Monday, 24 August 2009

Make-do for a full table







Having been inspired by the video in my last post, Skinny turned her attentions to her own front garden.
Modest and a little unkempt but it gets the sun all day.
Wondering how she could tame it into an edible delight of herbs and flowers?


Money, always tight, does not stretch to the 'open cheque' mentality seen in most garden centres.
A 'one-step-at-a-time' approach is a must! Nanny Flynn's words echo in my brain, "Use what you have". So with that in mind I set to.


The first job to mow the lawn, took a wee while as I only had a ropey old strimmer. But it did the job after replacing the wire a couple of times and the edges were cut with an old pair of scissors. I decided that there was far to much grass to leave on the lawn, so it was removed with just the head of a fine tined rake and to the compost heap. I have already earmarked a large rosemary bush, from the back garden, to be the centre piece 'back bone' of the garden.




Personal note to self... take cutting of big sage bush next to rosemary and thank god I've not got to planting those pots of chives, mint and thyme picked up at a local jumble sale.

I've also found a very useful seed web site with a list of edible flowers (with pics), Herbs and vegetables. Although I don't know if the Flynn house hold budget would stretch to too many of them! http://www.thompson-morgan.com/seeds1/ilist/edible-flowers.html?page=2;


Time and money is a premium in this busy day and age. So I'm allotting 1 hour a day and £1 per week

Sunday, 16 August 2009

Children of the revolution

When you are 'strapped for cash' Its amazing what you can do with a small plot, even a pot on a windowsill can provide salads, herbs and edible flowers, at a fraction of the cost (even the cheapest deal from a supermarket).
But it don't just relieve the purse strings! Growing your own, gives a sense of achievement and getting dirt under your fingernails is very good for the soul!


http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fbit.ly%2FGym7T&h=542c6d01457c1cad7032840adf0c3294


Please do view this!
Not hippy claptrap!
Not green wash!
The power to create a change is in your hands!

Tuesday, 10 March 2009

Fame !

Well you could of knocked me down with a feather! Not only did I sell a bag at my local craft club, I find my little shop www.BagsByEthicals.etsy.com has been reviewed by a fan.
http://www.redheadhomestead.blogspot.com/
O M G..........Fame @last!

Friday, 30 January 2009

Grappling with Plastic

You would of thought that the problem of getting rid of waste was fairly simple. Over the last three and a half years, I have found it increasingly complex. Not because of the nature of things but the diversity of the materials we casually throw away each day, not just individuals but homes, shops, offices, manufacturing and industry. Even the growing of food has its waste products.
Never before in our history has it been so important to address these issues in a sensible, almost holistic way. We are in a position, where the future of the world lay’s in a delicate balance. Global warming, Carbon footprints, or even going ‘Green’ or ‘Eco’ are bantered around in a blasé fashion. We all are aware of them but do we really know the true issues or consequences of the effect.
Great swathes of ‘middle England’ buy into the Green machine that governments, politicians and industry have worked long and hard to push before us. We are bombarded by the media industry with sound bites, photo opportunities, spin and news. Rallying us into a blind mass, aware of the subject but lacking the knowledge, doing something about it but missing the truth.
Let’s give an instance;
The recycling of plastic; Trying to do our bit we take plastic (carefully collected) to the skip, (conveniently paced in the supermarket car park) putting it in the a warm glow of Eco spin that says we are saving the planet. In actual fact there are 7 types of plastic that have the potential of being recycled but to date there are only 2 that can readily be reclaimed. The reality is that the righteous person only needs to place one incorrect tub or bottle in to invalidate the complete skips recycling potential, resulting not reclamation but landfill or (increasingly) being incinerated, the ash land filled and the air polluted. It only takes one bottle to have been correctly sorted and disposed but unwashed and covered with say food stuff to do the same.
Never has the adage ‘A little knowledge is dangerous’ be so true!
Modern living and industry have made us aspirational and wasteful beyond our means. Politicians, in there bid to address the problem, have been complicit in attacking the symptom and not addressing the cause.
Many of the so called developed countries compound the hype for wanting more! And yet it was only a few generations in the past where we were glad for the roof over our head, clothing on our back and food in our belly. Renewing our acquaintance with friends, and community on a daily basis. We sat to share food around a table and talk of our day, our concerns and reaffirm our family bond. Our wish list might of contained a new pair of shoes, a reading book, or a wheelbarrow to help us grow food, We wasted nothing because we had to deal with our own waste, burying it in our own garden or burning it on our fire.
I would be one of the first to agree it was a very hard existence and I would not want to return. I like my computer or the fact I can speak to family on the other side of the world. I have other things to fill my time, than spending two or three days washing clothes!
But the world cannot go on the way it has. We can not use resources without a thought of where it comes from or will we have more tomorrow. On a personal level I question the source of anything to pass my threshold. Has it been used till all value is gone, will it recycle, or compost? I may not be perfect, I live on a very small fixed income. I cannot buy into green, organic, spin I so readily seen in the supermarkets on a daily basis. But I only want a roof over my head, clothes on my back and food in my belly and perhaps good health would be added to the list. My wish list is a wheelbarrow to help me grow food, some insulation to keep us warmer next winter and per haps solar power to reduce our dependence on electricity.

Wednesday, 7 January 2009

Better late than never

12th night came and went. Luckily, just before the binmen came this morning I remembered to look through the rubbish leftover from Christmas.

It's amazing what you can glean, wrapping paper; crackers; tinsel scraps; and my most cherished of finds- Christmas cards! All will be carefully stored till next November, when the card making and present wrapping get going in earnest.

Even in the kitchen my scavenging knows no bounds! plastic bowls that the pudding came in, have been set aside, for home made versions. Sweet wrappers are carefully flattened to go in the collage box. Glass pickle jars washed and packed to aid my New Years Resolution of making as much as possible.

Thursday, 1 January 2009

Idea's on the back of an envelope


When you are about to start any job, there is always a cost!

The cost in time, skill or money, it is proportionate to each other. We have little money so must use more time and skill. An open cheque book can buy skill but we must learn, it will also buy time but it will take use longer.

The lack of money needs careful planning, there is no room for a mistake.

So if you need to get ready for Christmas, a birthday, decorating project, or just getting through a week, you need to plan!

My life is found on the backs of envelopes. Idea's, Menu planning, Bill's to be paid, are all there. Not tablets of stone but 'aid memoir'. From job's to do' to 'shopping list's', They help you focus, clarify and prioritise.
But most importantly they allow you to get your order of importance!
That small factor of no money means you have to divide things into 3,
what you want,
what you need,
what you have to have to live.
This last section is the one that MUST by met!
Your reduced circumstances (from whatever reason) means each facet of your life must be ruled by this. Feeding a family, keeping a roof over your head, keeping clothed and warm, then paying debts can feel overwhelming, taking control is the key to getting through.
So for the next step, collect used envelopes and a writing implement.

Tuesday, 30 December 2008

Never Again!

With Christmas over, I get back to the 'same old same old' of life. Now, though, with the added bonus of worrying bills landing on the doorstep (instead of Christmas cards).
A voice inside me is screaming " never again" and I realise that I could never live through a Christmas and New Year like this one. Flat broke doesn't begin to describe it.

So how do I and others like me cope next year! No one should borrow in this financial climate. But are others equipped with the knowledge and skills needed! How do you cope, when all you know is spend and throw!

So, in I dip, to my grand-mothers magical book. Stained, dog eared snippets of wisdom. Wisdom that helped her survive 2 world wars and the depression of the 1930's.
I will bring the tried and tested ways up to date and will welcome readers pearls too!