What Transpired With The Greenhouse Extension?

The Greenhouse Recruiting Chrome extension is a browser plugin that allows organizations to add prospects to their Greenhouse CRM from a website. It helps organizations find, reach, and manage talent in prospect pools. The extension is designed to help organizations reduce greenhouse gas emissions by expanding climate-action policies across government, society, and the economy. Extending greenhouses requires careful timing, as dismantling them too early could expose plants. The greenhouse effect occurs when certain gases, such as carbon, accumulate in Earth’s atmosphere. Greenhouse cultivation, under thin plastic films or glass roofs, is rapidly expanding globally to ensure high yields and quality of fresh produce. The Greenhouse Recruiting Chrome extension allows organizations to add prospects to their Greenhouse CRM from a website, resume, or manually. If issues occur while using the extension, it is recommended to log out and log back in.

The Greenhouse Gmail add-on scans email headers for email addresses matching candidates in the Greenhouse Recruiting account. Gem has built an integration with Greenhouse that allows for syncing emails to prospects and candidates to the candidate’s activity feed in Greenhouse. To set up the Greenhouse integration, open a candidate’s Gem profile in the Chrome Extension and press Connect Greenhouse.

The greenhouse effect occurs when greenhouse gases in a planet’s atmosphere insulate the planet from losing heat to space, raising its surface temperature. Over 18 greenhouse-related projects have been funded, and greenhouse technology is helping Armela Farms provide fresh greens and reds in the Abu Dhabi desert.


📹 What’s Happening – A Greenhouse and Expansion Update!

What’s Happening – A Greenhouse and Expansion Update!


What happened to Aviv Buchler in Greenhouse Academy?

Aviv Buchler, an Israeli actress, portrayed the character of Emma Geller in Greenhouse Academy during the first two seasons of the series. She departed from the role in the third season due to personal circumstances. Additionally, she portrayed Tamar Dvir in The Eight.

Why are greenhouses a problem?

Traditional greenhouses, powered by non-renewable energy sources, significantly contribute to CO2 emissions, with conventional greenhouses emitting around 575kg of CO2 per ton of lettuce. Advanced greenhouses, using renewable energy and closed-loop water systems, emit 352kg of CO2 per ton. This highlights the need for technological and methodological advancements to reduce greenhouse environmental impact. Additionally, greenhouses require significant energy to maintain optimal growing conditions, often sourced from fossil fuels, resulting in carbon emissions.

What has happened to greenhouse sensation?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

What has happened to greenhouse sensation?

Greenhouse Sensation, a UK-based company, was forced into administration after the collapse of its parent company in late 2022. The company temporarily suspended trading due to the situation, but was later purchased by a key UK supplier with over half a century of manufacturing experience. In autumn 2023, Greenhouse Sensation resumed trading and continued to offer popular products like Quadgrow Planters and Vitopod Heated Propagators. The company is committed to sustainability, using 100% recycled and recyclable plastic in all products.

They re-use and repurpose plastic to prevent it from ending up in landfills or oceans. Greenhouse Sensation molds over 2000 tonnes of industrial and post-consumer recycled plastic annually, transforming it into useful products for the home and garden. They recycle and reuse all plastic waste generated in their UK factory, sending zero plastic waste to landfill. Greenhouse Sensation also uses vegetable-based inks on printed boxes and point of sale materials, ensuring that paper and cardboard can be recycled or composted without negatively impacting the environment.

Why is greenhouse happening?

The burning of fossil fuels is accumulating CO2 as an insulating blanket around Earth, trapping more of the Sun’s heat in our atmosphere. This anthropogenic action contributes to the enhanced greenhouse effect, which is crucial for maintaining Earth’s temperature for life. Without the natural greenhouse effect, Earth’s heat would pass outwards, resulting in an average temperature of about -20°C. Most infrared radiation from the Sun passes through the atmosphere, but most is absorbed and re-emitted by greenhouse gas molecules and clouds, warming the Earth’s surface and lower atmosphere. Greenhouse gases also increase the rate at which the atmosphere can absorb short-wave radiation from the Sun, but this has a weaker effect on global temperatures.

What is Google Greenhouse?

The Greenhouse Gmail add-on allows users to view pertinent details regarding candidates directly within their Gmail inboxes, while simultaneously enabling the synchronization of candidate email messages from Gmail into Greenhouse Recruiting.

Is there a Greenhouse Chrome extension?

The Greenhouse Recruiting Chrome extension is a browser plugin that enables organizations to import prospective candidates into their Greenhouse CRM database from a website, resume, or manually, without disrupting their current workflow. The extension is available for all subscription tiers and is accessible to users with the requisite permissions, specifically those with the role of Job Admin or above, who are responsible for managing the CRM and prospects.

What happened to greenhouse effect?

Earth’s natural greenhouse effect, which maintains an average temperature of 15°C (59°F), is a key factor in its favorable conditions for life. However, human activities, primarily from burning fossil fuels, have disrupted Earth’s energy balance, releasing carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. This has led to a consistent rise in carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere and ocean, trapping extra heat near Earth’s surface and causing temperatures to rise. The Greenhouse Effect (UCAR) and NASA’s Climate Kids: Meet the Greenhouse Gases! provide more information on this topic.

What happened to Sprung Greenhouse?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

What happened to Sprung Greenhouse?

The Sprung project in the late 1980s was a controversial project that failed to meet production quotas, find a suitable market, or turn a profit. It cost taxpayers $22 million and damaged the credibility of the Progressive Conservative Party. The project went into receivership in 1989, and the greenhouses were sold to a Montreal company two years later and shipped off the island. The province’s economy was struggling, with high unemployment, low revenues, and cod stocks on the brink of collapse.

In response, the 1986 Royal Commission on Employment and Unemployment recommended focusing on small-scale resource development, such as agriculture. In the same year, Charmar Holdings Ltd. requested government support for the building and operation of innovative greenhouses based on those developed by the Calgary-based Sprung Group. Sprung president Philip Sprung claimed the greenhouses accelerated plant growth by combining a biophotic fabric covering with a hydroponics process. The company spent $35 million and 10 years developing the high-tech greenhouses and now wanted to sell licensing rights to interested parties.

What will the greenhouse effect be in 2050?

As per NASA’s 2050 climate scenario, which predicts continued greenhouse gas emission growth, climate shifts, such as heat waves, could limit outdoor work and pose a risk to lives. This is due to the fact that such shifts could result in 1. 5 degrees Celsius of additional global warming by 2050.

What is a quadgrow?

The Quadgrow is a self-watering planter that offers a convenient alternative to growbags or pots for vegetables. It produces larger harvests and keeps plants watered for 14 days while on holiday. Ideal for tomatoes and other plants typically grown in grow bags, the 130cm long by 24cm wide Quadgrow system is easy to set up and use. The SmartReservoir fills the pot, and FeederMats pull water up to the roots when needed. This prevents common gardening problems like splitting or blossom end rot, ensuring plants have access to water whenever they need it.

Do people still use Chrome extensions?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

Do people still use Chrome extensions?

Chrome extensions are not expected to disappear anytime soon, as more people become familiar with them and use them regularly. They are essential in today’s fast-paced world, helping with email management and schedule management. However, the question remains whether Google will permanently shut down the chrome store and remove extensions for good. This is an important concern for software developers, as they don’t want to invest time and energy in something that might not be used in the future.


📹 We built a passive solar GREENHOUSE | Here’s what happened

We replaced our old polytunnel with a passive solar greenhouse and then spent the first growing season monitoring how the new …


What Transpired With The Greenhouse Extension
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

25 comments

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  • Great and very useful information. However, here is a piece of advice for future articles. The music from the banjo is quite disturbing when you have both birds chirping and someone talking at the same time. For those with impaired hearing, it is almost impossible to distinguish words from all other sounds. Other than that, the article was really worth perusal.

  • Great article! So much information jam packed under 30 minutes. Questions: 1. How much did it cost to make the new greenhouse? 2. Could painting the cement brick back wall black help retain even more heat? 3. How long did this project take to finish? 4. How did you regulate the water distribution when you were away for such a while? 5. How on earth did you manage to eat all of that food? 6. With the tomatoes and fig issues, how would have constructed a more efficient way to manage them better? 7. If you can do it all again, what are a few things that you would do differently? 8. How many acres of land were you planning on? 9. In what way were you able to keep records of the temperature inside the greenhouse? 10. What happened with the wasps? 11. How you thought about writing a book about your experience?… to note all of the many tips, tricks & strategies you’ve learned? Thank you so much for your time and patience in answering these questions.

  • A couple of quick tips with very little cost: Paint your back wall with a flat black paint. This will help absorb sunlight during the day and radiate heat back during the night acting like a solar thermal battery. On the outside, build up the soil at the wall to within 15cm (to prevent moisture migration to water sensitive materials) of the wood construction. This will take advantage of the earth’s natural tendency to stay around 10C throughout the winter. A form of earth thermal power source. 6 mill poly sheets under the roof and on the walls to create a thermal insulation air barrier. A costlier addition: install a series of culverts below the frost line behind the wall. use low CFM air circulating fan (solar powered) to exchange air from the below earth culverts and inside the greenhouse.

  • An idea: You could paint the back wall white so more light is reflected onto the plants! I don’t think it will affect the temperature storage capacity as heat is taken up again through the room temperature. Now that the 2nd season is almost done, are there things you would do differently if you built such an amazing greenhouse again? Thanks for the great article 🙂

  • How wonderful! You must be so pleased with it. You could definitely get more use out of it in December and January though. I grow lettuces, salad rocket, miners lettuce, celery and Asian greens in my polytunnel that gets no direct sun in December or January! You need to plant more plants in winter than you would need in spring or summer to make up for the slower growth, but I’m sure in that fabulous greenhouse you’d get bumper crops! I also sow some brassicas and in October and overwinter them in 6inch pots on the benches, I plant them in the beds in January and they’re ready by late May just before the tomatoes go in. You can sow Napoli carrots in late September in a deep container (i use a plastic stacker storage box with holes drilled in the bottom) and overwinter them in there too. They’ll be ready in April. Hanging baskets in there would be great for lettuces in winter too. Check out my go to website for year round self sufficiency. Steve really knows his stuff. It’s only my second year and I was almost self sufficient in veg all year last year. There’s loads of links in the description to his gardening ebook, monthly sowing and growing guides and individual growing guides. It’s all free to access too (though you can use the buy me a coffee icon to donate if you wish) Check him out, he’s wonderful and so generous to pass on all his knowledge like he does. youtube.com/@SteveRichards

  • Looks Great! I have a polycarbonate lean to against garden shed and want to enlarge just a bit and replace the polycarbonate panels with heat sink in floor. I know about microclimates all too well as we were hit with frost a couple days ago and wiped out Many plants. Local weather never warned of frost.

  • I live in zone 5b, and have been wanting to grow figs in a windy rural area. This is wonderful; I was just given a pallet of bricks that I intend to use to do this along the front of my property line over an illegally placed sidewalk that shall now act as a pathway. My city was given 1 foot leeway into my yard for a sidewalk and they placed it ten feet into my yard when it was laid decades ago, so I’m claiming ownership. 😎😁 The kicker? They infringed on my property for the sake of a young tree… that destroyed part of the sidewalk. 😆

  • This was a well put together article. My only complaint is that his voice was often drowned out by the bird song. Also, the only wasp I’ve heard of that will kill aphids is the parasitic wasp which is only about 1/10 inch long, very tiny. I’ve heard people say that common wasps kill aphids, I just haven’t seen anything from a University that says that. Good work and I’m glad the new greenhouse got things all sorted out.

  • I really like your new greenhouse. The only thing about it that surprised me was that you stuck with the poly-tunnel for so long. I’ve two suggestions you might want to try. 1) Paint the interior of your back wall flat black to increase solar absorption during the winter. 2) Add insulation to the outside of the back wall to break the thermal bridging of the concrete that pulls heat out of the greenhouse during the winter. Still, I think you did a great job with what you’ve already done. I’m a bit envious.

  • Love this. Our polytunnel collapsed this winter in Romania after a snow period, it was already damaged from high winds but this killed it completely. We aren’t at the property all the time as the main house isn’t complete, we have a cabin in the forest which we use a few times a month. It’s time for an upgrade. Came here just looking for design ideas, what you guys have done is great as well as being practical it looks brill. We wont go anywhere as big, 3 x 5.5 mtrs, thanks for many tips!

  • Paint the north wall black, a flat black. You may get as much as 10*F out of it. And if you want to grow in the winter, add a insulating Sutter to close off South wall.and the west side. I hope you already insulated outside of the north wall to hold more heat. If not you might want to think about adding it. You have a beautiful greenhouse, thank you for sharing.

  • Great stuff guys. I am a little further down the river, and am also in a bit of a frost pocket. I have a central path in my greenhouse with supports for tomatoes on either side. I ha e overwinter stuff on the path this year by wrapping fleece around the supports and putting bubble wrap over the top..

  • I love your straightforward, down to earth approach! This makes me more confident I too can build a passive greenhouse! So many websites make this such a complicated, scientific endeavour that it becomes quite frightening and overwhelming! I’ll just come back here for a bit of ‘ahhh, that’s better!’ 😂

  • I wonder what temperature difference you could achieve in that greenhouse, if they were pumping air underground as a heat battery?I’m just bout to install an underground perforated tubing system in a normal 13’ x 8’’ glass greenhouse as an experiment. I’m in Italy so it’s going to be interesting to see how well it cools the greenhouse in the summer, as well as heats in the winter.

  • A great use for the old polytunnel frame is to screen in the entire thing for protected outdoor growing. We live where summer rains are often an unpredictable, so have a poly roof with screened sides so we could control watering. We also set the frame on 4 foot high pony walls to raise the tradionally low ceiling. We also pull a large shade cloth over it during the hottest summer months, creating a huge temp drop when you enter. Lastly, raised beds inside have made gardening a joy. We haven’t seen a caterpillar for 5 years!

  • This is an amazing article! Such an inspiration 🌿I am dreaming of doing something like this later in life as I thought about moving to Scotland, but would be lost if I couldn’t grow figs, tomatoes etc. Do you mind me asking roughly how much this project cost? And which were your best sources of information whilst building it? All the best, Thanks. Conor

  • 🇨🇦 bonjour! This is such a great project. We also are thinking of a greenhouse. Winter is the challenge as you can imagine ! But we could use the greenhouse to extend summer gardening : begin in april instead of june (frost happened one the june 3th last year) and up to the mid-november would be great. Ventilation : maybe had fans ? It was incredeble to see the wasps & the partnership with the gardeners. It is nice to see month by month the greenhouse. It is the most usefull article i have seen. Thanks for sharring!

  • congratulations to you verry nice new greenhouse. How do you get your fig tree to give fruit? I have a fig tree in my greenhouse. I believe that it was planted in the ground in 2010. It grows vigorusly but never give even one single fig in all this time. I have grown a bit tired of it as it only gives me a lot of work to keep it down and never gives any figs. So last yoar I cut it down to a stump but it still grows quickly. I have taken cuttings and have a fairly large cutting now growing in a pot. If there is no crop I will probably have to remove the tree but that will be a big job. The tree is thick and I believe that the roots must be hughe.

  • Nice ! Yes, here in west-central Wisconsin, USA at about the 45th parallel out last frost date is about May 15th. So, since I didn’t have a greenhouse or polytunnel until this spring ( late May tho by the time we finished it ! ), when we built a 3 panel long Cattle-panel “hoophouse”, I didn’t put put tomatoes overnight until the 3rd week in May at the earliest. We still get a big harvest, just have to wait til late July for the earliest ones :). Anyway, I love your beautiful greenhouse ! I love your beautiful country ! I watch the UK TV show ” Escape to the Country” here on YT, and my favorites are seeing the coastal areas and Wales and Scotland, although other counties in England are also interesting and have lovely things about them. I watch Huw ( Richards…?) ‘s gardening website, he’s in Wales there somewhere :), and Charles Dowding down in Somerset. Both “no-dig”, no-till type gardeners, Huw also into permaculture ( and Charles is also m/l practicing it in many ways) and wonderful people !! No offense for mentioning them, as if I lump in all UK people together 😁 ! Love and blessings !

  • Thank you so much for the article, it has reinspired me to forge ahead with planning my dream greenhouse. I live in South Wales and on the side of a hill, south-facing so your design was very apt for my plot. I was wondering if you were thinking of doing a follow up article on the cost of the build / build material’s cost breakdown as this would be great for planning my build also perhaps issues, problems and solutions and improvements. More detailed info on the irrigation system too 😂 But all in all I am very inspired 😁 so thank you again x Now going to re-watch your article with pen and paper in hand to make notes 📝 I have now liked and subscribed to your website

  • What type of wood did you use?? Treated or something like cedar?? EDIT: At the part where you said you oiled the wood to treat it. I still would like to know the type of wood and treatment. Being in the USA our country has so many different climates that there is a variety of hard/soft woods to choose from. Some more expensive then others. Your experience with a particular type of wood and treatment could offer an option otherwise not considered.

  • Beautiful greenhouse! Well done. Unlike your greenhouse, we have to eliminate wasps as they are an extremely aggressive and venomous stinging/biting insect here in Alberta, Canada. We love and welcome the bees but rid the wasp nests as soon as we see a colony starting. Looking forward to your vlogs to come.

  • You basically built a tiny house designed like a lounge soaking up the sun but with more light coming in compared to an average home. But yeah with a ton of money great. I think u have done the right thing. Looks so cold and surprised you were actually growing stuff. Summers prob are 6 weeks there because by the time it heats up the days start to shorten rapidly . Heat is what you need given your climate. Thanks for sharing.

  • Even after having some “free-thinking” young teachers try to incorporate the metric system into our 3rd and 4th grade Mathematics classes. Teacher: “Notice how it’s based on 10’s, see how that makes everything so much easier”. Every single parent: Nope…can’t say it’s easier. It’s just going to confuse the children. (LOL) and after having a Canadian boyfriend for five years here….at almost 60, here I am going to Google to find out what 6.5 centigrade is.

  • Youtube just recommended me this article as I’ve watched a lot of similar green house articles. I like the green house but you lost me as a sub because of the infuriating bird song track over the entire article. Is that supposed to be peaceful? It felt like artificial bullshit and was way too loud compared to the speaking volume.