Michael Rubalcava: Amateur Ecologist
(Page 3 of 3)
September/October 1980
By the Mother Earth News editors
IN BRIEF...
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In the tiny town of Wendover, Utah, ROBERT GOLKA has built the United States' only lightning machine . . . an apparatus he hopes will be the key to lowcost, renewable energy. "With nuclear fission there's always the problem of dangerous radioactive by-products," Golka says. "That risk is nonexistent in ball lightning fusion."
HATTIE BILBREY has always been independent, so it was no surprise when she landed a job—at age 72—demonstrating her skill at carding and spinning wool. Today, 13 years later, Hattie is still toiling at her sixteenthcentury wheel in Knott's Berry Farm's Ghost Town, and she has no plans for retirement. "I want to keep active," declares the California craftswoman, "and I want to keep on spinning."
Septuagenarian ELMER BACK has recently installed a steam engine in the 38foot commercial fishing boat (dubbed the Alma Lee) that he navigates around Oregon's Depoe Slough and Yaquina River. The vessel—which recycles steam back into water with an 80% return—runs on only 15 to 20 gallons of water per day.
JIM GULBRANSON is one of a growing number of farmers who are reducing their need for OPEC oil by bringing horsepower back to the farm. "There's very little cost involved in farming with horses," says the Spring Grove, Minnesotan. "Your mares produce new 'tractors' every year . . . and the feed is returned in good garden fertilizer." —JV.
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