SolarPunk
actually if you really wanted to screw up their day, you'd put gasoline in the tank. Most construction equiptment is diesel, and if you put gasoline in a diesel, it will cause massive mechanical failures that will cost a lot to fix, a mere serpentine belt…
This is bad advice and I'm going to explain why. First of all, this doesn't cause as much damage as you think, actually gasoline seems to work okay in most diesel engines. Second of all, even if it did cause massive mechanical failures, it's inconvenient. Carrying a five gallon gasoline can all the way through the woods or whatever to the equipment is not only difficult, it's extremely incriminating if you're caught. The best saboteur uses either no tools at all or only that which is normal for anyone in any given place/time to have. I would like to say right now that I am in no way condoning, supporting or in any way advocating for acts of sabotage, but there's a reason putting sand in fuel tanks is an old technique: it works and it's convenient because you can probably find it wherever there are logging machines.
America's first urban 'agrihood' feeds 2,000 households for free
https://inhabitat.com/americas-first-urban-agrihood-feeds-2000-households-for-free/
https://inhabitat.com/americas-first-urban-agrihood-feeds-2000-households-for-free/
Inhabitat - Green Design, Innovation, Architecture, Green Building | Green design & innovation for a better world
America's first urban 'agrihood' feeds 2,000 households for free
When you think of Detroit, 'sustainable' and 'agriculture' may not be the first two words that come to mind. But a new sustainable urban agrihood, debuted by Michigan Urban Farming Initiative…