John Peach

Mind-sized STEM ideas and experiments, beyond the textbook.

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Wild Peaches

Welcome to Wild Peaches, a place to experiment with ideas in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM). Our goal is to encourage everyone to explore and have fun with concepts and experiments beyond the textbook level, but not so deep that you need to be a research scientist to understand them. Our ideas are “mind-sized”, meaning they are self-contained within a few paragraphs and aim to present new perspectives.

We recommend many excellent online sources for learning about math and physics, such as 3blue1brown, Dr Peyam, and Veritasium. Wild Peaches is different because we want you to apply mathematics to solving STEM problems and to play around with the ideas yourself.

Our Approach

Each experiment or exploration on Wild Peaches is self-contained, explained in a single blog post, or at most a handful of posts. These experiments are fully reproducible by anyone. All the code and data are saved in our GitHub repository, accessible for download. You should be able to run the code and recreate the experiment as described in the blog report. The software we use is free, and usually open-source.

By combining reports about each experiment with the code and any data, we hope to do for amateur scientists what organizations like the Open Science Foundation (OSF), the Center for Open Science (COS), and FOSTER do for professional scientists. Wild Peaches covers a broad range of STEM-related ideas.

Our Inspiration

In the early days of personal computers, David H. Ahl inspired many through his Creative Computing magazine, which encouraged students to learn programming techniques while solving interesting problems. Computers, software, and display graphics have greatly improved since then, but we aim to maintain the spirit of David Ahl’s creativity in problem-solving.

Join the Community

We encourage questions and corrections from readers, as we don’t have a formal review system for articles. Stuart Ritchie, a psychologist at King’s College, recently asked The big idea: should we get rid of the scientific paper? in The Guardian. We’re attempting to be Ritchie’s answer by being completely open, transparent, online, and easy to revise and correct.

Connect with Us

We have several ways to connect with readers and experimenters:

  • Forum: Join the Wild Peaches Forum to find resources for experiments and discuss ideas in depth.
  • Blog: Post your completed experiments on our blog, Wild Peaches, our informal science and math journal. We welcome submissions and offer editorial assistance.
  • Facebook Group: Use the Wild Peaches Facebook Group to share new ideas or ask quick questions about STEM topics.
  • Email: Send us an email if you have an experiment you’d like to publish.![Alt text]

Wild Peaches is not a peer-reviewed journal; we just want to have fun with STEM concepts!

Have fun exploring with Wild Peaches!