Tag Archives: recycle

The Buzz

Just a quick note that if anyone who reads this has Google Buzz, feel free to add me. I am Callie82 on gmail. You will get automatic updates when I write new blogs.

Continued here:
The Buzz

The Urban Homestead

Have you ever built a solar powered food dehydrator in your garden? Do you know how to make your own household cleaners without using toxic chemicals? Can you repair any major toilet problem and reduce water usage with fixes that cost nothing? Have you ever made your own wine or beer from plants in your garden? Thought about raising chickens in the city? Kelly Coyne and Erik Knutzen have simple advice for living simply and comfortably even if you don’t own a lot of land. In a humorous, easy-to-read manner, they offer advice on composting, gardening, home brewing, and saving greywater among other things. The Urban Homestead was a gift from my friend Andrea, who bought it for me after she read it. Jason and I have both read it, and it is WONDERFUL! It was incredibly comprehensive on how to reach a new level of self-sufficiency without buying land and moving to the country. There were several ideas in this book that I have always wanted to do, but was unsure of how to accomplish cost-effectively. I plan to buy a few copies of this book this year and hand them out to friends and family for birthday gifts. I hope they read it and continue the trend. The book included several suggestions for incorporating permaculture into you city garden, including a practice called “Three Sisters.” This is where you plant corn, beans, and squash all together, and the beans climb up the corn stalks and they shade the squash. The corn and the squash will sap nitrogen from the soil, while the beans will replenish it. It was such a great idea that I can’t wait to try it. They also run a blog here: http://www.homegrownevolution.com/

Read the original here:
The Urban Homestead

Valentine’s Day in Oklahoma

This is one of the coldest winters I have ever lived through in Oklahoma, so it makes the anticipation for spring and gardening even more unbearable. To keep myself busy while I wait on the sun to make an appearance, I have taken up cooking. I’ve been learning how to make bread, and turned out my first loaf that was edible just last week. I think I finally got the hang of yeast and rising the dough. I’ve also decided to try and cut back on my dairy intake. Partially due to reading horror stories about how progesterone in dairy affects us ( Harvard Article and Time Article ), and partially because I eat a lot of pizza and could stand to shed a few pounds. So I am trying out a few vegan recipes to start a healthier diet. I don’t intend to go vegan though. I buy my eggs from a local farmer most of the year, and they are free range and organic, so I intend to continue eating them. I have borrowed (it’s an extended borrow at this point) a cookbook called La Dolce Vegan from a friend. So far I have tried two of the recipes in it. I made Carrot Ginger soup and Veggie Pot Pie. The Pot Pie turned out phenomenal. It is delicious, savory, and filling beyond my expectations. A healthy comfort food, and I estimated it only came out to 300 calories per serving, which is pretty good for a dinner. It covers all sorts of nutrients, the crust is made from whole wheat flour, so that covered grains, and there are tons of veggies in it, and then lentils to add the protein needed to get through the evening. The carrot ginger soup was decent, but it seemed to be lacking something, and the reheated version was unpalatable. I have few other recipes to try for carrot ginger soup, and I may begin experimenting on my own. I am looking for some decent cookbooks that feature whole foods and don’t contain too many strange ingredients. If anyone has any recommendations I would be thrilled to hear them. Jason and I went on the Valentine’s Day Weekend Art Walk in the Paseo district of Oklahoma City yesterday. It was fun, and they had a wine tasting from Tidal School Vineyards from Drumwright, Oklahoma. They have an excellent wine called Blackberry Essence that I recommend for anyone looking to buy local and delicious. I hope everyone is having a cozy Valentine’s Day this week. It’s a little chilly here today, so I am glad we celebrated yesterday by going outside all day!

Here is the original post:
Valentine’s Day in Oklahoma

Hiatus Over

Okay, so I ignored this thing for most of last semester. I was swamped with writing work in my classes last semester, so hopefully things are better now. This next semester will be my last one (Yay!), and then I can graduate with my Bachelor’s in Journalism/Professional Writing. This last semester, while fairly tough, was probably the best semester I have had for learning since I started school. I took a class on sustainable communities that was invaluable to my understanding of city planning and building the future. For it, I created a presentation on Bill Mollison, the father of permaculture, and learned more about permaculture than before. I have become taken with this concept and I am using my winter break to learn more about how to live this lifestyle. Bill Mollison is from Tazmania, Australia, and operates from there. Tazmania is full of lush rainforest and many endagered species of plants and animals. The structure of a rainforest and how it grows and cultivates crops is the guiding principle behind much of permaculture. It is a form of agriculture that is more sustainable and more diverse, for those of you unaware. It includes growing many diverse crops instead of monocultures, using feedback loops to create healthy soil, plants, water, and habitats, and reusing everything several times before it becomes waste. It is much more complicated than I have space to get into on my blog, but I suggest researching Bill Mollison on your own. I was very excited to begin reading a book that my friend Andrea got for me called Urban Homesteaders , which covers many of the principles and practices of permaculture also. I will review that book when I finish reading it. Another project I worked on last semester was designing my own sustainable community. While I had fun and turned in an interesting concept, it really got me to thinking. My concept was for a city of 200,000. It involved 80% open space, and 20% building. I designed this by creating towers that held markets, vertical gardens, and apartment-like adaptable buildings. While that sounds great in theory, I started thinking about my own dreams as of late. Would I enjoy living there? If not, what will draw other Americans? I have to admit that part of me has been infected with the very American dream of buying a piece of land and building a house on it. I want to grow my own organic farm, and have goats and chickens. Living out in the country right now, I have noticed a saddening trend, as the city encroaches on us, more and more of the big farms out here are being sold to developers. 2,000+ sq. ft. monstrosities are being built in cookie-cutter form to create housing communities everywhere. It’s turning into the suburbs everywhere, and there’s no stopping it. As much as I dream about buying land and starting a farm, I wouldn’t want to look out and see that scab of humanity next door to my beautiful gardens. But with a growing population of American Dreamers wanting their big house, big cars, and yards (not gardens), how many of these will we install before we realize we have destroyed everything beautiful that we have? So would I live in a community that was similar to apartments? Yes, because in my design, there were garden plots for everyone to work in, public transit out of the town, and a wildlife area that took up 50% of the total land and allowed for hunting and camping. It is an idea I plan to keep tweaking until I get it right.

Read the original:
Hiatus Over

Alaska Defends Itself

A twelve mile organic gelatinous blob attacked the coast of Alaska this week, devouring wildlife and messing up shorelines, in what some people believe was an attack formulated to hit while the Alaskan defense system is weak. Alaska Governor and former Vice Presidential Contender Sarah Palin recently announced that she would be resigning from her post as governor, and turning over the position to Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell, according to cnn.com. Without Palin’s intimidating defense strategies, the state of Alaska is left wide open to attacks from sea monsters. “We just have been watching what is going on with, like the pipeline, and now the logging stuff , and we thought we would pre-emptively strike to defend ourselves,” said Neptune, god of the ocean. If overfishing and pollution don’t decrease in the next year, and if Alaska doesn’t provide a detailed plan to improve marine life, Neptune says they may have to release the Kraken.

Follow this link:
Alaska Defends Itself

Patio Garden

I took a break from writing to enjoy the two weeks away from school before I start back into summer school. I am taking a class on journalism and blogging, which I hope will help me improve this blog. I also look forward to the Fall semester when I take a class on Sustainable Community Building. I am very excited about that class, and expect to fill this blog with the knowledge I gain from it. In the meantime, I wanted to post some photos of my little patio garden, which I was worried about at first, but has taken off since the weather warmed up. So far we have harvested four cherry tomatoes, and there are two little strawberries that call to me at night. I can’t wait for the watermelon to grow. So far it’s just a very large vine though. I love watermelon. Here is the first harvest of the summer: Jason’s Flower Garden: Not the most professional picture, but here’s the whole garden: flowers, strawberries, chili peppers, watermelon, cherry tomatoes, rosemary, garlic, and potatoes. Callie and Russia enjoy sitting by the patio garden:

Continued here:
Patio Garden

What is the Point?

I’ve been reading Walt Whitman lately and it reminded me why I need to do this. I didn’t arbitrarily pick a cause because I needed something to do; I picked this cause because I realized how insurmountably important nature is to me. There are too many places that I remember as a child that have been changed from their natural beauty to urban sprawl. When I lived in Phoenix (the city planner’s guide of what not to do) I remember there were days when I felt like my chest would collapse because of all of the pollution in the valley. I remember when I moved back to Oklahoma what it felt like to breathe again. I remember climbing to the top of the Superstition Mountains, one of the most breathtaking views in Arizona, and looking out to see the brand new copper mine, almost the size of a mountain itself. I remember how my heart felt when I saw that. I remember reading about the cactus owl , and how the EPA had deemed it “not enough of a sub-species of owl to be protected” and allowed builders in Arizona to continue their sprawl into its habitat and that of the saguaro cactus, despite the fact that there are only a handful of cactus owls left. I remember why Christine Whitman is my sworn enemy. I remember when my grandmother died of cancer. I was there, living with her. I don’t ever want to watch someone I care about go through that again. I remember reading about the island of plastic twice the size of Texas floating in the Pacific. I remember trying to drive in L.A. and thinking “What is the point of this?” I remember shopping for groceries in Canada at the local grocery store. I remember coming back here and going to Wal-Mart. I remember eating a fresh organic orange. There aren’t a lot of things better than that. I know what tomatoes fresh off the vine taste like. I know what it looks like when a forest has been clear cut and replaced with a monoculture of trees. I know why that’s bad. I also know what it looks like when Weyerhauser has a stack of trees they have harvested so high that when you look up you can’t see the sun at midday. I know what the mountain looked like after that harvest also. And I remember what it looked like before. I don’t like the obesity epidemic. It’s so pointless and sad! Why aren’t we getting enough exercise? Why don’t we walk more? Why isn’t there more public transportation? Why don’t we eat better? Why is it cheaper to buy soda pop and potato chips than organic juice and berries? Sanity depends on the ability to get away from the technology and just walk in the woods or listen to the water run by in the river. I chose this cause because it can’t go on. People have been effectively blinded to the consequences of commerce in the USA. I fear it’s spreading to other countries. There are other ways of living comfortably, and still creating a world future generations can also live in. We can have a healthy economy and not crush the social justice of the rest of the world. I chose this cause because I don’t give up. I’m not a quitter. I won’t back down just because the odds are against me. And because I think this issue is the single most important issue facing the world today. Without a healthy planet, nothing else matters. Because without air to breathe, water to drink or food to eat, there will be no people to govern. If we can’t find out what’s killing the honey bees, what’s causing more and more children to be born with autism, why Americans keep getting fatter, why the whales and frogs are disappearing, how can we stop the deforestation of the Amazon, why there is NO SUCH THING AS CLEAN COAL , why nuclear is a bad idea, why the sun is the best option, and why not every American should drive a car, then by the time we pay attention to what’s happening it will be too late. It may be a David and Goliath battle, but remember how that story ended.

Continue reading here:
What is the Point?

New Phrase of Sustainability

I was watching the Discovery Green channel the other night and I learned a new phrase: “cradle to cradle.” In the show, the girl was describing her new faux granite counter tops. Cradle to Cradle means that the product is made from either recycled synthetic material or renewable organic materials and can be recycled again when you are through with them or will decompose naturally. It is a term coined by environmental pioneer William McDonough. The counter tops she was using were made from concrete and glass. They were very pretty, durable, stain resistant, and eco-friendly. In my environmental business class we read a book by Paul Hawken called “The Ecology of Commerce.” He discusses this theory as a business model to reduce waste. If more companies created products that they could reuse all of the components of, it would save them money in manufacturing and it would save us money in garbage disposal and environmental clean-up. I was thinking about this in terms of home building. What materials are truly cradle to cradle? The counter tops are a start, but what about insulation, siding, roofing, and other key components of a house? That’s when I found this Seattle-based competition to build sustainable homes that have materials that can be re-used when the house has reached the end of its lifecycle. Not only is the winning design an eco-friendly accomplishment, it is also gorgeous! However, it doesn’t say anywhere on there how much these technologies cost. So I wonder if it is affordable, or considerably more than normal, or if it pays itself off quickly?

More here:
New Phrase of Sustainability