Thanks for commenting...
On Animals
That chicken point is very good to know. I was thinking of "few goats" and some grazing sheep, which give wool, and should be able to be bled a bit every now and then (I hear they get used to it) for some b12, etc. vitamins. And yes, it truly seems that animals are just on the way when thinking of CH4 an energy, and that is why I speak strongly against it in the explanation part of that link.
On CO and CH4
I was not planning to store much any of it as gasses or liquids... seems risky and space requiring to me. I was thinking of utilizing the burn-gasses (As they can both be burned to energy, etc. in the one and the same burner) the instant they are available and loading capacitators with the energy.... which can be utilize at need. By capacitators I mean anything from battery storage (seems to be short term solution), to pumping water, to lifting tons of sand/debris bags, and so forth. CO is made in the model from controlled high temperature burning of the wood... but as I pointed out, really many different ways to do this, with different additional produces (From heat to tar to complex wood nutrients). And yes, I will look into this more.
I like to avoid chemical fertilizing, as it seems to lead on the long term to depleted nutrient content. The CH4 production wastematerial is fodder for myceliums (as indicated by the "M"), whichs' fruiting bodies can be let to rot back into it, thus transforming it further to something that plants get various nutrients from. Precise maths done on this, and effectivity... I have not seen. It's just that the discarded Straws and Peels seem to give enough CH4 power yearly (in our 5+million people adminstration area) to replace 2 medium-scale nuclear reactors... just seems crazy to let it all go to sky as harmful methane...
On water
Moisture collection Nets seem a brilliant idea... needs to be developed into organic versions (Like 4x layers on top of each other... from moisture resistant fibres... like treated human hair for instance... most can grow hair... ? Though that humanhair might not work on that...)
Another idea is to let solar distillers separate water from salt of seawater, and that distilled water needs a degree of of life into it... like "seeded" with degree or natural pondlife for a while to spread and "do their thing" with sunlight, H2O, minerals, and feeding, secreting, and feeding upon each other, secreting that, and so forth (plant plancton, animal plancton etc. ) and then applied to fields... I'm thinking of low energy, low tech solutions again... requires glass and black paint (or tar) for solar seawater heating and evaporation part of thr distillation process, though. But, should it work well enough... = not expensive ?
Another thing that really seems to help with water, is again, the mycelia. Extensive symbiotic mycelial netwrok seems to increase the water retention abilities of soil considerably. (Water collection nets + Terra Preo Do Indios + Mycelial network applications = should mean a lot, for reclaiming the deserts even). It seems to me that if tree and plant roots are to soil what bones are to animals' bodies, then mycelium is to soil what flesh is to animals' bodies.
On greenhouses
It seems that farming organically few fish in tanks in a greenhouse, and using their "greywater" as both: Watering and Nutrients for greenhouse plants, costs no extra, increases the mineral and vitamin content (somewhat) of the plants, eliminates the need for extra nutrients, and produces some fish on the side... and this is without the mycelium being applied to the plants to see whether they would further boost this (which is possible, if not likely... yet I would not count on it). Swedish universities have recently done some very interesting testruns with this system. They used tomato plants and some variation of Perch ( Genus Perca ).
Hmmm... perhaps the ventilation of greenhouses should be done only through moisture collection nets ? I wonder if that could work to catch at least a portion of that water, back to use...
On Cisterns
There is absolutely, encouraging, ingenious, method for catching seasonal monsoons, for re-greening and farming desert-type areas. The Indian monsoon catching method, very low tech, but stores huge amounts of water... the results there were so sustainable and effective that this technique has been, and is being, introduced world wide to various dry areas with monsoon type-conditions.
On Dry area nutrition growing
Mushrooms. In logs. (This needs logs, though). Covered with man-made or natural shade. Won't probably work in total desert conditions, but when rest of the vegetation died in various droughts here... those mushrooms eating rotting wood material seemed alive enough... and those with a degree of natural shade were in edible conditions. Then there are certain species Opuntia... but these cactii and droughts are basically odd for me, since I have the amazing luck of being surrounded with plenty of freshwater in my area of habitation.
On Fiberplants
It seems that legalities for Fiber Only species of hemp are not impossible, though inanely complicated... (what horrible short sighted and unthoughtful planning). In my arboreal area of inhabitation Nettles seem hardy and plentiful, on the wild, and as farmed fields.
Nice thing often forgotten about these kinds of plants is that by mixing these fibers properly into concrete, you get amazingly sturdy concrete http://www.selkikeskus.com/ seems to have patented version on using recycled cloth fibres on this... which is ingenious... (as are apparently their desert re-greening techniques and experiments as well... good stuff, lots of it).
On Bamboo
You are absolutely right, huge oversight from my side. I hear many things about the amazing properties of these tree-sized reeds, from their ability to grow, to their ingenious natural structures, to steel-concrete being obsoleted in various locales by stronger bamboo-concrete, and have seen 15+ storey building sites in asia utilizing solely bamboo made construction platforms. Not to mention the edible bamboo shoots... but the reason I forgot, I suspect, was that the bamboo does not grow around these arboreal northern latitudes... at least no one has thus far been able to introduce suitable species here (Scandinavia), and we thus have been unable to utilize any of this plant in pretty much any-scale.
On Catastrophes
"Catastrophe that happens is the one you did not prepare for" (I citate it from Sergio Aragone's comic character Sage). Thus, I aim for ordinary civilized societies, or rather the citizens that form these societies, to be able to maintain and sustain their basic needs, indefinitely if need be. I hope that one day that would be amongst routine citizenship skills taught in schools (Or by parents, or by parents' organizations). That should form a solid platform for civilizations with commerce, travel, etc. to exist. Instead of cataclysmic catastrophes... thin times, every now and then, as has been the usual case through history... from which to rebuild to more prosperous times. (And let's forget the unthoughtful wasteful opulence fads from our social repertoire... ?)
And yes, I stored your response and plan to research about everything you mentioned... Thank you for the commentary.
MaxT
Environment and Developement
http://www.ymparistojakehitys.fi/index.html