Now we have the first town just starting to become viable as a town!
Some of the water from the nearest river has reached the town's treatment plant, where it is first cleaned up so that it can be used for irrigation. then cleaned more so that it can be used for raising fish, then more for the fish hatcheries, then to the final level for human consumption and bathing. If the river water is being collected near the end of the river just before it enters the seas or oceans. It will be full of sediments and soils, they are extremely important in rebuilding the soils that will become the first farmland! This farmland will be used for alfalfa, this is an excellent cover crop, great fish food, and a perennial so does not have to be replanted every year. Plus, the equipment for planting, harvesting, and storage, is very simple and easy to do! Alfalfa has a high protein content, in comparison to many other such crops. As the amount of farmland is increased, other crops will become important, vegetables, wheat, and after enough land becomes fertile, then trees that can bear nuts, and fruits, will be planted right in the alfalfa fields. It is the ground cover that is the most important aspect of replanting the planet, not necessarily, what is produced. It has to be a balancing act, between the production of food, and the increasing plant respiration, which is necessary for increasing cloud cover. As the production of seafood increases, along with vegetable crops, the long term storage, of both will need to be increased, which will go from fresh, to frozen, to canned (actual bottled) to freeze-dried, to dehydrated. All forms will be used to make the most efficient use of everything that each town produces. At this point in time where towns are becoming self-sufficient in power production, food, housing, transportation, then there needs will also start to change, to needing everything that a normal society would expect! This point will be in some ways the hardest, those that worked to get there towns to this level, will feel that newcomers are benefiting without, doing the hard early work. This is a very common problem and has not always been deal with well! How to deal with expectations of everyone being equal, when the early work will always be considered harder, and now life simply becomes somewhat easier. Perhaps one solution will be that those that came in first will get 30 acres, and later on, those that work for there land will only get 20 acres. Or perhaps take slightly longer to prove up on the land before it becomes theirs. Reach me in the USA @ 402-890-7946 or by e-mail @ < danielkadavy212@gmail.com > Thank you, Dan
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