The Lavender Osprey

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Passionate, small, knowledgable, Garden Consulting and design buisness centered around edible landscaping, permaculture design, native species, and sustainability. 💚💜🌱creator of a tiny suburban homestead on 1/6th an acre🐾🌻🪴

06/11/2026

Data Center discussion✨-

As an ecological permaculture designer and native plant specialist this is a topic me and fellow Ecological designers and Conservation practitioners have been diving into recently in seminars, research projects, and meetings on projects that either have been implemented already in other countries or should/ will be in the future involving Data centers. This is the biggest talking point in my career field right now and everyone has the same questions.

This discussion has come up with a plethora of people now, and I fully agree that generative AI isn’t beneficial to humanity. But AI specifically isn’t what I’m talking about here as most people tend to lump together. I’m talking about ALL data centers for streaming, social media platforms, hosting websites, email, online banking, enterprise centers, telecommunication centers, government data centers and research and scientific computing centers.

Data centers in the US as they are currently are a hot mess, yes I fully agree. This post isn’t to defend the dumpster fire that they currently are. They consume tons of water, give off loads of heat, are often loud, cause light pollution and take large amounts of power from our grid, and destroy vital habitats among other things.

The biggest thing is that even if AI centers weren’t in the picture, we would still have Data centers. If you use Amazon? Massive data centers. Email? Data centers. Use a cellphone? Data centers. Hospitals? Data centers. Watch YouTube, Netflix, or any other streaming? Data centers. You get my point here. Technology as a whole is still expanding rapidly as is humanity. We will always have these in growing number as more tech becomes mainstream.

While AI data centers are a new and rapidly expanding source of them, they’ve always been there. And they aren’t going anywhere anytime soon much to the dismay of the general public.

The most important problem we have to solve, (and many countries are already doing this in some really unique ways) is to figure out how to make the centers more sustainable. How can we offset carbon emissions? How can we utilize the heat they create? How can we recycle or reduce water used in cooling? How can we make them smaller? How can we preserve the land that is yet to be damaged by them? What rules do we put in place? Could we use them to create more power than we take? Could we utilize the resources it gives off??

I could continue with the novel worth of questions we have had to meticulously go through, but the biggest thing is- we are creating solutions to those questions. The bigger issue is getting US corporations to actually use them, and getting regulations to change to support these.

Our current solutions for freshwater preservation:

-Use air cooling and build them in cold climates
-implement cooling towers to capture and recycle evaporated water
-use water from sewage treatment plants, then purify it further and use for irrigation or other sources
-build them underwater, or underground in old mines

Uses for the waste heat they give off:
- use to warm greenhouses
- pipe heat to homes and city infrastructures
-drying agricultural products
- warm water used in aquaculture like tilapia and algae cultivation before put into cooling
-industrial preheating and washing systems
-absorption cooling

Solutions for reducing the heat and global warming:
-improving computing efficiency (best cooling system is the one you don’t need)
- creating living ecological buffers on rooftops and around the building and use evapotranspiration
-Paint the roof white/ reflective to reflect heat back (this also reduces heat inside the building and would make it so less water and energy is used)

Energy solutions:
-wind and solar microgrids
-hydroelectric
-geothermal
- waste to energy systems (methane digesters, waste incinerators, landfill gas capture etc.)

Light pollution solutions-
-Rules on specific types of lighting
-Amber and red/ warm wavelength lights
-shielded fixtures
-motion sensor lighting instead of 24/7
-zoned lighting.

Sound pollution solutions-
-Acoustic enclosures
-low noise/ high efficiency fans
-liquid cooling fluid
-earth berms, tree lines etc as buffers
-indoor only airflow design

These are only some of the possibilities and options we currently could have available if we fought to get them put into place. There has been a massive amount of research in various countries testing out many of these methods, and many we are finding are working beautifully at reducing the harm these centers cause. anyway I’m done for now- feel free to ask questions or even better yet, add some more ideas or solutions onto here. We are constantly searching for new ideas on how to fix the massive problems these centers are currently causing.

Was a beautiful day at a few of my clients, figured I’d post a few pics on here lol. Fully weeded and mulched a raspberr...
05/12/2026

Was a beautiful day at a few of my clients, figured I’d post a few pics on here lol. Fully weeded and mulched a raspberry bed (it was pretty rough looking) as well as pruned the third year canes out, transplanted some things, and other various jobs.

I am proud to announce that I now have an official website! It has an intake form for clients, my rates, and more. I pla...
03/26/2026

I am proud to announce that I now have an official website! It has an intake form for clients, my rates, and more. I plan to add much more to it over time!
Don’t forget to join our mailing list! Email us at [email protected] with the subject “Food Forest” and write your favorite plant!

At TLO Permaculture Design, we are passionate about creating sustainable garden environments that thrive. Our design philosophy integrates ecological principles with innovative techniques, ensuring that every project respects nature while fulfilling our clients' visions.

This diagram shows how a regenerative closed-loop homestead system functions as an interconnected whole rather than a co...
02/03/2026

This diagram shows how a regenerative closed-loop homestead system functions as an interconnected whole rather than a collection of isolated parts.

Each element — animals, garden, compost, insects, water, and people — performs multiple functions, and each output becomes an input elsewhere in the system. Food scraps feed compost and insects, compost feeds soil, soil feeds plants, plants feed animals and people, and animal byproducts return fertility back to the land. Waste is minimized, external inputs are reduced, and resilience compounds over time.

Importantly, this system also accounts for invisible yields: education, community trust, skill-sharing, and local resilience. Economic return exists, but it emerges as a byproduct of healthy relationships, ethical care, and ecological balance — not as the driving force.

The outer loop represents the ongoing regenerative cycle: nutrients, energy, care, and knowledge continuously moving through the system, supporting both the land and the people within it. This is not about perfection or self-sufficiency — it’s about thoughtful design, responsibility, and stewardship.

When you see your land as a whole system, and take in every part of it, look at every single component or resource this offers you. Then you’re able to stop relying on outside inputs and begin to regenerate your land, health, and community. This is what permaculture is at its core.

Hey everyone! My second email newsletter comes out tomorrow with a PDF on soil health and how it helps do the quiet work...
01/31/2026

Hey everyone! My second email newsletter comes out tomorrow with a PDF on soil health and how it helps do the quiet work for you in the garden. For access to last months PDF, and to subscribe to my newsletter, send an email to [email protected]
Using the codeword 🌱”Abundance”✨

Hey everyone! I know the weather lately has us feeling stuck indoors, and any gardeners out there know the feeling of ge...
01/20/2026

Hey everyone! I know the weather lately has us feeling stuck indoors, and any gardeners out there know the feeling of getting that “itch” to plant things, and be in the warmth and sunlight again while growing abundance. What many don’t realize though is there is so much to do before those first seeds are sown- from picking out varieties, delving into research, buying new tools, and plotting out the land, methods, and designs for the garden.

My job is to help you get the most yield from your land, in a way that is sustainable, mimics nature, and is the least amount of effort for you to reap the bests harvests.

-I help you to learn how your water flows on your land and how to catch it naturally so you don’t have to water your garden every day.

-How to build soil instead of buying bags that have been shipped across the world, full of unsustainable peat moss and expensive additives.

-How to grow organic foods with no pesticides or herbicides, just from using proper integration and companion planting.

There are many more things that permaculture gardening has to offer, and I help people create food forests that mimic nature, and feed both wildlife and the community.
I have a mailing list if you’d like to just learn more about permaculture, food forests, homesteading or self sufficiency. Email me @ [email protected] and use the code word “Abundance” to join my monthly newsletter.
❄️Stay cozy! - Bri

Well I certainly wasn’t expecting such a large flush of first year Winecap mushrooms, these were sown in very early Marc...
10/23/2025

Well I certainly wasn’t expecting such a large flush of first year Winecap mushrooms, these were sown in very early March, some of them are larger than my hand! So excited to preserve these for soups, stews and the like

🌿New mailing list in the works 👀 pm me your email if you’d like to be added for garden advice, tips, and tricks. Fall cl...
10/22/2025

🌿New mailing list in the works 👀 pm me your email if you’d like to be added for garden advice, tips, and tricks. Fall cleanup season is underway!

One of my phenomenal clients left me a super kind review/recommendation on Nextdoor🌿❤️ (important personal info scratche...
09/15/2025

One of my phenomenal clients left me a super kind review/recommendation on Nextdoor🌿❤️ (important personal info scratched out**)

Whew, tis the season of gardening! 🪴My long-term client list is currently filled for the season. However, I remain avail...
04/23/2025

Whew, tis the season of gardening! 🪴My long-term client list is currently filled for the season. However, I remain available for garden consultation visits, calls, and coaching.

✨🌱I hold certifications in native plants, edible plants, permaculture, landscape design, and maintenance. 🌱✨
Phone/video calls are $7 per 15 minutes, and in-person visits are $30 an hour plus gas ($.70 a mile)

📞📱A phone or video call is ideal for addressing specific plant issues, seeking recommendations on plants to purchase, or focusing on a particular species of plants, or **If you live farther than an hour from me.**

🌱✂️Conversely, an in-person visit is best suited for issues or tasks requiring closer inspection, such as pruning, weeding, transplanting, planting, assessing soil quality and type, and designing/creating a garden
***IF you are within an hour drive of me***
I operate out of the south Hanover/Parkville PA area.
To start a consultation call or visit, or to get more info about the services I provide, send me a message on here or comment and I will send a PM.

Address

Westminster, MD

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