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- Alcohol Can Be a Gas: Debunking Myths About Ethanol - Robert Nabloid - Seeking Alpha
- A Review by Albert Bates in the Permaculture Activist
- A Review by Randy White
- Kirkus Discoveries
- Review by Hopedance Magazine
- Review by Keith Addison, Journey to Forever
- Review by the Energy without Oil Weblog
- - Excerpts
- TOC
- the Front Matter
- the Back Matter
- Section 1 - Understanding Alcohol
- Section 2 - Making Alcohol
- Section 3 - Co-Products from Making Alcohol
- Section 4 - Using Alcohol as Fuel
- Ch 13 - Surprise! Ethanol Is the Perfect Fuel
- Ch 14 - Alcohol Versus Gasoline in Your Engine
- Ch 15 - Carburetion
- Ch 16 - Fuel Injection
- Ch 17 - Cold-Start Systems
- Ch 18 - Ignition Timing
- Ch 19 - Assorted Adjustments
- Ch 20 - Converting to High Compression
- Ch 21 - Smaller Engines
- Ch 22 - Flexible-Fuel and Dual-Fuel Systems
- Ch 23 - Methanol and Butanol
- Ch 24 - Cogeneration and Other Systems to Provide Energy from Alcohol
- Ch 25 - How Diesel Engines Can Run on Alcohol
- Section 5 - The Business of Alcohol
- Section 6 - A Vision for the Nation
- The List of Figures
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- Global Gardener Video with Bill Mollison
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- Interview with Peak Moment TV - Part 2
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- Watch: The American Home Grown Fuel Company
- Audio Clips
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- Dave Blume on NPR's Science Friday with Ira Flatow
- Interview on KPOJ's Morning show 2007
- Interview on KTLK in Los Angeles (Dec 2007)
- Interview on PR6
- Interview on the Focus 580 with David Inge
- Interview on Thom Hartmann's Show 2007
- Interview on WORT FM with Mike Moon
- interview with 'The Food Chain'
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- Thom Hartmann interview - June 2006
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Who Should Take This Course?
![]() Mandala gardens are minimum path gardens. This example is a thirty foot diameter layout. Things visited or harvested often are planted close to the path. Fruit trees and other seasonally harvested crops are planted furthest from the path. A nitrogen fixing farmer's tree is planted in the center which lightly shades the whole mandala. Six fruit trees are planted near the periphery. The paths are filled with organic matter which is turned into compost by worms. The crosshatched outer ring is a hedge producing fruits and nuts and acting as an animal barrier and wind break. This garden would feed at least four people. |
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