This is why when I occasionally smoke, I prefer smoking small cigars.
Its dried wrapped leaves. It will decompose fast and (to my knowledge)
is not doped with combustion regulators; they will extinguish pretty fast
if left alone, whereas a cigarette will cleanly burn all the way.<p>Another perk is how expensive they are compared to cigarettes, it's a natural counter to nicotine addiction.
1. What are the little specks that appear to be moving around the soil from the very beginning of the video? Some kind of mite? Nematode?<p>2. Is it really this easy to get a closed ecosystem going? I suppose the rubber seal is still somewhat permeable, but I assumed the oxygen in the jar would be depleted quickly, and all that would be left would be anaerobic bacteria. In this jar he seemed to have fungus and plants growing, and the little specks (if alive) kept going the whole time.
It's interesting that it's basically just the filters left at the end.<p>Do the filters actually help enough to justify their existence and environmental impact?
Everyone's talking about how they would smoke different cigars/cigarettes. And here I am just wanting everything in a jar timelapse in dirt...