David,and Gasification Colleagues,

On behalf of my daughter Stephanie who just loves worms:

> Gentlemen, I've seen these posts about earthworms 
> and finally feel the need to comment.

She collects the liquid that flows from her farm containments then dilutes it 
as liquid fertilizer to her garden crops. She can feed us on greens and still 
give stuff away. It tells me that worms are more useful than most people, or at 
least the effluent they emit is more useful(;-)

I usually can show photos of anything I support from experience, but I failed 
to photograph the habitat of native white giant worms of New Zealand, in pure 
clay leaving behind a cast to the surface, in which native trees found the 
fertility in which to shoot and grow. Without the worm holes and their complex 
mix of nutrients, New Zealand would have become a desert and many native 
species lost, if it wasn't for the foresight of creating huge reserves of 
native forests. This can be seen in my bush block down the back of the farm.

While off topic, worms , snails, and natural forests hide a multiple of secrets 
which while are of not necessarily of commercial value to corporates, are just 
one link to sustainability of human existence. Just ask an Arab where they last 
saw a worm(:-)

My order of existence would be soil habitat for bacteria, water, trees or plant 
growth of any sort of biomass, then worms to work on all the biomass surface 
litter.

Not sure if I should also say,"Yea" for gasification, as it too has it's place 
in the order of sustainability.

Doug Williams,
Fluidyne.

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