emmy,
   
  I love my wheelbarrow too, but my brother in-laws in Viet Nam all have 
single-axle handcarts with a box roughly 5 ft. long, 3 ft, wide and 2 ft. high. 
 The rubber tires are about 2.5 feet in diameter.  They are designed and built 
in such a manner that they are balanced over the axle. 
   
  Even when pulling one loaded with 2,000 - 3,000 lbs of bricks you have to put 
a slight downward pressure on the handles as you pull it along.  
   
  They beat my wheelbarrow any day!
   
  Of course you can't buy such inferior Third-World technology in this country.
   
  George Frantz 

emmy koponen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  the term horsepower arrived not humanpower, let us not
underrate the wheelbarrow. i like this topic, and
meanwhile, before grand spaces to can etc. would love
to gather and put up june fruit. emmy seeking a
living space starting august or september. enjoy!
--- Daniel Record wrote:

> The Power in Gasoline
> 
> Have you ever thought about the amount of power in a
> gallon of gasoline equated to human power? Picture
> a car that gets 30 miles to the gallon. Your
> average small Honda or Toyota. Can you push this
> car 1 mile in a day? If you are over 40 years old,
> probably not. If you are really fit you may be able
> to push this car 2 miles in a day. 
> 
> So the for the average ‘1 mile per day car pusher’
> there are 30 man-days of labor in a single gallon of
> gasoline. That little jug of gas, the size of a
> gallon of milk, has the amount of energy that equals
> you sweating your butt off for a month. It also
> includes the 40 or 50 pounds of food that you would
> eat for a month. 
> 
> The Creator gave us an amazing gift in hydrocarbon
> power. A gift that we are totally wasting on trips
> to the mall to buy Chinese made plastic gagas. We
> are using this gift as slave labor to empower our
> foolish egoistic desires at the expense of Life on
> Earth. 
> 
> So let’s put some dollars in the equation so you can
> really relate to that little gallon of gasoline. If
> you paid someone $10 dollars an hour to push your
> car around and that person could push you and your
> car and your Chinese gagas a mile a day then it
> would cost you $80.00 per mile or $2400.00 for every
> 30 miles. So your little gallon of gasoline is
> worth around $2400.00 in human labor. 
> 
> Assume you have hired a strong young teen to push
> you and your 2000 pounds of carbon debt around the
> city and he can push you 2 miles a day. That would
> mean each gallon is worth only $1200.00. If you use
> 10 gallons a week for your average lifestyle the
> cost in human labor is $12,000.00 per week; 20
> gallons equals $24,000 per week.
> 
> No wonder we will do anything to keep our gasoline
> fix. The real cost of gasoline slave labor in human
> terms is astronomical. 
> 
> If you had a few acres of land, a cabin, a chain
> saw, a roto tiller and 5 gallons of gasoline, you
> could live a simple lifestyle with very little real
> labor. The 5 gallons of gasoline could do all the
> real work required to feed you and cut firewood. 
> But it will not supply you with any of the wasteful
> luxuries that we are addicted to. 
> 
> It is obvious that moving 2000 lbs of steel and
> plastic to transport a 200 lb human is very
> inefficient. The energy that you expend on a trip
> to McDonalds for a burger is many, many times
> greater than the energy in the burger itself. You
> might be able to push your car a few blocks from the
> energy in a burger.
> 
> I think it is important to repeat myself regarding
> this. The more I think about it, the deeper I see
> into my addiction to gasoline. If I make a 10 mile
> round trip to buy a meal and I think about the
> amount of energy it would take me to push the car 10
> miles, which is 10 days of hard labor for a ‘1 mile
> per day car pusher’. Wow! I would have to keep
> myself alive, fed and fit for 10 days of hard labor
> just to make a 10 mile trip for dinner. I would
> have to eat 30 meals to provide the power to drive
> to one meal. (This all doubles if I am driving a
> 15mpg SUV and doesn’t include the hydrocarbon debt
> of getting the food to the restaurant.)
> 
> It is easy to see that the future is in bicycles or
> rickshaws. Your young teen could probably move you
> a mile or two an hour in a rickshaw as he would only
> have to push you and not your 2000 pounds of carbon
> debt. There is NO SUSTAINABLE FUTURE in any kind of
> automobile based society. It doesn’t matter if your
> little box on wheels gets 100 miles per gallon. 
> This kind of statement is definitely ‘water off a
> duck’s back’. WAKE UP DUCKY!!!!!!
> 
> There is a very similar amount of hydrocarbon power
> in home heating fuels, oil or gas. Picture the
> black aluminum heat sinks that are on the back of
> many electrical devices. These heat sinks dissipate
> extra heat from the electrical device into the air. 
> Our cities are just big heat sinks. Our buildings
> only hold heat for a very short time. Every time
> your furnace comes on, it means that quantity of
> heat has escaped to the outdoors. A gallon of fuel
> oil only lasts a few hours in the average home
> during the winter. Multiply 5 to 10 gallons of oil
> per day times the number of homes in a city times
> 100 days of winter and the numbers get crazy in a
> hurry. It is ABSOLUTE INSANITY to be constantly
> burning this amount of power to heat (or cool)
> buildings. The highest use for oil is to make
> insulation, not to make heat.
> 
> 10 gallons of heating oil will move a 1984
> Volkswagen diesel Rabbit for 500 miles. Would you
> rather walk 500 miles, heat your home for 1 or 2
> days or run your garden tractor to eat? In the not
> too distant future we are going to face decisions
> like this. At this moment I’ll bet the little
> quacker in the back of your brain is telling you
> that it will never come to this and I don’t know
> what I am talking about. You and your little
> quacker better get in touch with the real world
> Ducky.
> 
> A bunch of people are going to make trillions of
> dollars selling hope to a doomed civilization. The
> only hope is to fix the basis of the problem, not to
> apply band aids. The real basis of the problem is
> that we live by the doctrine that humanity has
> Dominion over the Earth. The Earth exists to
> satisfy any desire the human race can conceive,
> regardless of the cost to our Earth Mother. 
> Anything we can invent to increase our comfort and
> decrease our sweat equity in this lifetime is
> totally justified. WRONG AGAIN DUCKY!!!!! You can
> only live outside of the Natural Laws of Earth for a
> finite drop of time.
> 
> 
> 
> We could have super insulated every building 
> in the U.S.A. for the cost of the Iraq War 
> and told the oil companies to shove it.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> What are the two biggest drugs in America??
> 
> Electricity and Gasoline.
> 
> We will do absolutely anything to keep our fix: Go
> to war, Drop nuclear bombs, Cause a climatic change
> that is of the order of the changes that ended the
> age of the dinosaurs. 
> 
> The most valid reason I can come up with for knowing
> that the shit is going to hit the fan and we are
> headed into very tough times is to look at my own
> lifestyle. Despite my knowledge of the problems and
> my ranting and raving about things, I am still
> living in poorly insulated housing and burning as
> much gasoline as I want to. 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> “Our culture’s response to its problems is like
> rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.”
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Bill Record / Medicine Bear is involved in creating
> the Earth Town Network, a series of ‘eco villages’
> across the country based on the Peace Principles. >
_______________________________________________
> For more information about sustainability in the
> Tompkins County area, please visit: 
> http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/ 
> 
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> for:
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