Monday, March 13, 2017

BOY GENIUS WHO WANTED TO CHANGE RED PLANET MARS TO GREEN!

This idea sounded far fetched. But Jacob Schindler, recent graduate of University of Georgia, a student that majored in landscape architecture including the environment, held no limits for the future of the universe.  Jacob Schindler is the first youth honored in the winter season for the first prestigious Four Season Young Person Achievement award sponsored for World Enlightened New WENews. This extraordinary young man went on to solved a gross agricultural problem in America.
   
As a kid Jacob was shy and liked science better than sports. When he told sixth grade teacher his idea to make Mars green, she told him he wouldn't make it in time for the science fair since progressed that far in landing on Mars probably not until 2030s.  But he did not give up. After all, if Mars that would provide helium, nitrous oxide, carbon dioxide and oxygen it could do the opposite for planet Earth in blazing blazing a trail to rid America of noxious vegetation and even come up for a good use for it.

Kudzu was brought to America from Japan in 1876 at the Centennial Philadelphia Fair by exhibitors to be included in a garden with a variety of plants. In Florida nurseries started to sell the plant through the mail. It was also used for animal forage. The U.S. soil Conversation Service recommended it for its ability to stop soil erosion,  During WW II the Civilian Conservation  Corps (CCC) planted hundreds of kudzu planets during the Great Depression. Farmers were paid $8 for every acre they sowed what was called "the miracle vine." In the 1970s it was pronounced a weed since it could also cover houses and make them disappear from view.

Today this vice is so prolific, seemingly indestructible  and strong it can reach out and grab you like wisteria when it gets going and becomes so invasive it smothers trees and other foliage holding the dead trees up, Georgia in the South has more than 7 million acres of this vine and who knows hoq many more m Mississippi, West Virginia, Pennsylvania and elsewhere, The U.S Department of Agriculture removed kudzu from its choice list in 1953. A few decades later kudzu was branded as a weed. This Jack in the Bean stock can reach as high as 100 feet, its heavy tap root can exceed and weight more than 200 pounds per plant.  Its vines can reach four inches in width and is strong as Gazzila.  Power companies spend more than a million dollars annually to fight this monstrous large leafed plant.

So In 2014 student Jacob Schindler at 16 received a patent for "taming the shrew –the monstrous vine kudzu. He for years had researched the solution for keeping kudzu down to a trot and actually stopping it to grow.  He also encouraged it to have more benefits than fodder and erosion.

His answer to solving the problem is helium drilled into the soil through a stainless steel pipe holes placed near the plants' roots. Helium does not require toxic hazardous chemicals or drifts to other nearby plants. He's a winner through his Kudzu Eradicating Helium Technological Apparatus of his own patented invention–KEHTA

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