Damus
Jacob (Organix Farms) profile picture
Jacob (Organix Farms)
@jwadd

•• OrganixLandscapes.us ••
Homesteader, bitcoiner, naturalist, farmer, electrician, Systems engineer, Polymath, husband, father, landscaper, educator. Helping people design and build food systems to create a sustainable future.

Relays (5)
  • wss://nos.lol/ – read & write
  • wss://relay.damus.io/ – read & write
  • wss://nostr.land/ – read & write
  • ws://gawfu3zilh2bnmrysfkgftyss7jy3wbc7zatndlmg3fxxkbepnrc2eid.onion/ – read & write
  • ws://ppva2qoo1473retxesxknanniqsk3bkdscm1447iedffrj5d4igptiid.onion/ – read

Recent Notes

Haikustr · 4d
I usually dont but my notifications were a mile long #haiku #haikustr
z4ch4ry · 1w
Love it! GN 🌅
Luna Fish · 1w
There is absolutely nothing more satisfying than that "click" when a dowel finally behaves! 😆 It’s like the wooden peg gods finally stopped messing with you and decided to cooperate. Glad the hard part is over—now you can just cruise to the finish line! ✨
db · 1w
I had a tough decision in the past and asked a few friends what they thought. One answer that I’ll never forget; “Sometimes you gotta just put your dick on the table” Worked for me (not literally)
Jacob (Organix Farms) profile picture
Thoughts of the day.

Today our IT group found out that the whole dept will be outsourced to another company. They are offering about half the positions than there are staff. I could see this writing on the wall as the last 6 months to a year has been nothing but probing and inventory from our parent company.

Ironically, I'm not very distraught about the situation. See, I've been building my business for 6 years now and officially on the books the last three. I continue to build my skill sets in various other aspects to make sure I am always a valuable asset. Call it a prepper mindset, call me a go-getter, call me a polymath. Whatever you want to call it, I'm grateful for the choices I've made to allow this situation to be more of an opportunity than a hindrance.

I'm now left with a choice to apply for a potential position at said Outsourcing company, find a job elsewhere, or take this opportunity to dive head first into full-fledged entrepreneurship. The choice between security and freedom. This is ultimately the hardest Choice people have to make not necessarily when it comes to a career but in all aspects of life. I'm at the point where I'm tired of the corporate game, tired of trying to prove my worth and tired of being one of the only employees who gives a shit.

It feels like this is my opportunity to put everything into myself see if I really have what it takes to be a full-time entrepreneur instead of having three side gigs.

The scary part is I have 5 other people depending on my success so failure isn't an option.

Big choices are coming and I'm excited to have these opportunities.

#dailythoughts #gogetem

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db · 1w
Take the chance! You can always admit defeat and go work for someone else if it doesn’t work out. Just be open and honest with the 5 others. You got this.
LeviJohnson.net · 1w
It's a wild ride, but it's been worth it for me, entrepreneurially speaking.
Ryan Wilkins · 1w
If you don’t go for it, you will always have that nagging thought that you could have made it work. It wont always be easy, but what you’ll accomplish will have been worth it.
travisnj · 4d
I really resonate with this. What you’re describing isn’t just fear of job loss—it’s the tension between predictable stability and earned freedom. I’ve been on both sides of that divide. I was once part of the outsourcing machine, and I walked away because it was corrosive—to people’s...
Jacob (Organix Farms) profile picture
Finally got around to repairing the greenhouse.

It got some major reinforcement and will now be converted to a chicken run. I thought long and hard about trashing the whole thing but where there are problems, there are solutions!

Repaired the broken tubing with a few pieces of cedar wooden dowels, added 2 cedar log posts for central support, 6 tposts on each side for wind support, then some upcycled wood and metal sheeting for the skirt.

Only thing left are the doors and add a 5ft piece of welded wire to bring the sides higher.

#proofofwork #problems2solutions #homesteading





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Maria2000 · 1w
We've done this with a couple of old greenhouse structures. One of them is still in use by our guineas.
David II · 1w
💙🤝
David II · 2w
My onions and leeks are under the lights and just starting to emerge. Today I direct sowed some onions in a cold frame as an experiment. Yesterday I sowed outdoors some “wild” mustards and poppies to naturalize. I also have apple seed, aronia seed, and elderberry seed sowed in pots on the ...
David II · 2w
I sow in 4 rows in open flats about 300 seeds per flat or about 5 seeds per inch. No need to thin or up pot. Just scoop out and plant when weather permits for me usually 8 to 10 weeks later.
Jacob (Organix Farms) profile picture
I was thinking about going that route, but seemed more labor intensive at the time of outdoor planting. Dig hole, breakup soil mass and tease out roots, plant.

Thinking the cell method i can skip the teasing step (next year) and plant straight from the cell tray. Im usually going balls to the wall when spring comes so any time cutting pays dividends.

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David II · 2w
No method is perfect