The Curious Autodidact

July 19, 2008

Junk Mail B Gone!

Filed under: environmental ideas, helpful hints — honilima @ 7:57 am

Take a moment today to think about the last walk you had in a shaded forest on a hot day or the forest canopy on a rainy day when you stayed dry. Now think about how full your recycle bin can be and what comes in your mailbox each day or week.

Here are things that you can do to stop some of the junk mail, additionally you can send back the address pages from the mail you do not want to get. It takes vigilance but you will feel so much better once you aren’t contributing as much to environmental degradation.

Rid your mailbox of unwanted catalogs: http://www.catalogchoice.org/

Get off the junk mail lists including getting off the credit card offer lists: https://www.dmachoice.org/MPS/proto1.php

Center for Media and Democracy: PR Watch article: http://www.prwatch.org/node/7224

June 3, 2008

Grow a Forest: Turn off the Junk Mail

Filed under: environmental ideas, helpful hints — honilima @ 12:20 am

Two simple steps to take to stop unwanted junk mail is to register at Catalog Choice http://www.catalogchoice.org/ and then limited the so called “pre-screened” offers of credit and insurance base on the information they get from your credit report by opting out, call 1-888-567-8688 and tell them you don’t want anyone to have access to your credit report without your permission.

May 21, 2008

Things you can do Today to Help Save the Earth

Filed under: environmental ideas, helpful hints — honilima @ 12:18 am

  • Walk instead of drive
  • Buy from the bulk bins at the grocery store
  • Bring your own bag when you shop
  • Turn off the TV
  • Begin to eat vegetarian
  • Don’t have children
  • Plant some vegetables
  • Work to stop the flow of junk mail
  • Use your computer printer sparingly
  • Become aware of your water use
  • Use contraception early and often
  • May 18, 2008

    Fun with Maps: Where the Oil is…

    Filed under: cool internet stuff, environmental ideas — honilima @ 12:49 am

    For those who grew up with classroom maps showing the North American continent front and center twist your mind around this representation of where the oil is:

    http://bartlett.house.gov/uploadedfiles/PeakChartWhoHastheOil.pdf

    May 12, 2008

    The Quest for Simple Inexpensive & Local Organic Salad Greens–YUM

    Filed under: environmental ideas, helpful hints, kitchen tips — honilima @ 11:11 pm

    May 10, 2007 : In the Garden: from the New York Times

    It Takes a Hammer to Grow This Salad

    By ANNE RAVER

    IF you love fresh greens, there is no reason not to grow them yourself, even if you have only a tiny terrace or handkerchief lawn.

    When Jon Traunfeld, a regional specialist for the University of Maryland Cooperative Extension, showed me his homemade salad table, I wanted one, and I wanted to put it right outside my kitchen door. It has a whole different appeal - less work! proximity! - than my big vegetable garden.

    Essentially, it is a garden on wheels that you can move around, into sun or shade, a big benefit when the sun gets too hot for spinach. It’s waist-high, so people with creaky knees or bad backs can just stand there and pick a few leaves for dinner. And it’s a cinch to water and weed (not like that jungle I call my kitchen garden.)

    “It also means the groundhogs and the rabbits aren’t going to bother you,” Mr. Traunfeld said, standing by his leafy table, which sits on a terrace at the extension service’s Home and Garden Information Center in Ellicott City, Md. “Though, we have two deer trapped inside our fence. If they find this, we’re sunk.”

    The salad table is basically a 3-inch-deep, 11-square-foot planting box on legs. It has a hardware-cloth bottom, lined with window screening, so that water can drain but soil mix stays put. The table can be lifted by two people; better yet, if you put casters on the legs it can be rolled.

    Mr. Traunfeld invented his table about a year and a half ago, after seeing something similar at an organic farm in Virginia. He has long understood the joys of fresh greens: when it’s too cold outside, he grows them under fluorescent lights in his basement.

    He has been taking his salad table on the road to schools and community groups to show how easy it is to grow nutritious food right outside the door.

    Last year he grew greens in full sunlight during spring and fall. In the heat of the summer he pulled the tables back into the shade. Try doing that with your vegetable garden.

    “Shade isn’t a bad thing for greens, especially in the summer,” Mr. Traunfeld said. “They don’t really need direct sunlight.” In fact, in the heat of August you can grow lettuces and other salad greens in full shade. Just push that table back into the light come September.

    Lettuces, arugula, bok choy, mustards and many other greens are all shallow-rooted vegetables that can thrive, believe it or not, in three inches of potting soil, especially if it’s enriched with compost. Mr. Traunfeld plants seeds of Russian kale, mizuna (a tangy Japanese green) and colorful lettuces like speckled trout, whose chartreuse leaves are splotched with maroon, and merlot, a ruffled red. Heat-resistant varieties, like oakleaf, deer tongue and Jericho, a romaine developed in Israel, are especially suited to a shallow box.

    He is also growing purslane and amaranth, as well as basil and parsley; anything, in other words, that grows fast and easily in shallow soil. The greens sprout quickly in such loose soil, and will no doubt need to be thinned, in which case those little leaves may just be rinsed and tossed into a salad. As leaves mature, Mr. Traunfeld cuts them low to the base, then lets them grow again for a second cutting - the cut-and-come-again method - in a few weeks.

    “You can only do that twice though, and it’s time to take them out,” Mr. Traunfeld said. “All of these plants have a life cycle, so after 60 or 70 days, they’re just going to get bitter.”

    He fertilizes every two weeks with a liquid fertilizer, or relies on a slow-release fertilizer like Osmocote in the planting mix.

    Although his planting box is large, a small one could be placed just about anywhere, including a narrow apartment balcony.

    When I commented on how beautifully simple all this was, and wondered why no one had thought of this before, Mr. Traunfeld just laughed.

    “Every time I teach this workshop, somebody says, my grandmother used to take old drawers out of chests that were going to get junked, and she grew plants, either spring onions or salad greens, in a drawer,” he said. “So it’s nothing new. We’re just re-packaging it.”

    Mr. Traunfeld is also recycling another ubiquitous item: the five-gallon white plastic bucket used for bulk food, which bakeries, delis and restaurants are happy to give away. Instead of just drilling holes in the bottom and filling with compost and potting soil - perfect for tomato plants with deep roots - Mr. Traunfeld turns them into self-watering containers.

    It’s not complicated; just a series of trimming this, and sawing that, and drilling holes here and there. Directions for the self-watering container can be found at  http://www.hgic.umd.edu/_media/documents/hg601.pdf

    For those who want to try his movable garden, the table and trays are simple to make out of untreated framing lumber, a bit of wire mesh and window screening, and some nails, wood screws and staples. Find a handsaw, hammer and drill and you’re all set. Directions can be found at hgic.umd.edu, under online publications, on growing greens with salad tables and salad boxes. The table costs about $35 to make; the tray, $8.

    Mr. Traunfeld is finding that these tables are not only inspiring people to grow fresh food; they are also generating an interest in basic carpentry skills.

    Since soil is too heavy and dense for these salad tables, it’s better to use a lightweight, fertile mix, in which seeds can easily germinate. Mr. Traunfeld suggested half compost, half soilless mix. But make sure both are of a good quality. You could also use pure compost, if you make it yourself, or have a reliable source. Soilless mix dries quickly in the sun; you may have to water as often as twice a day.

    If you want more texture in your salad, space plants about three to four inches apart, he advised. This is a good method for mustard greens, collards and chard.

    “Then the mid-ribs develop and you get a little more crunch in your salad,” he said. And you can just pick individual leaves, rather than cutting little soft ones with scissors.

    These crunchy, bigger leaves are also less likely to wilt when tossed with an acid dressing made with vinegar or lemon.

    Hand me the olive oil, please. Or a hammer, so that I can start on one of these tables.

    May 6, 2008

    A Few Web Sites You Want to Know about

    Filed under: cool internet stuff, environmental ideas, helpful hints — honilima @ 11:18 pm

    Government DO NOT CALL LIST: https://www.donotcall.gov/

    Rid your mailbox of unwanted catalogs: http://www.catalogchoice.org/

    Get off the junk mail lists including getting off the credit card offer lists: https://www.dmachoice.org/MPS/proto1.php

    How to find a human on a customer service call: http://www.nophonetrees.com/

    Is that famous person dead or alive? http://www.deadoraliveinfo.com/

    To believe or not believe that urban legend sent via the internet no doubt: http://www.snopes.com/

    May 4, 2008

    To Buy Organic or Non-organic?

    Filed under: environmental ideas, helpful hints, kitchen tips — honilima @ 9:21 am

    If you have access to local foods and the money to pay for organic consider yourself fortunate. If you watch your grocery dollars and want to know what should be absolutely bought organic I offer this list:

    • PEACHES
    • APPLES
    • CELERY
    • NECTARINES
    • STRAWBERRIES
    • CHERRIES
    • LETTUCE
    • GRAPES
    • PEARS
    • SPINACH
    • POTATOES
    • BELL PEPPERS

    http://www.foodnews.org/walletguide.php

    One Last Kindness: Organ and Body Donation

    Filed under: end of life, environmental ideas — honilima @ 1:50 am

    Death provides many of us with a one-time chance to make a valuable gift to humanity. All major religions approve of body and organ donation for medical and dental teaching, research, and transplants. According to public opinion polls, most people believe that such donations are desirable.

    Organ Donation

    With the advances in medical science in the last decade, organ transplants have become fairly common. Organ donation at a time of death is a gift of life or sight to the recipient. Circumstances surrounding death may limit this option, yet the corneas of even elderly donors will be grateful accepted. If your wish is to aid the living with an organ donation, make sure your next-of-kin and your physician know your preference. This intent should be noted on any medical or hospital records, too. A body from which organs have been removed will not be accepted for medical study.

    Body Donation

    Medical schools have an ongoing need of bodies for teaching and research. The need may be especially urgent at osteopathic and chiropractic schools. No medical school buys bodies, but there is usually little or no expense for the family when death occurs. Therefore, if you live in an area where low-cost funeral options do not exist, body donation may be an economical as well as thoughtful and generous choice.

    Most medical schools pay for nearby transportation as well as embalming and final disposition. The School may have a contract with a particular firm for transporting bodies, so it is important to inquire about the specific arrangements to be used at the time of death in order to avoid added costs. After medical study, the body is usually cremated, with burial or scattering in a university plot. Often the cremains or remains can be returned to the family for burial within a year or two. This request should be made known at the time of donation. Some medical schools require that a donor register before death. However, in many cases, next-of-kin may make the bequest without prior arrangement.

    Funeral Plans

    Because it is important for the medical school to start preservation as soon after death as possible, a memorial service is most appropriate for those planning on body donation. Alternative plans for body disposition should be discussed with your family. A few schools take care of disposition regardless of condition at the time of death, in fulfillment of their contract with a donor. Most medical schools, however, follow guidelines in the acceptance of a body. If death occurs at the time of surgery, for example, the body would not be accepted for study. Certain diseases, as well as obesity, make a body unsuitable. Some medical schools may not have an immediate need and have no provision for storage or for sharing with another university.

    Provisions When Traveling

    There will be special considerations if death occurs while you are traveling and you planned on body donation. If you are a great distance from the medical school of your choice, should your family bear the cost of transporting your body there, or may the nearest university be contacted? The need for cadavers in some foreign countries is even greater than in the U.S. For example, in Argentina 200 medical students must share a cadaver. A private individual’s body may be shipped to another country if placed in a hermetically sealed container. If death were to occur abroad, do you wish your survivors to inquire about the local need for bodies or organs to fulfill the intent of your anatomical bequest? Be sure to note your preference on the Uniform Donor Card you carry.

    from:http://www.funerals.org/

    April 26, 2008

    Best Way to Wash Vegetables and Fruit in the kitchen

    Filed under: environmental ideas, helpful hints, kitchen tips — honilima @ 9:35 am

    In an inexpensive spray bottle in the kitchen mix one part plain cheap vinegar to two parts water. Keep this to spray the vegetables and fruits before you wash them. This has been proven as one of the least expensive most effective ways to avoid the chemicals and bacteria that may be present on foods.

    This solution is also a great daily cleaner for counter tops, windows and mirrors, and is quite friendly to the pocketbook.

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