>>2295593>I hope you're not stinky, though.Nah, you can take a quick rinse/shower if you ever feel the need and with this approach the benefit is you can take as many as you like.
>but muh water costs1min of cold water is cheap.
> but it probably works if you're using a real animal hair brush for mechanical cleaning and covering your hair around dirt.Yeah, I went almost 2 years without and shampo, now I think I should just get a good brush to distribute the natural oils because my hair is not short. The hair is actually so nice, that it's almost a shame to now grow it out, I imagine women would kill for these kind of improvements.
Anyway not telling anybody they have to go on this method, but by god, it works for me, just luke warm water for "washing" and cool/cold for rising and/or when finishing a wash. Did take a couple of months for things to reach a nice equilibrium though, so if anybody wants to try, don't expect it to settle in less than a month.
>Agreeing 10000000x on the soil web. I took some chunks of well-rotten forest wood and buried them in the yard when I decided to go full veg garden to try and bring back the microorganisms/soil web critters.Yeah, I'm definetly going to try the no till jihad this year and just add some fungal life into my garden and disturb it as little as possible, let nature sort out the rest.
I get the feel I will get similar results. Slow inital setup but better long term stability and results.
I tend to notice the plants I mettle with the least, are the most stable in terms of disease and pests. While plants I try to take care of in the classical gardening way, get swarmed by pests and have mold and other shit problems.
These reoccurring fractal patterns, I notice them more and more. I feel there is some universal truth to be extracted here.
In an effort to manually stabilize the system we keep teeter tottering it from one end to the other, simultaneously solving and creating problems on opposite ends of the spectrum.