• Post Reply Bookmark Topic Watch Topic
  • New Topic
permaculture forums growies critters building homesteading energy monies kitchen purity ungarbage community wilderness fiber arts art permaculture artisans regional education skip experiences global resources cider press projects digital market permies.com pie forums private forums all forums
this forum made possible by our volunteer staff, including ...
master stewards:
  • Nancy Reading
  • Carla Burke
  • r ranson
  • John F Dean
  • paul wheaton
  • Pearl Sutton
stewards:
  • Jay Angler
  • Liv Smith
  • Leigh Tate
master gardeners:
  • Christopher Weeks
  • Timothy Norton
gardeners:
  • thomas rubino
  • Jeremy VanGelder
  • Maieshe Ljin
  • Likes 4
  • Mark post as helpful
  • send pies
    Number of slices to send:
    Optional 'thank-you' note:
  • Quote
  • Report post to moderator
I know that we all wish to avoid consumerism, but at the same time there are a lot of people that are about to buy stuff as Christmas gifts.

So, what are your suggestions?


Here's some physical goodies that come to mind:

Permaculture Playing Cards 52 pokersize playing cards about permaculture, sustainability, &/or homesteading. Each card highlights a different bit of information about permaculture practices, technology, plants or personages.

permaculture playing cards, gardening gift idea

Seeds - landrace seeds (especially those from Joseph Lofthouse), seeds you saved, seeds of their favorite food

Lofthouse seeds
Lofthouse Seeds


Gift card to a local nursery (see our seed and plant-sourse review grid)


Truly Garden hori hori knife - read the reviews here on permies

Rechargable headlamp from Loma Creek - see the reviews here on permies. You can see all the gear by Truly Garden/Loma Creek here



Food Forest Card Game Food Forest is a unique, fun deck of cards that can be used to play games based on real-life food forest design

Food Forest Card Game




Last minute digital goodies:


You can buy a gift code to something from the digital market and write it on a little card or piece of paper and slide it into their stocking!

Cob Builder's Handbook


Better Wood Heat: DIY Rocket Mass Heater DVDs
paul wheaton's better wood heat DVDs

$50 and Up Underground House book


Wood Gassifiers Builders' Bible


Complete Set of Living Woods Magazine


Backyard Dairy Goats book
Backyard Dairy Goats

Building a Better World in Your Backyard book
Building a Better World book by Paul Wheaton, resilient living

Permaculture Design Course or Appropriate Technology Course video
online permaculture design course and appropriate technology course video

Sepp Holzer's 3-in-1 Permaculture DVDs


COMMENTS:
 
Posts: 141
Location: UK
  • Mark post as helpful
  • send pies
    Number of slices to send:
    Optional 'thank-you' note:
  • Quote
  • Report post to moderator


http://www.chocablog.com/reviews/edible-com-chocolate-coated-giant-ants/

Mind you, Probably not something that would fair well with your Great Auntie Mable, but I think I could try one of these, and maybe make them!
 
steward
Posts: 1202
Location: Torrey, UT; 6,840'/2085m; 7.5" precip; 125 frost-free days
134
goat duck trees books chicken bee
  • Mark post as helpful
  • send pies
    Number of slices to send:
    Optional 'thank-you' note:
  • Quote
  • Report post to moderator
I asked mom for wildflower seeds for the new project. She liked the idea a lot. We would need 50 lbs to seed it at the recommended rate, needless to say, she won't be buying us that much! I told her we will think of her every spring.
 
author and steward
Posts: 52410
Location: missoula, montana (zone 4)
hugelkultur trees chicken wofati bee woodworking
  • Likes 1
  • Mark post as helpful
  • send pies
    Number of slices to send:
    Optional 'thank-you' note:
  • Quote
  • Report post to moderator
Now is the time to add stuff to this thread.
 
Posts: 78
34
  • Likes 4
  • Mark post as helpful
  • send pies
    Number of slices to send:
    Optional 'thank-you' note:
  • Quote
  • Report post to moderator
I have a few ideas. I don’t know any other Permie types in real life, but I do give gifts that are in keeping with my own values, usually handmade or local, something useful or tasty.

sewn items
   - cloth napkins (I often use scrap fabric or secondhand fabric)
   - gift bags: I sew up reusable drawstring gift bags to to wrap gifts
   - fabric itself: for friends who sew, I wrap gifts in fabric furoshki style so they can make something with it.
   - sewing kits: I find a pattern and fabric I think a friend will enjoy and do all the crummy laborious bits: measuring and cutting. I give them a copy of the pattern, the pre-cut pieces, hardware (is it’s a purse or such), a spool of matching thread, and extra fabric in case it’s needed. These have been a big hit.
   - placemats
   - re-usable shopping bags
   - potholders
   - dish towels
   -pillowcases

Knit/crochet: I’m still learning!
   - knit scarves
   - crocheted washcloths

Embroidery
   - tea towels

Food stuffs
   - jam! I love giving homemade jam, apple, Pumpkin, or pear butters In small 4oz jelly jars. They fit nicely in the toe of a stocking and I like to make unusual jams.
   - dehydrated berries/ baked good mix: I like to dehydrate our wild raspberries and give them in Pint mason jars or mix them into a dry pancake mix or scone mix in a Quart jar with instructions attached.
   - herbal tea mixes: first time will be this year, but I made herbal tea mixes foraging what was available on our property (raspberry leaf, chamomile, pineapple weed, nettles, mint, etc). They’re loose leaf, and I haven’t decided if I ought to give them with a diffuser or not. Also I think I might gift them in pouches made from brown craft paper instead of mason jars, to reduce costs (shipping especially).
   - spice/seasoning blends: not from our own garden (yet) but we have made seasoning mixes, flavored rock salt, etc. from bulk herbs and spices. It’s was very economical and useful
   -baking mixes: bread, pancake, cookie, scone etc. mixes. Layer the ingredients in a quart jar and add a pretty label with a list of wet ingredients to add and instructions. I usually give these with a useful utensil- my favorite are big wooden mixing spoons made by a local artisan.
    - coffee: not the best Permie-wise, but I have some friends who really enjoy it and I buy from local roasters. I try for single origin and fair trade beans.
    -local maple syrup and honey

Other
    - seeds! I usually nag every gardener on my Christmas lists to look at my online spreadsheet of seeds and let me know what they’d like. I always send some in Christmas packages.
    - wax sandwich wraps: can be pretty/fun pattered and much more earth friendly than ziplock bags for preserving sandwiches and such. There is a local company to me that makes them but they are widely available.
    - rocks and shells. Seriously. My dad likes weird stuff and decorated his whole yard in neat unique rocks and such. Several years I shipped him some shells I’d found at the beach or a cool rock I found. I also have a friend who paints rocks for fun,
So if I find a really unique one that’s smooth enough to paint I send it to her.
    - experiences: some folks I know just don’t get much quality family time. Each year I give one friend an annual family zoo pass. They go maybe 20 times a year and love it. Movie or theatre tickets are another gift I’ve given many times. Another idea for families with young kids are science/children’s museums.
  - soaps, candles, etc. just nice smelling things that get used up and enjoyed. Often purchased from local makers.


Typically I do little crafts year round and put aside gift items as I make them. By November I have my gift drawer mostly filled up, and I fill in the rest from the winter markets. My goal is to give things that are useful or consumable. I do not gift trinkets or baubles that take up space or personal taste items like clothing or jewelry. If an item is purchased rather than made I focus on ethical products from local folk.
 
Posts: 86
Location: Wasilla, United States
23
5
hugelkultur chicken medical herbs wood heat rocket stoves homestead
  • Likes 1
  • Mark post as helpful
  • send pies
    Number of slices to send:
    Optional 'thank-you' note:
  • Quote
  • Report post to moderator
I like to give things like books on herbal medicines, sometimes with samplers of some that I make. Maybe books on wild edibles, foraging, seeds or cuttings of plants I find harder to get or harder to start. Homemade food items. Books on food storage and canning, or prepping type storage. Living in Alaska there are many things that can cut off our food supply here...from earthquakes and avalanches to trucking strikes and all the current calamities. Prefer to be aware and ready in case a winter storm shuts down roads for several days or whatever.
 
steward
Posts: 21553
Location: Pacific Northwest
12040
11
hugelkultur kids cat duck forest garden foraging fiber arts sheep wood heat homestead
  • Likes 4
  • Mark post as helpful
  • send pies
    Number of slices to send:
    Optional 'thank-you' note:
  • Quote
  • Report post to moderator
I was thinking about this thread today, and how it'd be neat to give the gift of a PDC, and that we can actually do that here on permies with the 177 hours of Permaculture Design Course and Appropriate Design Course. But, just sliding someone a gift code number on a piece of paper seems to kind of devalue to gift.....But, what if it was presented on a pretty card?

One of my favorite ways to add value to a gift, is to make a pretty and personal card. I've never really figured out scrapbooking, but I can kind of draw. So I'd make a funny saying and draw or pain a pretty picture that goes along with it. (I did this a lot of for Mothers Day/Father's Day and my grandparents presents, as my grandparents always said they didn't need anything, but liked getting cards).

Aaaaanyway, long story short, I drew a card for the Permaculture Design Course and Appropriate Technology Course !

online permaculture design course gift card for Christmas
click for larger picture of the Christmas Card


Here's a foldable version:

foldable Permaculture Design Course gift card
click for larger picture of the Christmas Card


You can buy gift codes to the 177 hours here (or here on permies)

(fun story, as I was coloring the card, my kids decided they wanted to color one, too. So I printed out my black and white sketches. They started chatting as they were coloring, and my daughter asks my son, "Are you coloring it because you like Paul Wheaton?" My son replies matter-of-factly, "I do like Paul. He's a nature guy like me.")


.......

Speaking of gifts, I'm reminded of a list I made here on permies 6 years ago (time flies!!) of homemade gift ideas, and how some of those things are now Badge Bits in our PEP course. So, you can learn a new skill, and then give it to to someone! And, if you're like me, everyone on your list will invariably get one of these things, and you'll get lots of practice making them. Maybe, just maybe, after a while you'll get good enough to sell them!

Anyway, here's some gift ideas (bolding the ones that fit in a stocking), that you can get Badge Bits for completing!
  • felt a bag or a pouch Tiny little pouches are great for putting tiny trinkets into and then putting in the stocking, making it harder for the recipient to guess what's in the stocking]
  • make a small pillow](I totally made one for my mom when I was a teenager, and one of my first gifts to my husband was a pillow in his favorite colors, and I made little pillows for my kids' toys, too)
  • crochet a dishcloth(I had a co-worker who made washrags in lots of different colors every year, and let us all pick our favorite three. They were a huge hit!)
  • weave a basket (if you're like me, it might take you a lot of tries to make a decent basket! But, you could also make one to hold the person's present, too! Just drape it with a pretty dishtowel to hide the contents!)
  • knit a hotpad (my grandma, mother, and sister-in-law all got nice wool hot pads!))
  • create a sewing kit (I made one years back for my neice who was interested in sewing. She loved it!)
  • needle-felt a figure (Guess how I got good at making needle-felted things! All my family members got something, bwahahahaha! Small creations can be made pretty quickly, and fit in a stocking
  • lots and lots of other things on the textile list!
  • carve a spoon
  • compound mallet (make a small one as a first hammer for a small child. My kids love theirs!)
  • carve a bowl
  • other impressive things from the round wood badge
  • homemade pickles!
  • balm of gilead salve or a calendula salve
  • elderberry syrup salve
  • woodburn a sign (my father loves the one I made him!)
  • build a bird house[/ur](we made some for both my mom and my grandpa)
  • cutting board
  • a lot of very impressive gift ideas are found in the dimensional woodworking badge!
  • Seed bomb bon-bons! from the foraging badge!
  • [url=https://permies.com/wiki/151807/pep-textiles/wax-wraps-PEP-BB-textile#1188054]wax wraps from the nest badge
  •  
    master pollinator
    Posts: 4987
    Location: Canadian Prairies - Zone 3b
    1351
    • Likes 5
    • Mark post as helpful
    • send pies
      Number of slices to send:
      Optional 'thank-you' note:
    • Quote
    • Report post to moderator
    I see a lot of ideas for "stuff." Fair enough, our dill pickles are so good that family members keep the brine and make more pickles in it. Jam from hand-picked fruit on our property is flavourful ambrosia instead of commercial corn syrup. Win!

    But what about services? What about "help that's needed?" Gift certificates!

    Dobbin the Workhorse! A whole afternoon of heavy lifting and fixing! Will bring tools!

    One evening of guitar playing-and-singing to impress your friends at a gathering around your fire. (An indoor salon would have worked in the past, nixed by F*nCV.)

    Stay sharp or die! Will swing by for a cup of porch coffee and tune up your kitchen and garden tools while telling tall tales. Tell your neighbours; if they bring a little nice port, they may get a little nice sharp too.

    ... A shrubbery! Will scrounge awesome plants and seeds and compost, and transform your yard into a pollinator and hummingbird and wee bird haven. Bragging rights!

    That's based on my list of specialties of course. It's about value-added, based on expertise that you've earned the old-fashioned way. You may need to follow up and gently nudge people, though. Canadians, at least, don't like to impose.
     
    pollinator
    Posts: 521
    Location: Gulf Islands BC (zone 8)
    205
    4
    hugelkultur goat forest garden chicken fiber arts medical herbs
    • Likes 4
    • Mark post as helpful
    • send pies
      Number of slices to send:
      Optional 'thank-you' note:
    • Quote
    • Report post to moderator
    Kindling or firewood. Fire starters.

    An interesting willow or driftwood trellis.

    Homemade wooden bench.

    Chainsaw sculpture or something interesting made of driftwood.

    Bag of cover crop seed. Even better, covr crop or other seed made onto seed balls.

    Gift card to their favourite local or online nursery.

    Mushroom plug spawn and wax (maybe with a coupon that you will come help drill holes and install) or growing kit.

     
    Andrea Locke
    pollinator
    Posts: 521
    Location: Gulf Islands BC (zone 8)
    205
    4
    hugelkultur goat forest garden chicken fiber arts medical herbs
    • Likes 1
    • Mark post as helpful
    • send pies
      Number of slices to send:
      Optional 'thank-you' note:
    • Quote
    • Report post to moderator
    Ha, I just realized those things on my earlier post are all things I would like for Xmas! LOL.

    Also, this year in particular, people might appreciate your homegrown or wildcrafted immune supports. It is probably not too late in many areas to gather and dry mullein leaves or rose hips. Other ideas with ingredients gathered earlier in the year might be elderberry syrup or gummies, echinacea, nettle, etc.
     
    • Likes 5
    • Mark post as helpful
    • send pies
      Number of slices to send:
      Optional 'thank-you' note:
    • Quote
    • Report post to moderator
    This year I bought 5 gallons of raw honey from a local farmer. (Why not? It’s supposed to last forever right?). So everyone will be getting a jar of honey in their stocking. I might laser cut some little honey bee and honey comb ornaments to decorate the jars.

    I’ve also been considering buying a bunch of the botanical prints from Good Nature Publishing in bulk. I would laminate them and give a few to the kids in the family each year as place mats or posters for their room. A lot of adults would probably appreciate them as well in a Goodwill frame.

    I have a few patches that consistently grow 4+ leaf clovers. I pluck a few on occasion if I see some without bug damage. I thought I might set some in resin as little keychains or something for the kids.

    And it’s already been mentioned but... soap. I recently learned that my aunt and I share a love of butter lambs. She would make butter lamb shaped soaps for Christmas and Easter gift. Since she recently passed, I thought I should pick up that tradition.

    She left me a massive 100+ year old Christmas cactus that belonged to my great grandma. So lots of people will be getting clones from the pieces that broke off during transport.

     
    gardener
    Posts: 1251
    Location: North Carolina zone 7
    446
    5
    hugelkultur forest garden fungi foraging ungarbage
    • Likes 4
    • Mark post as helpful
    • send pies
      Number of slices to send:
      Optional 'thank-you' note:
    • Quote
    • Report post to moderator
    I will be giving:
    1. Landrace seeds
    2. Homemade tinctures
    3. Small potted fruit trees and vines that I made from cuttings.
     
    pollinator
    Posts: 216
    Location: Wisconsin, Zone 4b
    56
    8
    kids books homestead
    • Likes 2
    • Mark post as helpful
    • send pies
      Number of slices to send:
      Optional 'thank-you' note:
    • Quote
    • Report post to moderator

    Douglas Alpenstock wrote:

    One evening of guitar playing-and-singing to impress your friends at a gathering around your fire. (An indoor salon would have worked in the past, nixed by F*nCV.)



    Transform it to a private virtual concert via Zoom, Skype, or whatever.

     
    Posts: 7
    Location: Treaty 1 Territory, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, Zone 3b
    7
    urban books bike
    • Likes 2
    • Mark post as helpful
    • send pies
      Number of slices to send:
      Optional 'thank-you' note:
    • Quote
    • Report post to moderator
    Depends on if they have indoor plants or not, but mosquito dunks (for fungus gnat control) are gold this time of year (and also weirdly hard to find in my area right now? Something about most of ours coming from the west coast).
     
    Douglas Alpenstock
    master pollinator
    Posts: 4987
    Location: Canadian Prairies - Zone 3b
    1351
    • Mark post as helpful
    • send pies
      Number of slices to send:
      Optional 'thank-you' note:
    • Quote
    • Report post to moderator
    I don't know. If I were to offer a gift, perhaps it would be an invitation:

    If you have time, I will show you everything I know. And I will also show you what I don't know, and perhaps you can teach me new things. And together, we can build things, and perhaps that will make a difference.
     
    steward
    Posts: 16058
    Location: USDA Zone 8a
    4272
    dog hunting food preservation cooking bee greening the desert
    • Likes 2
    • Mark post as helpful
    • send pies
      Number of slices to send:
      Optional 'thank-you' note:
    • Quote
    • Report post to moderator
    I like Nicole's idea for making stuff for gifts and earning BB (Badge Bits) at the same time.

    https://permies.com/wiki/permaculture-gifts-stocking-stuffers#1160674

    This wiki also has some great ideas, too.
     
    Posts: 44
    17
    • Likes 2
    • Mark post as helpful
    • send pies
      Number of slices to send:
      Optional 'thank-you' note:
    • Quote
    • Report post to moderator
    I have two east asian designed hand tools that I really like:  

    1) Homi-homi (Korean hand spade) - My stepson, knowing of my obsession with gardening, gave this to me, and, goodness, it is handy!  It has a pointed end for digging and/or furrowing, a flat edge for smoothing soil, and a flat bottom for tamping down soil.  Some of the edges are sharpened for cutting, too!   The curved handle looks a little weird, but is very ergonomic.  

    2) Katana style japanese hand hoe/sickle - I use mostly raised rows in the garden, and this sickle makes it so easy to cut off weeds just below the soil level, leaving the roots intact to decompose in place.  Could be used for cutting narrow strips of grass sod for transplanting, depending on how deep into the soil you start your cut.   It's now my go-to for chop-and-drop weeding!
     
    Don't go into the long grass, or the tiny ads will get you.
    Freaky Cheap Heat - 2 hour movie - HD streaming
    https://permies.com/wiki/238453/Freaky-Cheap-Heat-hour-movie
    reply
      Bookmark Topic Watch Topic
    • New Topic