06-22-2012, 07:31 AM
I was disappointed that not one subdivision was willing to do any test miles of the X-zyme process from Brazil. It certainly looked worth a shot. I think I was the only one signed up to do a test project on my property for a pond.
What X-zyme Corp was looking for was some test miles for their natural road building system. This was in 2008. The costs as I recall was something like $30k per mile. The spiel was that in Brazil they had a massive road problem in the Amazon region where, in the rainy season, farmers couldn't get their crops to market due to the mud wallow roads. They had an enzyme which, when mixed with a soil/sand blend, would develop concrete hardness. Their Brazilian remote roads which had this surface had endured for ten years. They had some test sections completed in San Diego and New Mexico for officials to visit.
No one on the Big Island seemed interested. It certainly seemed worth a few miles of test.
If we had done study four years ago a determination could be made about now. So I guess we'll never know.
What X-zyme Corp was looking for was some test miles for their natural road building system. This was in 2008. The costs as I recall was something like $30k per mile. The spiel was that in Brazil they had a massive road problem in the Amazon region where, in the rainy season, farmers couldn't get their crops to market due to the mud wallow roads. They had an enzyme which, when mixed with a soil/sand blend, would develop concrete hardness. Their Brazilian remote roads which had this surface had endured for ten years. They had some test sections completed in San Diego and New Mexico for officials to visit.
No one on the Big Island seemed interested. It certainly seemed worth a few miles of test.
If we had done study four years ago a determination could be made about now. So I guess we'll never know.
Assume the best and ask questions.
Punaweb moderator
Punaweb moderator