Kirsty Pollock wrote:My cat produces more garbage than I do. No joke. My non-recycling is 99% kitty litter and my plastic and metal recycling is mostly cat food cans (and in winter, frozen vegetable plastic bags).
* He doesn't seem to "go" outside and pees 5x a day
* I have a closed cesspit and can't dump kitty litter there due to toxoplasmosis risk to my land, and probably unpumpability by the city sh!t-wagon.
* Dry food (which might come in paper bags) is bad for cats, and despite that he just appeared from the "wild" I think he's a hopeless hunter, but he's still only a "teenager" maybe he will improve. Someday I'll keep poultry and rabbits and then he can eat those instead!
jackie woolston wrote:My grandmother grew up on a homestead in the Lakota Territory. The family had a small sod cabin. Water was scarce where they were. She told me that to conserve water, at the end of every meal, everyone would wipe their plates/bowls clean with a piece of bread, then turn them upside down on the table. Ready for the next meal. She lived to be a sharp 102. HMMM?
'It is a plant of great virtue;...therefore, give God thanks for his goodness, Who hath given this herb and all others for the benefit of our health.' (Mattheolus/Fuschius)
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Thomas Dean wrote:I'm a fan of the new "buy nothing" groups that are popping up on Facebook. The downside: I think that there are a bunch of "takers" on the group. However, I frequently dumpster dive, and I sometimes find odd things that just need a home. If I don't want to go to the hassle of trying to sell them for a couple of bucks (mostly for my time investment), I can find community members who want the things. I've also made new friends in the community this way.
Peasants slept on beds of straw, while Emperors slept on beds of hulls.
www.OpenYourEyesBedding.com
When my loom was set up years ago, I made a lot of rag rugs. 30+ years later, I've still got 4 in daily use. I've never had that long a life out of purchased area rugs. I do admit that the kitchen one is showing its age... I should mend it a little.Scottie Chapman wrote:My latest acquisition is a large loom, and I intend to make rugs, runners, placemats, etc, from cotton items that have become too degraded or damaged to mend.
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Lynne Cim wrote:I can only imagine how many mattresses our family has saved from being thrown into landfills. We only sleep on plant based, hull filled mattresses so after the life of the mattress is over we can simply use the filling to mulch our organic veg garden. We continue this theme throughout the house, only using natural fillings for our comfort. It's nice to know that we can compost all the fillings in our furniture, knowing they do not contain any forever chemicals that could be harmful to our health.
Hemp Hull (aka a Hemp Sand Mattress) and buckwheat hull pod mattresses last a very long time, provide a better quality grounded sleep and buckwheat hulls are naturally fire resistant so they don't need flame retardant chemicals added to them like in petroleum based foams.
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Cécile Stelzer Johnson wrote:
Lynne Cim wrote:I can only imagine how many mattresses our family has saved from being thrown into landfills. We only sleep on plant based, hull filled mattresses so after the life of the mattress is over we can simply use the filling to mulch our organic veg garden. We continue this theme throughout the house, only using natural fillings for our comfort. It's nice to know that we can compost all the fillings in our furniture, knowing they do not contain any forever chemicals that could be harmful to our health.
Hemp Hull (aka a Hemp Sand Mattress) and buckwheat hull pod mattresses last a very long time, provide a better quality grounded sleep and buckwheat hulls are naturally fire resistant so they don't need flame retardant chemicals added to them like in petroleum based foams.
To boot, I heard that hemp facilitates sleep, so that's a two for!
Peasants slept on beds of straw, while Emperors slept on beds of hulls.
www.OpenYourEyesBedding.com
jackie woolston wrote:My grandmother grew up on a homestead in the Lakota Territory. The family had a small sod cabin. Water was scarce where they were. She told me that to conserve water, at the end of every meal, everyone would wipe their plates/bowls clean with a piece of bread, then turn them upside down on the table. Ready for the next meal. She lived to be a sharp 102. HMMM?
Scottie Chapman wrote:I got turned on to "visible mending" a little over a year ago, and I wish I would have gotten into it years ago. It's a creative way to prolong the longevity of clothing (possibly indefinitely) while adding beauty and character at the same time. If you're not familiar with it, check out Kate Sekules book, "Mend!", or just Google "visible mending".
So far, I have mended moth holes in 3 merino sweaters, patched holes in 4 pairs of pants (2 were for friends), and appliqued patches over two shirt that had gotten stains on them.
Rich Rayburn wrote:Allison, your comment about not renting food storage from the electric company for the rest of your life, struck me like an epiphany! What up insightful thought, that most people probably never think about.
Our household has also moved away from canning and it's high-tech sealing methods and expense, both in materials and energy.
We currently dry, apples, green beans, green and hot peppers, sweet corn, tomatoes, herbs, and swiss chard.
Here's another method of storage that's probably very unusual that we just started doing the last few years.
We pull our cabbages from the garden just before Frost, then we bring them in and put them in the root cellar. However when put into The Root cellar we heal them in, or simply put, bury the roots.
The cabbages still think they're in the garden, and every couple of weeks I cut off a head for household use. The Roots stay in the ground and begin sprouting small leaves again. The Root cellar is cold enough that the roots should survive the winter, and also vernalize (a period of sustained cold), which will prepare them for going to seed next summer, when replanted in the spring.
Fresh picked cabbage in January in Minnesota isn't the norm!
There are probably many preservation methods out there that haven't been revived or haven't been thought up yet, that require no outside intervention.
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I find there is definitely a texture difference between dried food and frozen food. How I plan to use the food is a factor. Cooking the food before drying sometimes gives a better texture. Experimenting with small amounts seems like a good idea.Cécile Stelzer Johnson wrote: My main problem is that I fear that the food will not *reconstitute* quite right and I will have wasted all that time. I need to check how to do that right.
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Jay Angler wrote:
I find there is definitely a texture difference between dried food and frozen food. How I plan to use the food is a factor. Cooking the food before drying sometimes gives a better texture. Experimenting with small amounts seems like a good idea.Cécile Stelzer Johnson wrote: My main problem is that I fear that the food will not *reconstitute* quite right and I will have wasted all that time. I need to check how to do that right.
Also, some ecosystems, (read mine!!!) aren't as drying friendly as others. I live where the humidity is almost always high.
That said, I'll be interested in how consistent the results are with the rocket mass supported food dryer they built at Wheaton Labs.
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Kathy Gray wrote:I stopped buying Kleenex tissues, instead I use good old fashioned handkerchiefs, they work much better too.
Another thing I do is that I keep cloth napkins in the car.
And naturally I use cloth napkins at home in stead of paper. Plus I’ve made some too.
I have a whole bunch of kitchen
Towels ( hand me downs and thrift shop finds)to keep me from using paper
towels.
I try hard to think first and set myself up for success.
I find such joy in making decisions like these.
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Cécile Stelzer Johnson wrote: Freezing tends to break the walls of a cell whereas just drying remove the moisture from inside the cell but does not necessarily break the cell walls. Hmmm...
....Maybe that is the idea behind blanching ?
Rich Rayburn wrote:TOOTHPASTE, ALTERNATIVE.
Many years ago we decided to switch from popular commercial brand toothpaste, filled with all sorts of undecipherable ingredients. We switched to natural toothpaste, of which there are many brands.
After using a particularly popular brand for decades, several things prompted us seeking an alternative.
The cost kept going up , the plastic tubes the paste came in were not practically recyclable, and I noticed some pain near the gum line on several teeth.
After checking the ingredients of this popular "natural" toothpaste, I found that it contained among other things glycerin and xylitol. Both of these ingredients are sugars, and according to research glycerin is more sugary than sugar.
Grinding sugar into my teeth to help prevent cavities just didn't make sense!
Since baking soda was one of the ingredients in this toothpaste we decided to go with just a moistened toothbrush dipped in plain old baking soda.
We also checked several sources for a toothpaste alternatives and baking soda was one of them.
That was 6 months ago, most of the gum line pain in my teeth disappeared, we no longer despair of what to do with the plastic tubes, and the cost is next to nothing.
A win for teeth, less pain. A win for the environment, less trash. And a win for the pocketbook, less expense!
Rick
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I do Celtic, fantasy, folk and shanty singing at Renaissance faires, fantasy festivals, pirate campouts, and other events in OR and WA, USA.
RionaTheSinger on youtube
Rich Rayburn wrote:Allison, are those Avens you're talking about those little yellow flowers?
And also how do you make that Avens tincture you mentioned.
Like you mentioned modern dentistry is probably mostly a byproduct of modern diet.
If we were eating more in sync with our genetic predisposition, tooth health may not be such an issue.
I find it unlikely that all of our ancestors for the last 30,000 years all died of toothaches!
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