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Archive for the ‘Organic Gardening’ Category

Tiny little flowers Abby and Jess picked for me

What a weekend!

Rhubarb pre- and post-hacking.

This basket is much fuller than it appears.  Trick photography.  Then, the final gallon-size bag of rhubarb for future goodies.

Abby and Jess ran through the sprinkler on Saturday during our unseasonably warm, pre-rain 90 degree day.  Afterwards, Abby wanted to watch her “bee friends”, so she curled up by the hive entrance to watch them all working.

How much do you love those little toes peeking out from under the towel?  I didn’t think it was going to get this warm this soon, so I hadn’t bought her a running-through-the-sprinkler suit yet.  She’s wearing one of those suits with the floaties built into it, which is why she looks like she has a belt of bricks around her middle.

We have a very thick row of strawberry plants that we moved last fall to be out from under the eaves.  They are loaded with little green berries.  Their production may actually outpace the kids and the birds this year!

We had a campfire in the backyard Saturday night, complete with s’mores.  No, I did not make the graham crackers or marshmallows.  We DID use a Green & Black Organic milk chocolate bar though.  I’d have to say that I do not have the same taste for s’mores that I used to.  Next time I think I will make the grahams because Nabisco isn’t doing it for me anymore.  Anybody got any ideas for marshmallow substitutes, or a decent recipe?  I don’t know how you’d make marshmallows without processed ingredients, considering I’ve never seen a marshmallow tree nor do I expect to in my lifetime.  Well, I guess one shouldn’t underestimate Monsanto’s gene technology, though.  So really, there might be a jet-puffed marshmallow tree at some point.  But I wouldn’t eat them anyways because they’d be GMO marshmallows.  So, moot point.

Richard with his two girls, and his new compost bins he made last week.  He got the pallets for the compost bins for $2 apiece on, you guessed it, Craigslist.  He has alerts set up with keywords so as soon as any postings are put up he gets an email alert.

On Sunday we called on a craigslist listing for retaining wall blocks.  The guy wanted $50 for 75 of them, then $.50/block after that.  We ended up with 200+ blocks for $110.  We had to disassemble the guy’s retaining wall and load them up on our 8-foot trailer, and it took us 3 trips altogether.  We only live about 5 minutes away from where they were so it wasn’t that big of a deal, except it was 90 degrees out and starting to rain, so we managed to get it all done in a little under two hours.  It’s such a good feeling to be able to be in such a win-win situation, with reusing materials and getting a great deal on it at the same time.

And…. you’re not going to believe what we else we got on Sunday.  We are going to disassemble it on June 2nd with the help of some family and friends.  Want to see?

Yes!  We found it on Craigslist.  It’s a 50′ x 20′ galvanized steel frame greenhouse.  The two endcaps are polycarbonate, and it comes with the blower motor for the double-paned plastic walls, and the ventilation fan, and all the wiring.  It’s gorgeous.  Right now it’s over a pool, but the new owner of the house it’s at wants to fill the pool in and get rid of the greenhouse so we were able to make a great deal for both of us.  We are going to grow so much stuff in this thing!

Bonus points if you recognized the post title as the title of a Calvin and Hobbes book.

(This post also shared here on http://FrugallySustainable.com.)

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After seeing the documentary Fresh, we decided a family trip to Growing Power would be a great idea.  Growing Power is a non-profit organization and land trust that was created in Milwaukee, Wisconsin by its founder and CEO, Will Allen.  The original Community Food Center is located in what is still considered a food desert, with the average resident needing to travel 3 miles to get to fresh produce.  However, this is cut down from 5 miles, which is what it was before Growing Power was created.

From the website:

“Community Food Centers are local places where people can learn sustainable practices to grow, process, market, and distribute food.  The prototype for Community Food Centers, as mentioned in our mission, is the Growing Power facility at 5500 W. Silver Spring Drive in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.  This historic two-acre farm is the last remaining farm and greenhouse operation in the City of Milwaukee.  Since 1999, our Community Food Center has provided a wonderful space for hands-on activities, large-scale demonstration projects, and for growing a myriad of plants, vegetables, and herbs.  In a space no larger than a small supermarket live some 20,000 plants and vegetables, thousands of fish, and a livestock inventory of chickens, goats, ducks, rabbits, and bees.”

How inspiring!  We are in the process of planning a greenhouse complete with aquaponics.  It will probably go on the 30′ x 50′ cement pad out back.  We’re thinking a geodosic dome would be the way to start.  It’s efficient to heat and inexpensive to build compared to standard greenhouses.  We could use the vertical space efficiently too.  Richard is reading a book right now called The Essential Urban Farmer (Carpenter and Rosenthal, 2011).  It’s written like a textbook so it’s very easy to follow with lots of illustrations, great ideas, and frugal approaches to start-up and problem-solving.  The authors have proven that their ideas work through their own experiences with urban farming.  All in all, a great book to read, learn from, and reference going forward.

I’m reading The American Way of Eating (McMillan, 2012).  Tracie McMillan goes undercover in the fields of California, a Michigan Wal-Mart, and a New York Applebees to discover why the working poor eat the way they do.  I’m about halfway through and so far she hasn’t covered much about food.  I wonder if that’s the point, that the working poor are so busy surviving that there’s not much energy left to focus on food.  Well, I guess I am being a bit disingenous – of course that’s her point.  This makes food deserts even more defeating.  If you barely have energy or resources to obtain and prepare food when it’s readily available, how are you going to afford go the extra mile (or five, or ten round-trip) to obtain fresh produce?

This is a real problem, and one that costs billions of dollars in healthcare every year.  There’s no monetary motivation for companies to make whole, fresh produce available when there is much more money to be made from processed foods.  It’s the seed companies, the fertilizer and pesticide companies, the pharmaceutical companies (who supply the antibiotics in the CAFO chicken, pork, and beef feed), and the food processing companies who make the real money, not the farmer who grows the food.  General Mills’ biggest profit center is their cereal division.  They’re taking the most inexpensive commodity available (GMO corn subsidized by the government, aka the taxpayer) and charging a premium by making it into many different forms that are essentially the same product.  This is what is in the middle aisles of the local supermarket; aisles and aisles of the same three ingredients in different iterations.  GMO soy, GMO corn, and GMO canola.

I’m not really sure where we’re going with this greenhouse we’re planning.  I don’t think it’s going to end with us being merely self-sustaining.  I think I’ve got too much to bitch about for that to be the case.  Apparently Richard and I have too much energy for it to end there as well, because we wore out the chicklets at Growing Power.

This post was also entered in the blog hop over at Frugally Sustainable

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In this post I’ll tackle the first five of the ten questions I posted as my biggest hitters when people ask me about food.

1.  You’ve lost a lot of weight.  How did you do it?

Richard and I made the decision to cut processed foods and chemical additives out of our lifestyle, and eat only whole, organic foods.  This means organic produce, legumes and grains, as well as humanely raised and pastured meats and eggs,  We drink plain water, and occasionally Richard has an herbal tea.  We eat dairy, but much less than we used to.  We try to keep dairy consumption to under 15% of our diet.  We do have “junk food” occasionally, such as whole wheat bread and whole wheat cookies, but only if we make them.  At this point, I’m usually getting an unbelieving, slightly horrified stare.

2.  How did you get started on this kick?

After about six months of seeing the documentary Fat, Sick and Nearly Dead available on Netflix, I finally watched it.  It was an eye-opener.  It is about a guy from Australia who was feeling sick, and fat, and unhealthy, and decided to go on a juice fast for 60 days.  It chronicles his journey through the 60 days from fat and sick to healthy and bright-eyed.  The message made sense, deep inside me.  It’s such a simple concept:  What you eat MATTERS.  I urged Richard to watch it.  After he watched it, we decided to juice fast for a week.  We made it four days, and in that time we had reevaluated our entire food lifestyle.  We finally got clarity, and joined forces to steer our family toward decades of good health and mental vibrancy, and away from decades of steady, incremental decline in health.

3.  Did you start doing this to lose weight?

We initially started our juice fast to kick-start our weight loss, but by the end of four days we had gained a vision of a food lifestyle that didn’t include counting calories or fat grams.  It was so much simpler than that.  Eat lots of plants.  Eat local, humanely raised meat, where you know the conditions the animals live in.  Eat dairy in the same manner.  We are finding as we embrace plants more, we eat less meat, and less dairy, naturally.

4.  Organic’s so expensive.  Do you really think it’s worth it?

I think this question usually assumes an apples-to-apples comparison.  It’s not quite that simple, at least it wasn’t for us.

Before we started on this new lifestyle I went out for lunch at work everyday; subs, chinese, pizza, local restaurants, etc.  When we grocery shopped we’d always buy a couple of frozen pizzas for my mom to feed the kids when Richard and I went on our Friday date nights.  Abby likes crackers so into the grocery cart they’d go, as well as tortilla chips, goldfish crackers, fruit snacks, and always some sort of candy.  We’d also get some fresh produce (half of which usually went bad before we used it), 3 gallons of milk for the week, pre-shredded cheese (more expensive than a block of cheese), canned vegetables, and processed breakfast cereals.  Tortillas made it easy to have a build-your-own-taco night.  Richard and my Friday night date nights always included a dinner out.

So, now we compare that to our usual activities and purchases.  I bring a lunch everyday at work, and it’s usually a green salad or leftovers from the dinner the night before.  Today it was two organic small red potatoes to heat in the microwave at work, with a little pastured butter, organic sour cream, and finished with pink sea salt and pepper.  I brought an organic orange, an organic apple, a small container of raw walnuts, and my two juice bottles for the day.  So that’s the sort of thing I do for lunches now.  It doesn’t cost me anything but leftovers or produce on hand.

When we go out on date nights, we eat at home first.  We have our family meal of good whole foods, and leave afterwards to go do something fun like visit a book store, or see a movie, or scout out new organic grocery sources in the area that maybe we’ve heard about but never visited.  We spend a lot less money and have just as great a connecting evening together as we ever did before, and our kids aren’t eating the frozen pizzas.

Crackers, bread, goldfish crackers, fruit snacks, tortillas, pre-shredded cheese etc. are all processed foods and don’t get into our cart anymore.

All of these changes together have made ample room (and room to spare) in our budget for organic produce, and to obtain meat and dairy from local and sustainability-minded land stewards.  This year we joined our first CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) farm and are looking forward to forging more relationships in the concious-eating community.

As for the organic products themselves, and what benefits they offer:  I think it’s worth it if for no other reason than to detox your body in the intial stages of this change.  I felt like I had been deluging my body with chemicals, unhealthily-raised meat, processed foods, and so many other terrible foods, that I needed to detox all the pesticides and junk that had built up over the decades.  We still juice veggies and fruit for two of our meals, which we consider a medicine.  The nutrition we get from the juices helps our cells work optimally to process the food we consume.  I also think that organic is especially important for kids, because the ratio of what they eat compared to their body size is much different than that of an adult.  They also can’t process toxins as efficiently as an adult because they’re physically smaller and less developed.  I realize that being certified USDA Organic does not erase the problems created by that very certification, but even factory farms that are certified organic are more sustainable than non-organic.

5.  So, what IS ok to eat?

I love this question, because then I get to talk about all the wonderful things we are eating now.  Changing to this food lifestyle is a bounty; it in no way feels like any deprivation such as you might experience on a typical restriction diet.  I feel like we have the best food we’ve ever eaten, every single day.  These days, going out to eat is the almost unavoidable result of obligation (usually work or family related), resulting in a struggle to find something to eat, and it’s frustrating and irritating to be spending more money on less nutritional quality.  Dissatisfying in every way, except the time spent with good company.  Given the choice between big-farm organic or small-farm local non-certified organic, but who take their role as stewards of land, animal integrity, and sustainable agriculture seriously, I’d take the non-organic local product any day of the week.

I know this post is a little rambly, but I’m still figuring out what makes sense for me and my family, and putting it into publishable-quality form isn’t my goal.  It’s to try to convey our sense of purpose, and our struggles, in a way that might resonate with you.

Let me know what you think; leave me a comment.  If you’re on this food train, why and how?  If you’re not, what do you think about that?  Where are you on the spectrum of interest in this lifestyle?  Or are you just overwhelmed and enjoy reading about it but know you’d never find the iron will it would take to change all of these things at once?  Just curious.  Let’s have a dialogue.

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The eggshells are sprouting, the eggshells are sprouting!  These ones are heritage cauliflower sprouts.  Aren’t they pretty, with purple edges?

There’s also heritage cucumber and broccoli sprouts.

Then we cheated and went to a local greenhouse and bought some tomatoes.  Richard got these Wall-O-Waters for a great price at a thrift sale last summer, and put them up last weekend to protect them against frost and promote growth.  You just prop them up around the plant and fill them with water.  A veritable wall o’ water.

Did you see up in the first picture that blue bin with holes in it?  It’s a compost bin.  We saw a steel garbage can done up this way and sold for $38 while we were out and about last weekend.  For $11 and 10 minutes of hole-making, we have a compost bin.  It even has holes on the bottom, so stuff can drain out and attract worms up into it.  His plan is to have 4 bins of compost, with an empty one for rotation.  By the time the compost makes it to the last bin it should be ready for the garden!

Our bleeding hearts are blooming, and I absolutely love them.  They’ve been transplanted a couple of times, as we’ve taken them with us where we’ve moved, and are thriving in our shade garden.

Last but certainly not least, I will be getting my honey bee hive within the next two weeks.  Their little spot is all ready for them, and FiBear awaits their arrival!

I can’t wait for my little buzzers to arrive…. and I can’t wait to share them with you!

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It was a beautiful afternoon on Sunday.  I took all kinds of pictures of our little 1.28 acres.  Let’s go for a walk!

The centerpiece of the backyard is our beautiful great big willow tree.  We were married under that tree in 2006, with all of our friends and family there.  Next to the willow is a swing where I like to bring my knitting, or a book, and watch the kids play.  Inside the playhouse is a little kitchen, and we put up white dry eraserboard walls and ceiling inside so the kids can draw whatever their imaginations can dream up.

On the very edge of our yard is where the bee hive will go.  The guard bear was chainsaw-carved by Richard’s dad a couple of years ago.  He used to be in my office, and he held skeins of yarn and fluffy batts of wool.  His name is FiBear (fiber, get it?)

Over behind the playhouse, way in back, is a campfire pit, with lots of dry wood.  We used to have s’mores and hot dogs cooked over it.  Now I wonder what we’ll be roasting on those cool summer and fall nights?  Is there such a thing as organic marshmallows?  I know I can make graham crackers, and raw cacao chocolate squares…. hmm.

Behind that pine tree to the left of the campfire pit is our rhubarb patch.  I can’t believe it’s only March and we’re already seeing six inches of rhubarb leaves.  All over our yard are vibrant purple wood violets.  I guess some might view our lawn as cluttered by weeds, but I love the diversity and the colors.

This is the view from the very furthest point of our backyard, from behind the pad and the burn pile.  I guess you can still tell it’s March because the mulberry hasn’t leafed out yet.  The whole time I was taking pictures from back here, this little bird was singing away in the tree above me.

The buds are popping out on the apple trees and grapevines, and the sedum is well on its way.  Do you like the grapevine trellis?  Richard repurposed the wooden frame of our old screen tent last summer.  It wasn’t going to last another year, so he took it down and we put up the metal frame you can see behind it, on the deck.  There’s a canvas top and screened zip-up sides that we’ll be putting up on that frame soon.  Many summer nights are idled away there, talking with friends.

Up in the front yard is Richard’s little Zen rock garden.  When he was in college, he worked at a concrete molding business that was part of a greenhouse.  They made things like this Ming lantern, which Richard actually made when he worked there.  Isn’t the metal dragon sculpture cool?

I remember the first time we drove up the driveway of our house, I absolutely fell in love with all of the huge pine trees lining the drive.  My family used to vacation up in the north woods of Wisconsin, and the smell of pines always takes me right back to those lazy summer days.  Last week Richard decided to paint our boring black mailbox and post a bright green and purple.  How fun is that?

Remember we were saving the eggshells for starting seeds?  The girls helped Richard fill all of them with dirt on Sunday.

 

 

And finally, would it be Sunday if you didn’t have a gorgeous, healthy, organic family dinner?  Richard made Whole Wheat Bread and Five Grain Bread.  We had ocean perch, organic smashed potatoes, and sweet heirloom carrot rounds.

 

Good food, beautiful surroundings, and a happy healthy family.  What more is there?

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It’s been a rainy day here in southeastern Wisconsin, with a high temp of 65F.  Richard and I had our usual Friday night “date night,” and went to see Hunger Games.

Unless you’re in the 12 – 17 year old demographic, which if you’re reading this blog you almost certainly aren’t, don’t bother.  I actually left at one point to use the restroom just for a change of scenery because I got bored.  Think about that a moment; a public restroom was a preferable place to be at one point in the movie.

When we got home, the driveway was, well, wormy.  It’s ok, it makes me a little squeamish too, and then I remember that worms are what make the soil a happy place for our veggies to grow.  We stepped out to our garden to have a look, and boy were they out in force.  Happy worms everywhere, moving leaves, munching juicer pulp, pushing through the soil and doing what they do best: making nutrient-rich dirt for our garden.  Oh, and trying not to drown in the rain.  Poor little guys.

See them everywhere?  This was just a little 3′ x 2′  patch of our garden.

So how do worms help your garden?  Well, I did a little research, and found that they do the following:

  • increase the amount of water and air in the soil
  • break down organic matter into nutrients that plants can use
  • “turn” your garden, bringing the organic matter from the surface down into the soil
  • burrow and create a drainage system
  • as they work their way up to the surface, they bring the rich minerals from the lower areas into the upper layers of the soil where the plant roots can access  the nutrients
  • as they eat organic matter, microorganisms and soil, other microorganisms in their gut  become mixed with the material they ingest; their waste actually contains more nutrition in a form more readily available to  plants than the food they ate

Keep in mind that using pesticides or chemical fertilizers (containing ammonium nitrate or ammonium sulfate) destroys worms.  Sevin is especially toxic, diazinon is  moderately toxic, and 2,4-D herbicide, while not as lethal, is somewhat  destructive of earthworm populations.  Organic gardening practices are  the best methods of fostering earthworm population. (Source: Pittsburgh Gardening Scene)

Happy worms = happy plants!

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