Sister’s doin’ it for herself.

The more I learn about being eco-friendly and reducing your carbon footprint and all that, the more I come to the conclusion that there’s not one right way to do it. Bamboo, for example,  is a brilliant renewable resource for making soft, comfy clothing (as well as for construction, I’m told, though I haven’t gotten as far as green construction in my research, yet), but it’s not local (for me, anyway; I suppose they get the best of both worlds, bamboo-wise, in China).  Our options for our public water systems in highly populated areas are two:  put chemicals in the water to kill off a bunch of the bacteria, or have a whole bunch of sick people peeing out antibiotics and excreting all sorts of icky things that only really sick creatures can, which in turn get into our water supply, which in turn makes a whole bunch of people sick… etc.  There are a whole whack of things about the environment that don’t have an easy answer, and I’m still not sure how to handle most of it.  Do I buy clothing made of a fiber shipped from China, because it’s renewable?  Do I simply buy all my clothing used?  What about under garments?  While you *can* buy those used, I refuse… call me a prude, I’ll take that over someone else’s panties any day.  Should I give up my meds, which keep me sane and alive and my flashbacks to a dull roar that I can mostly live with, out of fear that I’ll pee them into the water supply? Should I only have sponge baths rather than showers/baths? Do I need to give up tea?  Chocolate?  Cinnamon?  Do I need to sneak into local farmer’s fields to feed beano to the cows and save the world from methane gas?

I don’t know, honestly (aside from being pretty sure that sneaking beano into the cows is not the answer, nor is the world going to end if I don’t buy my panties used… I’m not a tiny girl, but my bum’s not *that* big!).  I’ve always said that our efforts to Save The World will only work when we’re asking people to do reasonable things:  you needn’t eat off dirty plates, but use an environmentally friendly soap (there are plenty to choose from); don’t give up coffee/tea/whatever, but take a travel mug; you don’t need to give up imports entirely, but you don’t need to buy Argentinian honey when it’s produced locally, and you don’t need to buy fake maple syrup from another country when we (in Canada, at least) have real maple syrup produced right here.

What I do think is incredibly, incredibly important, though, is to do things for ourselves.  Grow your own food if you can, buy as locally as is reasonable if you can’t. Cook from scratch as often as you can, and buy things that have the bare minimum packaging when you can’t.  I’m lucky in that, in addition to having an awful lot of time on my hands (not for very happy reasons, but I’ve the leisure to be very, very domestic, and that certainly has its advantages), I’m a crafty sort of gal.  I love to cook, so most of our food comes from scratch.  I make soap and sew and spend far more time with the puppies than I do in front of the TV, purely because that’s the way I roll, yo.  I’m made this way.  It works out well, and I suppose it was only a matter of time before I snapped and became the ‘dirty hippy’ that my husband professes me to be.

(he professes this lovingly, for the record)

That said, even if you’re not domestically inclined, it’s still worth it to put in the effort in little ways.  Buy big, bulk bags of oatmeal rather than those little packets that are already flavoured and you simply need to pour water upon.  I’m pretty sure that the three minutes it takes to make ‘quick cooking’ (more finely mealed) oatmeal are the same as the three minutes it takes ’til your kettle boils.  Buy bulk in general, if you’ve the room. Bake a whole bunch of muffins on your day off and freeze some to last you throughout the week; it’s certainly better than getting them at the grocery store, where they’re packaged and over priced.  Or bake a lasagna instead of buying microwavable suppers.  Keep a pot of your favourite herb on your window sill. Keep a reusable bottle of water on you when you go out, lest you get too thirsty, lose your mind, and buy bottled water.

I’m getting all preachy, aren’t I?  I’ll be quiet for a bit.  First, though, I wanted to share the two newest things that I’m doing for myself:

IMG01325

Ta da!  Home made dog biscuits!  These (shaped like half-moons and owls respectively; there was another tray with hallowe’en bats and flowers) are the Milk Bone recipe from the excellent Bullwrinkle site (the biscuits work out to be incredibly cheap, by the way! One batch kept all three dogs in biscuits for 4 full days, and they loved them!).  I actually have a second batch cooling on the oven as I type, which is an altered version of the milk bone recipe… I have plans to try a bunch of the others, but I’m tired and lazy tonight, and it’s such an easy recipe!  I think Fido’s Favourite will be  next on my list…

Aaaaaaaaaaaand:

IMG01343

THIS lovely little machine is the miraculous yogurt maker of my childhood!  My foster mum used to make homemade yogurt for us when we were little with some milk, a little bit of bacterial culture, and a scoopful of jam… I’d asked her relatively recently where she’d got it (second hand store, it turns out), and she’d eagerly asked me if I wanted it (YES!).  Apparently it’s been sitting in the basement, a very sad and lonely existence for such a noble and useful machine, and now it’s sitting on my kitchen table, waiting for its first batch of yogurt in a number of years.

What about you?  What do you make for yourself?  Does it make you feel more connected to your world, your family, the environment?  Or is it all just a big pain in the bum?

Eco-change: May 2009

I’ve sworn a sacred vow to myself (this morning in the shower, where all sacred vows are sworn) to make one major change each month in my life that’s beneficial to both myself and the environment.  My change-challenge to myself for this month will be something I’ve already begun (and wrote about yesterday): stop all use of shampoo, conditioner, and detangler on my hair.  I’ll report back at the end of the month on my success. (so far, so good).

I dug up a large-ish portion of my lawn this morning to put in a veggie patch, incidentally; we’re a scant week away from this area’s last frost date! Soon, soon there will be sweet  fresh produce both grown organically and as local as it comes… I can’t wait!

Aaaaaaaaand, oh my goodness, it’s a random picture of one of my dogs!

Jack looking sheepish

(Jackalope, looking suspiciously as if he’s done something naughty… which is most likely the case)

Sunburns and growing seedlings

After a trip to the market today for veggies, duck eggs, meat for Brian and cheese for me (all local, or at least local-ish… I admit we did pick up some American strawberries… *ahem*), we made our first stop of the year at one of the nurseries on the outside of town.  Pickings were admittedly slim, but we found some baby lavender plants (we only bought two, as I’m still hoping to find a good supply of different varieties of lavender seeds this year; we haven’t gone to the OSC store, but if worse comes to worst, I’ll buy them online from them.  Shopping online makes me nervous, but lavender is important stuff!) and a whole bunch of OSC vegetable seeds.

Which, of course, meant that I immediately had to start a new batch of seedlings, using my Jiffy Greenhouse. This is my second attempt at mini-greenhousing… my first went reasonably well, but I’ve learned a few lessons from the first one:

1.  Leave the poor things alone to sprout.  Prodding at them isn’t going to make them sprout faster. (with apologies to the chives I accidentally unseeded, which ended up growing in a small clump of dirt that had fallen out, and which promptly died)

2. When the instructions say, “sow 2 – 3 seeds per pellet”, sow 2 – 3 seeds per pellet.   (with apologies to all the plants that I overcrowded in the early stages, many of which promptly died)

3. When the instructions say, “do not over water”, don’t over water.  (with apologies to the rosemary seedling I over watered, which promptly died)

4. Finally, when the instructions say, “gradually expose to full sunlight”, they don’t mean stick it in your sunroom for a full day, they mean gradually expose to full sunlight. (my apologies to both the oregano and dill plants, which are apparently the most tender in their youth. Those plants, incidentally, promptly died)

And so, actually following the instructions properly this time, I sowed bell pepper, broccoli, and leeks from my veggie seeds (the rest are to be sown directly outside, and I think I’ve learned something about following directions…), and sowed a second batch of thyme, oregano, sweet basil, rosemary, Italian parsley, curly parsley, and peppermint (depending on the plant, either due to the delicate state of the remaining plants or due to my percieved demand).

See?

mini-greenhouse

As well, I learned something else very important in my gardening adventures of the last few days:  if you’re going to be doing a gardening job that takes several hours, such as digging up an entire patch for your herb garden, wear sunscreen.  And a hat.  And cover yourself.  It doesn’t matter if you *think* you’re only going to be out there for an hour at mid-morning.  If you’re me, or at least like me, you’ll find yourself out there at mid-afternoon, not realising how much sun you’ve got, not realising how late it is, thinking “I’ll go inside in five more minutes… just one more root clump… I’m almost done, almost…”.

Then you’ll look like this:

owie.

And it will hurt.  And your husband will laugh at you.  It will also re-activate the really severe cold/throat thing that you thought you were almost over.

That last bit of grumping was meant as a PSA.  Aside from my enjoying the odd bout of whining, the sun really is stronger than you think at this time of year.  Please, do protect yourself.

Companion Planting

So, I was all prepared to do all sorts of deep research into companion planting and write up my findings here, when I came across this beautiful and informative site in the course of my research, which appears to cover everything I wanted to and a few things I hadn’t thought of.

In short, companion planting involves planting two plants near together so that one plant draws the pests away from the other plant or masks its scent enough to not attract the pests in the first place.  It’s a brilliant form of organic pest control; I’ll be reporting back on my frustrations and successes with it if frost season ever ends. (it won’t)

I’m still designing my garden layout, which I hope to have completed by early next week. Meg and I, alas, will not be digging up our garden and prepping the soil this week, due to… well, living in S. Ontario and the late-season snowstorms that accompany that.  (have I mentioned that frost season will never, ever end, and I’ll have to spend the rest of eternity planning my garden and growing seedlings and checking the weather six times a day in the hopes that the soil will at least thaw?  Because that’s totally what’s going to happen.)

My impatience aside, I came across another neat site called Ecovian, which is a very cool information sharing site on local businesses and green living.  I haven’t had much of a chance to go through the site with a metaphorical fine-toothed comb yet, nor have I submitted any reviews, but I think it’s an excellent potential resource for those of us who’d like to live as locally as possible and as greenly as possible.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.