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576 lines
52 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1114
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Title: HPR1114: DudmanoviPodcast Episode 7 - A geeks Journey to nature
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1114/hpr1114.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 19:14:36
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---
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Episode 7 A Geeks Journey to Nature
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A podcast that did Manovie.cz
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Hello and welcome to Episode 7. A Geeks Journey to Nature. This is a podcast that
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did Manovie.cz. It's recorded live thanks to mumble server. Well that's a bit of software
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but it's just server the WeConnect2 is provided by Linux Basics.com and we thank them
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greatly for their assistance and help in doing that. What have we got in store this week?
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Well no we had we got some updates some news we're going to talk a bit about technology
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how this podcast is powered and that's really right. Let's just so we can turn down that music.
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I thought I'd remixed it so it'd be quiet. So first a few updates. Well when I started to do this
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blog this morning I had edited the show notes kind of a guide what I would talk about but I went
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to login to my WordPress blog and somehow I'm not sure I think maybe my wife or my son had
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tried to login to somewhere else and the admin I rely upon Firefox to remember my passwords and
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for some reason maybe someone clicked on remember and the password had been incorrect so
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I had forgotten what the password was and had to go and reset it through I think it's called
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my PHP admin where you can access the SQL database and change it. So I quickly found some
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instructions how to do that on our friend Google and all his well I got back in a bit of a relief
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really. Another note I tried to use our door version 3 a new version came out instead of our door
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2 people have been getting excited about it and I thought it looked great but when I installed it
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it looked great really nice colors and everything but just pressing record and then stop
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seemed to crash the whole thing so I can't be doing with that while I'm in the middle of
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trying to do something sensible so I've reverted back to version 2 but I had to reset stuff up
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and that was a bit of a pain but it didn't take long and it was a good practice. What other
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news and updates have we got let me look at my notes oh yes how cow Theresa Tresca still hasn't
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given birth she's out grazing today with her daughter and two friendly horses and every night
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I wake up in the middle of the night go and check have a look in the morning go and check because
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when she gives birth it's good to go and help her a little bit dry off the little calf and because
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at night she is chained to one place where her food is all the cows are at night all at home
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that I'm only worried that you know she gives birth it comes out the back end and she can't
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she can't turn around enough to help try the cow off on the lick and what have you so
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probably it's no problem I remember one year I think the first year about five years ago when she
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gave birth to her first son who was called Albert we woke up in the morning I went out to have a
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look and there was there was this kind of big creature there and it looked strangely like our dog
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at the time we had a Bernadine a Bernad Bernadine dog and he was massive and kind of a bit of fluffy
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and silly looking but the thing is this this little bull as we later found out called
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down bud he he looked at different color but he was loping around and very active I was very
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surprised so I had to catch him first and then get him to drink the milk and what have you
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but what else what else happened well my wife had a bit of a panic this week she was just going
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down past our house to her neighbors and on her way back with a bucket in hand to pick up some
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apples to give to the bull and the cows for the evening there was this she was confronted by this big
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pig running towards her and she had about 10 seconds of panic thinking oh my god how of our pigs
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escaped you know and now we've got they're out on the road and we're going to have to try and
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hurt them back and then she realized it was the neighbor's pig and although it's it's never
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nice when any animal escapes if it's if you have animals and if some animal escapes and you
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realize it's not yours it's such a relief because you know you're not responsible for hurting
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them back anyway my wife quickly heard it heard it the big pig back up the road to the neighbor's
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house and knocked on their door but she wasn't so sure if she could hurt the pig because he seemed
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very stubborn and determined that he would go past but always well and the biggest relief is it
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wasn't our pigs what else has been we're rushing through the news here because I want to get on
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with a with the with the main feature story um our I've mentioned last week that we have I've
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selected a guinea pig to kind of do some home brew research here now I don't want to mention his
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name specifically um there was a bit of clashing times and he actually fell asleep um when I was
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going to chat with him yesterday I mean to give him credit he was very late in the in the evening
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or early in the morning for him and he'd had a long day so um we'll we'll reschedule but um his
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initials are BB and you would recognize him by the depth from the the um silkeness of his voice
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so we're hoping to get him back on and we're going to be talking about healthy food and hopefully
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he has agreed to uh to be a guinea pig for his benefit and the outs and your benefit so he can
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kind of do a little impromptu scientific study here um it's it's a scientific study that's been
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done thousands if not millions of times over back in into the eons of time when people
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people weren't suffering from any health related or societal related problems and we're all happy
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but um sometimes to believe the repercussions of these simple changes in our lifestyle and what
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we eat and do we need to retest them with it's not always easy just to believe um what we read or
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something and fair enough you know we we should test and collaborate our sick sort of test and
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collaborate if that's the word ourselves these things so that's what our friend BB has agreed to do
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and it's just a matter of catching him what else um i want to speak just at the end of this podcast
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briefly um about some more things with uh debian and abuntu i outlined last week perhaps in a bit
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of a haphazard way um my frustrations or discoveries with abuntu the software distribution based on
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debian i have made a few more discoveries whether they are completely accurate or whether i'm
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misunderstanding um that's definitely possible but um i thought i'd share and discuss them
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just briefly and i'll carry on my research and without further ado let's get on
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so the feature for this episode is and this is reading from my notes 10 years compressed into
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perhaps an hour how an english computer programmer ended up owning cows horses pigs chickens and
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speaking check what is check you say the check language not the english language the check language
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and after all this time is still into tech but is perhaps a little more discerning what started it
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all is free and open source yes that is absolutely true anyway i hope there's kind of a primer
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but what my intention was if i'm sitting comfortably maybe my wife will bring me a cup of coffee
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or a hot cup of tea because i'm english after all is i wanted to outline what my experiences were
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and how i got to where i am um i'm realizing as i do these podcasts it is quite a difficult thing
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just to sit down and chat to yourself and it's uh along the way it is my intention just not to
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to edit things so you can really hear what i'm like and i'm not going to spruce it up you know um
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how it is is how it is so how did it start well um as a young kid i will call myself a young hacker
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because i like literally to hack things apart and look in them i had a cupboard full of old
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electrical things or old things that our parents had thought they won't use any more and
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weed somehow got them some old wireless or radios um some old bits of computery things or something
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no that's probably not true maybe there weren't so many computery things in those days
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anyway i had a cupboard full and uh like all best hackers i took them apart and at the time i didn't
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have the skill to put them back together again so i hit them carefully at the back of the cupboard
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so no one would notice because i know that my mum will be a little bit upset if she noticed that i
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destroyed things well that that was where it all started i was big into technical Lego and Lego
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and i love building and playing with things like that i think i did i did think that i would be in
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an auto mechanic at some point but i'm pretty pleased i'm not because um i think the scope for
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comprehension is is a little bit limited really not um to to uh this on uh auto mechanics but
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i think computer technology and science is is a wider field than just fixing or mending or
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expanding on cars you know but anyway i slipped into uh like most kids i'm not sure they really have
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any comprehension of what they want to do they've got the careers services and they just told
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they've got to pick something you know you've got to move on from school and go and do science so
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i went to college and enter to university first in engineering and then in computer science
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graduated from computer science after the three or four years and uh started to be a computer
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programmer but um i was infected at university by the concept of open source slackware i think
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um there was a teacher at my university called Bob Dickinson and maybe i was getting
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in contact with him again the university of half the churning land and uh he was a big inspiration
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bit of a wacky long-bearded lin um sort of open sourcey linuxy type no insult no insult meant Bob
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but um maybe it's a compliment in fact anyway he was big into e-max and slackware and all these kinds
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of things and uh the first history of tuition i tried was slackware on 14 discs you know download
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in them at the university because not many people or nobody had a internet at home back in i think
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it was 96 or 98 something like that and um slackware from 14 floppy discs go home install it
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oh no one of the discs is corrupt you could have drive back to university download anyway
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the cat a long story short i was infected by the bug of open source just the the concept that
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you had the freedom you know you you could look to see how something was implemented
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you know you could you could learn from what somebody else shared you could see it running you
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know compiled you could try to learn the whole can basically you could learn if you had the interest
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and uh if you didn't have the interest and but you wanted to have it to be something different
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you could make it into a commercial thing you could pay somebody to do it um but you needed to
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give and pass on that freedom i share your changes share your modification share what it took for
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you to be able to build it you know the know how the the the the gubbins behind what makes it do
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its thing so i went in and i i worked at different places i was quite fortunate in a way
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after the jobs i took because i never really kept one for for more than a year i i jumped
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getting good pay pay rises on each jumper i spent some time in the city of London working for like
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some financial banking consultancy so i had some good experience being a consultant
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for the financial industry never a particularly good one but it was interesting experience to see
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how they behave you know getting involved and seeing what salesman alike and
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kind of behind the scenes a little bit and then i worked for some more proprietary software
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getting into Java but along the way you know i was pretty fortunate i had a lot of free time
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and uh all those jobs had fast most of those jobs had fast and uh openly available into access so
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you know in my spare time or any additional time i had i was able to to research and
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search to my house content you know google at that time and come into its own so
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it was really easy to find stuff and to be honest perhaps even now you know you could easily get
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overwhelmed with with any pursuit or study and that's exactly what i did i've got a thank all my
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employees uh at the time they didn't really notice what i was doing or even demand too much from me
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but um i was developing a problem all the time during those years and that was pains in my hands
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and stressing my shoulders from the bad posture the the too many hours of stamina to
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screen you know kind of tension and stress to do things quickly and get results you know
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in a performance related way oh my cup of tea has just come thank you very much
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and you're still trying to prevent everyone from shouting out there will you okay great thank you
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i gave them strict commands not to be shouting at all while i'm doing the podcast but that's
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no guarantee in a nice way they shout sometimes angry but uh it's a family after all and where you
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anyway um i developed these uh problems and pains in my hands i had some injections you know i
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remember vividly going to the general purpose doctor the GP in england and it's a sort of
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incompetence that she she put an injection in one wrist and you know she was pressing and pressing
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on the on the plunger at the top and it just wouldn't go in you know it's so painful she
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banged it in my arm right in in in my wrist there some quarter zone or some injection
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and um and it wouldn't go and it ended up that the needle was sort of blocked at the end so she
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got a new needle injected the bottom line was it made no difference it still was hurting i was having
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some sort of work paid for massage and physiotherapy and it was it was a pain there was one more one
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of those nagging constant pains you know it creates a kind of frustration and it just kicked me in
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the the backside and reminded me do i want to be doing this the whole of my life do i want to be
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sitting at a computer is it something what i that i want to do so uh fairly quickly based on all the
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free time i had i started looking for more jobs um a quick reminder if you've just dipped into the
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middle of this podcast you are listening to dudemanovie.cz and this is episode seven and we're just
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talking about a geek's journey to nature so uh back on where were we yeah so i had these injections
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it made no difference and i started to look to see for some alternative um i got it interested
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in ecology and uh eco eco villages um i realized i needed to get away from the work and and
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to find some some place so basically i found an eco village um which i felt some affinity with
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and seemed interesting um the one i chose was it was called falcon blanco in uh ibiza spain
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well an island off of spain and i thought that sounds cool you know go and see what these people
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are about and learn something so i ranged with my boss to uh take a six month break in my mind
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i didn't intend to come back maybe in his mind he didn't intend to employ me i don't know
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but i think i think that he probably did and uh actually i did come back after six months
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or five months and i worked there another two months just for some spending money to an
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a kind of different job so i must thank those employees they were really great at morant in
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actually they've changed their name recently been bought out by another american company so i don't
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know they probably changed their name again but um i rented my house um which you know i had a
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mortgage on and it was a bit stressful but uh i found someone to rent it put it in it with an
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agency and i packed all my bags and i traveled off and um the experience i had for six months was
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quite phenomenal to be honest because um it was a very special eco village um they had concepts
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of eco-ness but um it was really about facing your preconceptions and your your sense of reality
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and that my same stress out strange but their their method of doing it was that their way of income
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was to go around the the bins and the sort of dumpsters in on the island of Ibiza they also had
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agreements with quite a few supermarkets in the main town where we would go and pick up the
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disposed the disposed wooden padlets because they were quite expensive to dispose of and transport
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back to the mainland because you know there was this bottle neck of the ferry line and uh in
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exchange for picking up those pallets they would they would allow us to and they would deliberately
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put into a certain place um at the back of their shops for us all of the out-of-date products
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you know the cans and tins damaged things and we would go and pick up all of that and then we'd
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go back to the to the little um sort of oasis home away from home and um sort through it and take
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the things which we thought had more value for ourselves to eat and uh then sell and we had there
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was a shop on the on the place on the property and people would come so they'd be a lot of like
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washing powders some food stuffs it was it was amazing really the amount of stuff they threw out
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the the island of abyssa is um a big tourist resort and really quite affluent but at the same time
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very wasteful you know you can go you can get all your clothes and everything from the dumpsters
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in fact i remember one time our computer broke it stopped working and uh you know we just
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sat there in the evening and we we put out the intention it sounds a bit hearty farty or um
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in new agey you know i was going along with them at the time and and i'm always trying to be open
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to new experiences so throw myself into it and and experience it but uh you know put the message
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out there that we need a new computer and lo and behold we get in the big dumpster dive in
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palette picking up van go off to um abyssa the next morning i think it was me and one of the girls
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and down by a dumpster was a computer we took it home you know installed i think it was
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xp at the time and and it worked perfectly there was absolutely nothing wrong with it i think
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even had a monitor so we got a monitor um a box an old box with a pc in it and it worked fine so
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we had a new computer anyway that was the the island there there was an associative problem you know
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the the guy there because you're picking up rubbish and a lot of it can seem useful
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it's very tempting just to keep accumulating and um it's slowly quite slowly became apparent to me
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that even if we clear up all the rubbish that he had accumulated he was accumulating more
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at a faster rate and it was an impossibility to keep up that there were literally palettes and
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palettes of of stuff and it was our job to kind of sort for it all store it but then nothing
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was done with it you know so it became really a massive fire risk in the summer and uh
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often palettes then would be you know left out in the rain and quickly it would become kind of
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useful goods to it be transport transferred after a few rainings and washes to complete absolute
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rubbish that had been rained on and spoiled so i i realized it wasn't really a future and i actually
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needed a place of my own so so i was in charge and and what i really wanted this community wasn't
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some kind of haphazard eco village is i wanted to find and founder my own family so i had a
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braver who'd already gone to the Czech Republic he'd been sucked there by an opair he'd fallen in
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love with in England and we'd all met in a pub together and there were free free Czech opairs
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and he'd very quickly narrowed out the one of them that he liked the best and he was a very fast
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mover and um likewise he quit his job and moved to the Czech Republic before me about three years
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four years before me two years three years maybe anyway and uh got married in the Czech Republic and
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um built his own little house and has a nice life and now he has free children maybe four
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even actually going very big guns at it anyway so um i thought it would be nice you know my twin
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braver is in the Czech Republic why don't i at least come and see if it's not possible to settle
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in in some region which is closest you know try to you know we're gonna move far away from our
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parents but why don't we at least us bravers as twins stay kind of close you know so
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my came out i found eco villages and there's something called woofin um it's called
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willine workers on organic farms and if you're a young person looking for opportunities to travel
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on budget and to maybe go to farms maybe to to help out in a more sort of open air environment
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you don't have to be necessarily a big ecologist but it's a great way on a budget to travel and to
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meet different people see different lifestyles but so there's this thing called woofin
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and um i found a kind of position at a place in Czech Republic near Olamorts which isn't
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actually far from where i'm living now and um i stayed there and helped the guy for about four or
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five months and um i was kind of interested again you know should i make my own family inside an
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eco village or should i be you know completely independent and again there were problems with
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that guy that um he was he was quite of a quite an activist pushy ecologist very well meaning
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but upset a lot in his life by what's happening in the world and and try and a little too forcefully
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and um aggressively to uh to see and create change and um hi it was a wonderful learning experience to
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be honest to be thrown in and well voluntarily i put myself into all these positions and
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became intimate with these people so i must thank them all um along the way but um you know
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have to make my own way in my own decisions and be my own boss so i left that place
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little bit of a conflict um but it was time to leave i um threw another friend that i'd met
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from there i uh i found a flat to vent in the local city which to be honest was a massive contrast
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i'd never lived in a block of flats and i've always had at least some garden and i'd spent almost a
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year with like outside life making and constructing building destroyed you know very practical
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down to earth lifestyle and it was a bit of a contrast to be suddenly thrown into a into a into a
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block of flats um but i was doing a little bit of teaching not that i really needed the the income
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to teach english but more um to sort of integrate myself learn a bit more check and uh meet people
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so i did that for a while quickly realized that uh teaching english to people who aren't really
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self-motivated or engaged isn't really my thing i'm i'm to be honest i'm i'm a wonderful teacher
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if somebody is passionate but um if they just feel like they should you know to get a job or if
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they're not really interested then um i'm not going to push anybody you know and um i don't believe
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in that kind of teaching model so um i i gave up that actually at the same time i was doing that
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that was when i met my wife and it was a very interesting meeting uh for another mutual friend
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who just kept saying you've got to meet Vera you know you you just have to meet Vera she's so
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lovely she sings so beautifully and she wants a family she'll be perfect for you and you know
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he's he kept saying that when i met him but he he never arranged to to get us to meet and
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you know it seemed a little bit strange to me so i never pushed it and um the funny thing is he
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kept saying that to um my wife as well to Vera he kept saying oh you've got to meet me or he's
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really lovely you know oh and i think she said oh and he's really rich you know the funny thing is
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now when we reflect together that actually put my wife off completely because she didn't want to
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meet some rich spoiled Englishman you know and actually um she had some some inclination that i
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was black and uh she had some a little bit of prejudice towards that you know or actually she
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said she had this image that i had a leather jacket and i was some leather jacketed black inkling
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which is very funny but we did eventually meet um the guy invited me to his little birthday party
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and uh and of course Vera was there as well and um it was very funny because we both had the feeling
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that we of course we'll get married have children together and be living together for many many years
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to come and that is exactly what happened you know um but uh um yeah of course he he mixed up the
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telephone numbers when we when we asked him can you give me her number and she asked can you give me his
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his number that he gave us both the wrong number somehow and we were waiting a week or two weeks
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and uh surprised
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which was interesting
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there's somebody on mumble who uh who is it it's breeze breeze who he's having problems with
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his audio and can't hear but um he's not in my channel right now just a quick reminder um this is
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episode seven of dude manovie um a geek's journey to nature and um we are recording live using
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mumble um as i said before without half an hour into the episode now i'm probably going a bit slower
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i'm drawing it out longer than i'd intended but maybe we'll make it a two-part episode um so um
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you can catch this live as a nice guy there called breeze tried to but it had problems with his
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mumble audio and said he's looking forward to listening to the recording instead so thank you very
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much their breeze and um but you just just come to the website dude manovie.cz and um the instructions
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there on the left there's a countdown to when the next live recording will be and if you've got
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any questions or you want to join in the conversation we've got a um a we've got a
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we've got a little forum area over on the Linux basics forum i'll put a link in this show note
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and somehow integrate into the dude manovie.cz website anyone interested in how to pronounce the
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dude man dude manovie.cz domain name it is dude manovie.cz and that is our family name here in the
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Czech Republic Czech Republic it's a Czechic Czechalized version of our family name um i just
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mentioned that because on a recent episode i think one two two of uh Linux basics door
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says a very kind things about me and the podcast and he also said he wasn't sure how to
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pronounce it so there's a quick help to you door and thanks a lot for your help you you're a good
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funny guy. Anyway back on with the episode on so i'm now in the Czech Republic i've met my wife
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and um she is at that time studying a terribly difficult and stressful university she's she's
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eternally determined young lady and um she was studying Japanese studies combined with English
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and russian i think at the same time she was very crazy she spent two years in Japan and she had
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just come back from Japan and was continuing with her studies when i met her so you know uh
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fate brought us together and we were we were combined but um it was terribly stressful and i was just
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trying to help her with her English studies and be patient until she'd finished um we both quickly
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realized that the best way to get to know each other because we were a bit older at the time we were
|
|
both almost 30 or 28 30 and we we weren't ready for just messing about we wanted to see you know
|
|
is this a one will i marry you you know should we have children together or not
|
|
so we decided to to move in together to to save costs and to sort of test you know to to know each
|
|
other intensely and to test to see if we could tolerate each other so we did that fairly quickly
|
|
to be honest after about two weeks of meeting um and you know i was really pleased because i can
|
|
move out of that horrible um block of flats which is called a panelak in english in Czech which
|
|
literally means flats made from panels stuck together which is very funny and very true
|
|
so i escaped and we moved there and it was very nice very small place so we had like one little room
|
|
and it was atop of the house so the the ceilings were so sloping in that you would bang your head
|
|
you know if you stood up too quickly but we had loved a few less you know and we were living on
|
|
the fumes of love so it made it all worthwhile anyway so um it was about a good four months
|
|
while she was finishing her studies and then she'd had lined up a very well-paid job as an
|
|
interpreter a Japanese interpreter for and a Toyota massive Toyota factory that was being bought
|
|
built in the Czech Republic so the problem was it's a very male orientated environment and my wife
|
|
is a short soft girl you know and it was very very overwhelmed to be honest and the the Japanese
|
|
culture that they're imported and the the insecurities between the new Czech employees and the
|
|
Japanese culture because the the Czech employees were being treated like kind of children they
|
|
were being taught how to how to screw up screws in in in plastic fenders of cars and it was
|
|
taking so long for them to get on with their actual work and to be like a Czech work because
|
|
that they were used to so there was a lot of insecurities and conflicts and my poor little wife
|
|
not then wife but to be the stuck in the middle of all this so she had a kind of a kind of a nervous
|
|
breakdown a tension and without any hesitation I went and picked her up and bought her home
|
|
and quickly then realized that you know if we're going to have a family she didn't need to do that
|
|
for the money you know I had already budgeted and I had like five years of a five-year plan worked
|
|
out and I didn't need to find a job for five years because the Czech Republic was um really
|
|
economically advantageous for me I had some savings from for my well-paid job in England as a
|
|
computer programmer and I've been pretty good at saving up um and also the house I'd sold
|
|
I was very lucky it would sold at a and a profit the the house prices just were magically up at that
|
|
time you know I was stressed when I was selling it thinking is it going to suddenly plummet now
|
|
is it going to plummet because it seemed like it was artificially high and I could then have
|
|
been in the negative you know but I was lucky and it didn't and I had savings and I tried to schedule
|
|
sort of plan how long they would last and what I would spend my money on and I was living very
|
|
very cheaply at the time so we uh god I'm really drawing this out so apologies I hope this is
|
|
still interested if you want this to be more interesting come along and listen live and ask
|
|
questions and interact and then I won't be tempted to draw it out so long so there's a challenge out
|
|
to all of you um there was a guy today breeze who tried and uh I challenge anybody else to try
|
|
and it also makes it more interesting because uh because I'm interested in listen to other people as
|
|
well back on we're about 35 minutes I had a reminder in my left here a big bing bong that you
|
|
couldn't hear five minutes ago reminding me um see you carry on let's see so we went and got a
|
|
very cheap old check made car so we could travel around and easily look for houses more or less
|
|
one of the first houses we found was um because I already hit in my mind that I wanted some kind of
|
|
homestead I was already inspired by some sort of organic vegetarian growing they were like extreme
|
|
macrobatic vegans I wasn't quite that extreme I didn't quite see it but I was always open and I was
|
|
naive I was happy to get inspirations and learn from people and sort of sort of integrate myself into
|
|
into environments and then you know from what I see in here try to judge if that's if that's you
|
|
know sound or if it has a future or how how do those people live off that those the kind of fumes
|
|
that that technology creates you know so I knew I needed a place with some land and space so we
|
|
found a place and it was a pretty big oldish homestead that needed fixing up the the old parents had
|
|
died and the the young now sort of 50 odd children I think there were four children they'd all
|
|
moved off somewhere else and weren't interested in the house and to be honest it had really been left
|
|
to disrepair there were holes in the roofs and and um if we we decided fairly quickly we fell in
|
|
love with the place it had massive gardens and it had about I think about 4,000 square meters
|
|
like directly connected to the land but the the biggest thing that I really liked was there was
|
|
there was an apparent possibility to buy up to another 20,000 less two hectares or about four acres
|
|
of land which was the original sort of farm in land connected with a homestead and that was right
|
|
behind the the actual homestead there's a kind of pattern in the Czech Republic villages that
|
|
you'd have like a central circle of houses and then at the back of each homestead sort of
|
|
fanning out like a pie like a big circle you'd have each of those homesteads the original ones
|
|
would have a piece of land of course in recent years last 50 or 100 years the the children have
|
|
of each generation have progressively sort of squeezed houses into the sort of front road-facing
|
|
land and then they've built land you know houses behind so it kind of becomes
|
|
messed and mishmashed and squeezed but more more importantly the pressure on the on the land
|
|
behind that was the original mainstay of the homestead is diminished or even just lost you know
|
|
and then what with the in the what was in 1920s onwards or 1910 the pressure of socialism to
|
|
unite all the all the land together and basically have all the all the independent homesteaders
|
|
working for the what was called the Yezadere which I'm not sure what that really means in Czech
|
|
but basically the the co-op farms you know that you as a farmer you for the advantage of having
|
|
access to machines and modern technologies you give up your land you allow with the fields to
|
|
all be joined you know no more no more hedge you hedge rose in between them and individual parts
|
|
you can maximize your your use of the land and you know increase the the manner which you
|
|
you exploit and and apparently the profits I think if anybody looks into the details and
|
|
thinks about it ecologically not that I'm a big ecologist in the extremist view but you
|
|
don't have to look far to see that it's it's really a misguided way and this will be a subject
|
|
for a future episode I won't go down that rabbit hole too much because I really would ramble
|
|
for a long time but we bought that house very quickly and we kind of I thought we had quite a
|
|
good understanding with the owner that within a few years you know once we've demonstrated that
|
|
we really need the land it wouldn't be any problem to buy that extra two hectares for acres
|
|
it seemed really nice so we went and bought the land in hindsight we perhaps should have listened to
|
|
when when we were buying the land we were up in the solicitors office you know we had
|
|
in those times you could still buy a land buy a house by just getting all the cash out so
|
|
we went to the bank we got you know think it was about a million crowns it cost us which
|
|
said about 40,000 crowns I'd like that 30,000 I can't remember exactly but so that a million
|
|
crowns we we took out the bank we had in our brow lymph envelope we're going to the office the
|
|
the three the two brothers and the sister or the three brothers and the sister are there
|
|
and halfway through the negotiations or the sign of the contracts the the sister the more sensitive
|
|
of them she collapses completely from sort of the hotness and dehydration or whatever and you
|
|
know they're all about 50 60 70 years old these brothers and sisters so you know they have to
|
|
help her out she only just manages to sign it and then when we get outside there's a clamp on
|
|
our car you know we'd parked and we hadn't put a ticket or any expired because we'd taken so
|
|
longer than I know so we had to phone the police and you know my wife and I were just so excited
|
|
because we finally the first time we possessed them because it was ours you know I was so excited
|
|
we can be the bosses you know we can make our own mistakes or successes anyway and in hindsight
|
|
because of the way it went with the relationship with those people and our sort of constant
|
|
asking so can we buy the land already you know we we need it we have two horses we have two cows
|
|
we need the land you know we want some grazing area they just wouldn't sell us a land you know
|
|
we were we were already using the sive extensively for all our harvesting of hay and and maintaining
|
|
land so you know that was for all of those animals and you know we had goats initially and we
|
|
built up slowly that's maybe another another episode but the long and short of it was that
|
|
we were cutting lots of neighbors lands neighbors gardens and and doing that it wasn't always
|
|
possible to to cut it at a time that they wanted you know we had to cut it when it was when
|
|
it was the next piece the cut when it was the right time of year to cut and you know we weren't
|
|
interested to maintain English lawns we wanted to cut just two maybe three tons a year to make
|
|
hay with you know the grass at the beards and length and most of the neighbors were very happy but
|
|
there was one piece of land where you know he you know we were relying on upon it and he he didn't
|
|
really care for he was pleased we were cutting it but you know there wasn't the communication and
|
|
this just really reminded me that sort of bad dependency if the land isn't yours you know we
|
|
had animals to feed at that time there was one big farmer in the area that we would buy hay from
|
|
if we needed any extra you know when we first got the horses we bought hay for them because we
|
|
hadn't hadn't sort of accounted for for making hay for them and we didn't have enough land to cut
|
|
but we were we were cutting in all the ditches and you know I was pulling it back and forwards
|
|
all with a hand card you know the time I didn't have a car or a trailer or hadn't trained or got
|
|
any horses to do the work for me so well one day I just came home and really enough was enough
|
|
me and my wife just decided if we can't buy the land what is the point you know it was five years
|
|
in already and we had just finished fixing the house you know new roofs we had gradually moved
|
|
from one room around the house as we fixed individual rooms we would move to the next room you know
|
|
as we fixed upstairs we were living downstairs then we moved upstairs so we could fix downstairs you
|
|
know we'd already had our first child and it was difficult to imagine moving somewhere else after
|
|
doing all that you know but it was so critical to us to have our own land and to be in control
|
|
that we just decided right let's go down on our bikes we'll go and see the the main boss of the
|
|
the family and just ask him are you ever going to sell us a land we went there and confronted him
|
|
to be honest we weren't polite at all because we wanted him to say no because you know we didn't
|
|
expect that he would just turn around and say yes and of course he said no I will never sell you
|
|
that and never won't be yours so we knew then and there that we had to do something else
|
|
something else happened at the same time there was another sort of piece of land that we could buy
|
|
and um it wasn't directly connected to our land you know it was like a few me like
|
|
maybe a hundred two me two hundred meters away we couldn't see it from our homestead but
|
|
it was just one hectare and we tried to negotiate with the ladies there was like
|
|
free old babki free old ladies grandmas who owned that and we tried
|
|
or rather an old lady and her two daughters I think but we tried to negotiate with them and
|
|
they were all right they were so excited and we we almost got to negotiation
|
|
and then my wife just phoned and they said no no we we've decided not to sell it
|
|
and we were like flabbergasted shocked what why why well it turned out that they they
|
|
decided that they can make about 20 times the amount of money if they sell it for building plots
|
|
instead you know so not only were we annoyed that we couldn't get it but we were doubly frustrated
|
|
well no more damn little modernized houses with more town people you know nothing against
|
|
your town people but it's just in in the long run you'll probably realize that you need a bigger
|
|
garden and it'd be better if you even if you don't utilize a land now build a house with
|
|
a large area which is yours you know don't be too close to neighbors because um the way I see it
|
|
will all need more land in in the future you know to be more independent that's a subject for
|
|
another podcast but um so with those two things going on we decided we've got to find a new house
|
|
so independently my wife and I on separate computers we we searched and searched and the internet
|
|
was amazing because um because we you know they had pictures descriptions you hardly have to
|
|
visit places so we could search hundreds of different homesteads and I found this particular one
|
|
and it looked like virgins from a castle you know it looked very beautiful I mean said it wasn't
|
|
inhabitable and that was a bit of a problem because at that point already we had you know one child
|
|
we had an inhabitable house you know it wasn't perfect but you know we were used to it and it was
|
|
safe and warm whenever I think we had an inhabitable house and um we also had you know cows, goats,
|
|
sheep, horses so we had to find a place where we could move where we immediately they could
|
|
believe as well you know we had all the husbandry equipment and lots of stuff so it wasn't a matter
|
|
of just packing some boxes and making sure it was close to our place of work um we had to move
|
|
everything the animals was more complicated so anyway we went to visit now I'm thinking I might
|
|
save this for the next episode because we're already at 46 minutes and um I'm just going to mention
|
|
a few more things about uh when we bought that first house um it was funny you know you go to look
|
|
at a house and we're probably very naive people you know and we were just in love with the house
|
|
you know had great big fixed stone walls and there was there was a massive barn for storing hay
|
|
it needed fixing but um you know it's very historic and up in the loft they left a lot of the
|
|
historic machines and you know we basically had no value you had like historical it's like a
|
|
value of interest to us and but most of it was was unusable and really just fit for some sort of
|
|
museum just for a friend attainment you know and there's plenty of those in check anyway
|
|
because there was so much of this stuff up in people's lofts but um the interesting thing that we
|
|
never noticed when we came was there was there was no running water in the house you know we only
|
|
noticed after we bought it and uh you might laugh but um you know we just took it for granted that
|
|
there was that that was there because there was an old lady who was living up to a year before we
|
|
came and had a look it'd been empty you know a year and there was also no toilet you know
|
|
inside or outside there was a kind of like a bash down locked down um sort of relic of some old
|
|
outside toilet but um so they've obviously done a lot of clearing up and um I think they'd
|
|
clear it up any relics of an old outside compost toilet now I think about it there was probably
|
|
some old wooden thing and a hole that they'd buried but um when we spoke to neighbors after we
|
|
had bought it that they described how much material and wood was in the yard outside and
|
|
that it was a real mess so they must have tidied all of that up before um we'd moved there
|
|
or we'd bought it rather they tried to sell it but that was just an interesting tip bit that um
|
|
actually there was a kind of sink in the kitchen and we just assumed we didn't look carefully
|
|
that there was a tap but there were no taps coming out the wall and the only way to collect water
|
|
was a bucket underneath the sink but again the the passion of love and excitement and
|
|
unis carried us along and to be honest still does today so that's the end of episode one I think
|
|
of uh what did I call it? Episode one of a geek's journey to nature
|
|
how a computer programmer with uh to be honest a love for nature but no experience or
|
|
no sort of real practical understanding of what it means tried to work things out
|
|
quickly and another thing we were I was also very naive during those periods just assuming that
|
|
all the villagers around would be interested in you know cutting grass with a sive
|
|
or you know spinning wood with by hand or you know cooking honest sourdough bread or you know
|
|
traditional ways of preparing foods I just assumed that they would be interested in that but um
|
|
I you know and so so I would we would when we first moved there we'd be invited to people's
|
|
house and I we would share with them our excitement like as town people
|
|
discussing to this how we're excited and they would maybe politely sort of nod but I think inside
|
|
them they're thinking you're crazy you know what you want animals for just buy a jumper don't
|
|
consider making it yourself you know and and you don't want to keep a pig is too much work you know
|
|
you can just buy it cheaper and um I think I've come to realise that a lot of people in the
|
|
a lot of them not everybody you know I don't mean to put everyone into the the same bucket but
|
|
a lot of people are doing it through doing the old things through kind of inertia you know
|
|
and maybe they don't have the education for a better job or more money so it's a way to make
|
|
your things a little bit cheaper and um maybe often it's the older people which are still keeping
|
|
the animals or you know want to keep a pig but once they die you know the younger people haven't
|
|
really not in all cases haven't really been integrated into looking for them or having that passion
|
|
towards keeping them saying that there is a big growing trend of people especially people who come
|
|
to our courses what we do courses on how to use a sive and cutting grass with ease you know
|
|
for men and women and children to spell in the myth that you've got to be somehow mature and
|
|
strong to do it you know and it's an exhaustion because it doesn't have to be but um we you know
|
|
one of the advantages of doing these courses are we meet so many people just for a brief time you
|
|
know one day and we we get to hear about the things they're doing you know and we've got a real
|
|
feeling that there are so many people in the Czech Republic or even worldwide who are excited
|
|
you know passionately excited you know not for a sense of profit not for a sense of
|
|
I don't know but just for a sense of excitement to see what's possible and get in touch with nature
|
|
you know so that's that's a great thing that's happening but a lot of them are really
|
|
thanks to Western A price and the real comprehension of what is healthy food people are returning
|
|
to to appreciate that keeping an animal even if you intend to kill it or if you're exploiting it by
|
|
taking milk and maybe if if it gives birth to a cow a bull that you you will kill it but you're
|
|
trying and in a respectful way to kill it in a fast way you know and don't send it off to the
|
|
slaughters and let it be stressed do it at home learn how to do it yourself in a quick way
|
|
you know just kind of say a blessing before you do it and thank thank the creature for his
|
|
life and what you know the theory of my life as I say that because I really mean it and um you know
|
|
to integrate what we can exploit and use from animals but making sure that we serve them and they
|
|
serve us a real mutual relationship of serving each other anyway we're up to about 50 minutes here
|
|
on the podcast and uh come back next week for part two of a geek's journey to nature where I'm
|
|
going to complete when we moved into our new homestead which we've been we've been here for now
|
|
five years and uh basically we started again from scratch making a new homestead fixing it all and
|
|
struggling so in the last ten seven ten minutes I I wanted to quickly mention again this whole
|
|
thing about technology um I'd meant this week to reformalize but the structure of the podcast you
|
|
know um I need to get some sound bites in there really just to remind myself and listeners
|
|
the sort of motivation I'm not quite sure how to do it yet but you know this podcast is about
|
|
technology it's a tech podcast but for me I'm gonna I'm calling it real tech you know because I
|
|
I was thinking about this I listened to lots of tech podcasts you know computer and programming
|
|
and Linux and you know that kind of tech gadgets you know and uh I just quickly looked at the
|
|
the Wikipedia definition and I've got it here at the top of my website and it says you know technology
|
|
is making modification usage and knowledge of tools machines techniques craft systems
|
|
methods of organization in order to solve a problem so I want to emphasize in this podcast them
|
|
you know technology needs if it's gonna be good technology it needs to solve a problem
|
|
and that technology is about making modifying and using and knowledge you know of tools
|
|
it's not just about oh somebody else has the knowledge and they will sell us something it's not
|
|
just about a gallon you know some gadget you buy it's been my experience in the last few years
|
|
I buy a gadget like an iPhone you know I'm trying to be open like there was one point where I was
|
|
you know trying to get rid of all these gadgets because they just create stress and I was frustrated
|
|
that they weren't serving there you know who was serving was I serving them or were they serving me
|
|
I was spending all my try and just trying to get them to work how I wanted them to how I thought
|
|
they should it's still my feeling quite a lot of the time that would be treated like beta testers
|
|
you know I love technology gadgets like the like the next geeky gadget loving person but um
|
|
being a bit older and with a family now I have other priorities and uh and I need to make sure
|
|
that uh anything come using serves my greater purpose you know and the greater purpose of
|
|
of um humans coexistence with nature you know how our family integrates together
|
|
relations with the animals you know our our ability to get the animals to collaborate with us
|
|
not through fear but through collaboration and good leadership this is something else I would like
|
|
to talk about in another episode is uh techniques and knowledge and tools for for horse training and
|
|
dealing with animals that I learned which actually extend completely and very well to humans and
|
|
children especially and which I've been using I feel quite successfully on my own wife and my
|
|
children and uh all of those things I call technology you know and according to this definition
|
|
in Wikipedia our technology so it's the kind of the purpose of this podcast is to to
|
|
highlight this perversion of the term technology towards things we can just buy yeah I'm not
|
|
against people making profit but um I'm tired for one of being a beta tester although I enjoy
|
|
testing and playing with things um I just think we should be honest with what it is you know if I buy
|
|
some some computer and it's sold as a development board and you know you can tweak your stuff
|
|
that's great but if I'm if I'm sold so Incas have finished product then I want to know it's a finished
|
|
product wow you can hear the music coming in and um if I'm going to be good at doing this I should
|
|
really respect that uh two minutes music before the end so before it really forces me out and let's
|
|
have a quick look I've got a few more minutes I'm going to quickly mention about Ubuntu um after
|
|
last week sort of semi rant I didn't want to be too unfair I'm not sure how it sounded but um
|
|
I've still been looking into understanding how distributions work you know whether it's
|
|
derived from Debian you know Ubuntu is derived from Debian and then there are so many derivatives of
|
|
Ubuntu um I started a few different threads over on the forms at Linux basics really trying to
|
|
understand how these things are you know I was looking at um was it though the um some license
|
|
in trademarks it was called like a trademark agreement for the Ubuntu and I'm I'm not completely
|
|
sure I agree with or understand it or that it's really really a very good um trademark description
|
|
there you know I've got a lot of questions as I read it I have the feeling that they are actually
|
|
restricting what you're allowed to do to the to the um derived works from Debian you know they
|
|
take it from Debian and I feel that they are actually restricting what you can do that didn't seem
|
|
to be much mention of you know there are no restrictions as long as you share the source code
|
|
because it was my understanding with the gpl you're able to sell stuff you're able to make money
|
|
from it but you must pass on the same freedoms that you got you know when you got the works and
|
|
for that to be true it's my understanding you just need to share the source code you know the
|
|
whole trademark issue using the Ubuntu trademark I think that's completely valid you know that is
|
|
owned by Ubuntu it was a surprise for me that anything Ubuntu not just the U but anything we
|
|
Ubuntu so that's X Ubuntu, Ubuntu, Ubuntu all of those are trademarks of Ubuntu that is my
|
|
understanding I could be completely wrong and I'm happy to be corrected but it made me look at it
|
|
you know I'm running out of time now just another 30 seconds so we'll do all this to an end but I
|
|
did have some interesting discovery which I'll talk about or go and look on the forums about
|
|
Ubuntu's use of something called I think the popularity tool popularity contest which is a
|
|
Debian package and it didn't seem to me that Ubuntu are following the rules that Debian I'm not
|
|
sure Debian is forcing you but but saying so that's going to be a discussion for next week's episode
|
|
hopefully now we'll see how this information and music is coming in and we'll be off come back
|
|
next week for dutmanovie.cz thank you very much for listening
|
|
you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does our we are a community
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