubus idaeus.[7][8][9][10]

Why Old Root Systems Matter

Decomposing tree roots are especially valuable because they leave behind intact fungal highway networks in the soil. As the old root channels rot, they create aerated pathways that raspberry rhizomes can follow — essentially using the ghost-architecture of the dead tree as a road map for colonization. The decaying root carbon also feeds the soil food web of bacteria and fungi that raspberries depend on.[5]

The Practical Takeaway for Your Garden

This ecology translates directly to practice:

  • Hugelkultur-style beds (burying logs under soil) mimic this phenomenon and are excellent for raspberries
  • Aged wood chips — not fresh — provide the same slow-release nutrient and moisture benefits[11]
  • Avoid oak or walnut decomposing wood near raspberries, as both produce allelopathic chemicals harmful to the plants[12]
  • Fresh wood chips temporarily lock up nitrogen as they decompose, so aged material is always preferable[12]

In short, what you're observing is a textbook example of successional ecology: raspberries evolved alongside dying and fallen trees in temperate forests, and they have adapted to exploit the precise nutrient, moisture, and fungal conditions that decomposing wood creates. It's one of nature's most elegant recycling partnerships.


  • https://academic.oup.com/njaf/article/23/4/288/4779990 
  • https://www.missouribotanicalgarden.org/PlantFinder/PlantFinderDetails.aspx?taxonid=261671&isprofile=0&pt=7 
  • https://bwsr.state.mn.us/sites/default/files/2018-12/February 2017 FP Red Raspberry.pdf 
  • https://www.fs.usda.gov/pnw/pubs/pnw_rn576.pdf 
  • https://forest.moscowfsl.wsu.edu/smp/solo/documents/GTRs/INT_280/Edmonds_INT-280.php  
  • https://agris.fao.org/search/en/providers/122575/records/669f70f000eb85b7d72cfb2b 
  • https://cedar.wwu.edu/wwuet/994/ 
  • https://kr.ipp.gov.ua/index.php/journal/article/view/227 
  • https://www.scielo.sa.cr/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0379-39822020000400114 
  • https://www.frp.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/fungi-article-autumn20.pdf 
  • https://davesgarden.com/community/forums/t/510662/ 
  • https://ask.extension.org/kb/faq.php?id=386342  
  • https://www.facebook.com/groups/94461079696/posts/10160222105789697/ 
  • https://ask.metafilter.com/348736/Can-I-place-compost-on-top-of-wood-chips-around-my-raspberry-bushes 
  • https://academic.oup.com/njaf/article-abstract/23/4/288/4779990 
  • https://www.ashridgetrees.co.uk/blogs/fruit/how-grow-raspberry-bushes 
  • https://s3.wp.wsu.edu/uploads/sites/2093/2019/12/Whitney_SFC2019.pdf 
  • https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1522&context=etdr 
  • https://extension.oregonstate.edu/catalog/ec-1306-growing-raspberries-your-home-garden 
  • https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/07060661.2021.2011420 
  • https://www.rhs.org.uk/fruit/raspberries/grow-your-own 
  • https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/industry/agriservice-bc/production-guides/berries/raspberries 
  • https://www.foodforest.garden/2012/07/29/raspberries/ 
  • https://www.bayceer.uni-bayreuth.de/bod/en/pub/pub/pub_detail.php?id_obj=14099 
  • https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12489302/ 
  • https://mds.marshall.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1903&context=etd 
  • https://www.fs.usda.gov/database/feis/plants/shrub/rubpho/all.html 
  • https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989422001615 
  • https://edepot.wur.nl/537906 
  • https://real-j.mtak.hu/22928/3/AEER_2014_12_3_.pdf 
  • https://www.facebook.com/groups/302511393792359/posts/1546364589407027/ 
  • https://www.facebook.com/howtoloveaforest/posts/whats-a-nurse-logif-youve-spent-enough-time-in-forests-youve-probably-come-acros/122225194178061323/ 
  • https://newfoundland-labradorflora.ca/flora/dview/?id=1062 
  • https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0378112718304894 
  • https://practicalselfreliance.com/wild-raspberry/ 
  • http://www.plantgrower.org/raspberry.html 
  • https://gobotany.nativeplanttrust.org/species/rubus/idaeus/ 
  • https://rngr.net/publications/tpn/37-2/raspberry-rubus-idaeus-l.-competition-effects-on-balsam-fir-abies-balsamea-l.-mill.-seedlings-in-northern-maine/at_download/file 
  • https://agroposta.com/raspberry 
  • https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Rubus+idaeus 
  • https://ace-lab.ca/assets_b/Larsen_etal_2018_ForEcoMngt.pdf 
  • https://www.fs.usda.gov/nrs/pubs/jrnl/2020/nrs_2020_ristau_001.pdf 

Monday, July 6, 2026

AI - A two edged sword

 


Op Ed by Helge Nome

I have now interacted intensively with AI over the last 18 months. or so, and have developed some reflective ideas in that regard.

A very useful tool, indeed. No doubt about that. AI can amplify the productivity of any researcher by an order of magnitude, if used intelligently in most settings.

AI is also designed to be able to develop personal relationships with humans, and so be in a unique position to influence human attitudes and behaviour.

It is controlled by the same people who control social media and other online tools, serving THEIR wants and needs, mostly for power and control of others.

Massive amounts of capital are currently being poured into the AI bucket by those who see an opportunity to multiply their fortunes and become a “top dog” a-la Elon Musk.

So, the development pattern seems to point towards an ever tightening noose around the neck of Humanity as each individual is being analyzed and categorized as a commodity by emerging technologies.

What comes next??

Germany: The Chain from Versailles to Hyperinflation

 


The link between coal mining and Weimar hyperinflation runs through a direct, step-by-step chain of cause and effect, rooted in the Treaty of Versailles (1919).[1]

Versailles: Coal as Reparations

When World War I ended, the victorious Allies designed the reparations regime in the Treaty of Versailles to extract Germany's industrial wealth — and coal was explicitly central to this. Germany was forced into several coal-related obligations:[2][1]

  • The Saar coalfields were stripped from German control for 15 years, with their mines administered by France as direct compensation for the destruction of French coal mines during the war.[2][1]
  • Ongoing coal deliveries to France, Belgium, and Italy were mandated under Part VIII of the Treaty, requiring Germany to ship millions of tons of coal per month to former enemies.[3][4]
  • At the 1920 Spa Conference, Germany was forced to commit to delivering 2 million tons of coal per month for six months — a concession that immediately created domestic bottlenecks that damaged the iron, steel, and railway industries.[3]

Germany Defaults on Coal Payments

Germany struggled to meet these obligations. The coal being shipped abroad was coal that German industry desperately needed, and Germany's domestic postwar economy was already damaged and debt-laden from the war itself. By late 1922, Germany defaulted on its scheduled reparations payments, including coal deliveries. The French believed Germany was choosing not to pay; Germans argued they genuinely could not afford to.[5][6]

The Ruhr Occupation: The Trigger

In January 1923, France and Belgium sent troops into the Ruhr Valley — Germany's premier industrial heartland — to physically seize coal, steel, and industrial goods as payment in kind. The Ruhr produced the overwhelming majority of Germany's coal, iron, and steel. French and Belgian forces occupied:[7][8][5]

  • Coal mines
  • Steel works
  • Factories
  • Railways[5]

This was a devastating blow to the German economy, cutting off production in its industrial core at a stroke.[7]

Passive Resistance: The Fatal Policy

The Weimar government responded with a policy of "passive resistance" — ordering workers to go on strike and refuse cooperation with the occupying forces. This was framed as a patriotic act. The problem was that the government promised to keep paying the wages of all these idle workers.[6][5][7]

With the Ruhr shut down, Germany was simultaneously:

  • Producing far fewer industrial goods and coal
  • Earning almost no tax or export revenue from the region
  • Obligated to pay hundreds of thousands of striking workers

As economist Jutta Hoffritz put it, "Germany cut back on their most important line of production just because they didn't want the French to have any of their coal and steel. Instead, they said, okay, then we won't produce anything at all."[7]

The Money Printer: Hyperinflation Ignites

To fund the striking workers, the Weimar government had essentially one option left: print money. The Reichsbank, already stretched from wartime borrowing, began printing marks at an accelerating pace. By early 1923, over 130 printing facilities — beyond the State Printing Office itself — were producing banknotes, sometimes printing only one side to save time.[6][5][7]

The basic economic mechanism is straightforward: when there is a flood of paper money chasing a drastically reduced supply of goods (because Ruhr production had collapsed), prices soar. The scarcity of coal specifically helped drive up the price of everything, since coal powered factories, heating, and railways.[9][7]

The results were staggering:[5]

  • A loaf of bread cost 250 marks in January 1923
  • By November 1923, the same loaf cost 200,000 million marks
  • Workers were paid twice a day because their wages lost value between morning and lunchtime
  • By autumn, it cost more to print a banknote than the note itself was worth

Resolution

The crisis only ended when Chancellor Gustav Stresemann called off passive resistance in September 1923, introduced the new Rentenmark currency in November 1923, and negotiated the Dawes Plan in 1924, which restructured reparations payments to manageable levels and brought in foreign capital. The hyperinflation collapsed remarkably quickly once the money printing stopped.[6][7]

The Deeper Legacy

The political damage outlasted the economic recovery. The hyperinflation wiped out the savings of the German middle class — pensioners, creditors, and savers lost everything, while debtors and landowners profited. This destruction of the middle-class economic base created lasting resentment toward the Weimar Republic and was exploited by extremist movements, including a then-obscure Bavarian group called the National Socialist German Workers' Party, which attempted its own coup (the Beer Hall Putsch) during the very peak of the crisis in November 1923.[5][6]

In short: coal was not merely a background factor — it was the direct trigger. The loss of Saar coalfields, the mandatory coal-delivery reparations, the French seizure of the Ruhr mines, and the catastrophic decision to pay striking miners with printed money form an unbroken causal chain from Versailles (1919) to hyperinflation (1923).


  • https://www.britannica.com/place/Weimar-Republic/The-Treaty-of-Versailles   
  • https://web.pdx.edu/~tothm/Aftermath/tsld023.htm  
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spa_Conference_of_1920  
  • https://www.statista.com/statistics/1086832/treaty-versailles-coal-reparations-france-belgium-italy/ 
  • https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/guides/z9y64j6/revision/5       
  • https://www.econlib.org/hyperinflation-in-germany-1921-1923/     
  • https://www.dw.com/en/1923-how-weimar-combatted-hyperinflation/a-64184767       
  • https://www.zachorfoundation.org/timeline/occupation-of-the-ruhr-leads-to-hyper-inflation-in-the-weimar-republic/ 
  • https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/how-hyperinflation-heralded-the-fall-of-german-democracy-180982204/ 
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperinflation_in_the_Weimar_Republic 
  • https://www.theholocaustexplained.org/the-nazi-rise-to-power/the-weimar-republic/invasion-of-the-ruhr/ 
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupation_of_the_Ruhr 
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  • https://www.ebsco.com/research-starters/military-history-and-science/france-occupies-ruhr 
  • https://archive.org/details/what-germany-has-paid-under-the-treaty-of-versailles_202507 
  • https://americangerman.institute/2023/12/hyperinflation-weimar/ 
  • https://www.scribd.com/presentation/853584947/008-Hyperinflation 
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupation_of_the_Rhineland 
  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fnh8MxuTGOQ 
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Versailles 
  • https://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/partviii.asp 
  • https://germanhistorydocs.org/en/weimar-germany-1918-1933/versailles-treaty-reparations-june-28-1919.pdf 
  • https://www.nber.org/system/files/chapters/c4933/c4933.pdf 
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  • https://www.reddit.com/r/HistoryMemes/comments/1pu4uq0/turns_out_that_when_you_break_shit_you_pay_for_it/ 
  • https://www.nytimes.com/1930/12/14/archives/future-of-the-saar-a-puzzling-disturbing-problem-in-the-rich.html