An Earth Day Celebration

Happy Belated Earth Day! I have been pretty busy, though I don’t recall with what… I just have been thinking about this post for a while and I was disappointed it was never written. Then I came to the realization, “hey this is my blog and I can write whatever I want, as long as I don’t embarrass my parents.”

So getting back on topic, Earth Day 2009. Like most people, I had to work…all day, 8:30ish to 7pm. I still wanted to do something, so on my lunch break I took one of those plastic bags we get from the grocery store and picked up a bag full of trash.  Sadly, I filled the bag within 5 minutes of exiting my car and only took 25 steps…This inspired a new goal, once per month (I am trying to be realistic here) I will spend 5 minutes picking up litter. I know I can do this, maybe you can too.

A Produce Aisle of Your Own

Here in Minnesota the growing season is short, too short, but that doesn’t mean you can’t grow your own fruits and vegetables. Last summer, I grew a lot of our produce including: green beans, cucumbers and tomatoes. My own vegetable garden is a raised bed, approximately 15 feet by 3 feet and it’s built with retaining wall stones from our local home improvement store. It was pretty easy to build in an afternoon. This small garden provided us huge savings at the grocery store last summer and anything we didn’t grow we bought at the local roadside stand.

This roadside stand happens to be conveniently located at my favorite greenhouse, Waldoch Farm and Garden Center. Recently, I was invited on a tour there. I happen spend a lot of time there in the summer so it was really fun to see the baby plants! It was also very informative, I learned about starting seeds, plant propagation and honey bees.

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So this year, I have been planning my garden since the snow first fell because last summer I had big plans for canning salsa, but sadly, they didn’t pan out. It’s a funny story, my sister was house/dog sitting for a week (which I really appreciated) while Chris and I were on vacation. I left her several pages of notes on everything (yes, I am a little obsessive,) but somehow the tomatoes were forgotten. This may not have been a problem if they were planted in the garden but they were in clay pots on the deck. When we arrived home from South Dakota the tomatoes were shriveled beyond recognition…

All this garden talk has really put me in the mood for spring, I am truly disappointed to hear more snow is coming!

Reusable Napkins, Paper Towels and the Like

This seems like a no-brainer for the well-versed frugalite however, it was a difficult transition at my house.  I was worried about getting the cloth napkins permanently stained, my husband was concerned with germs…but that is probably another story.

Here is how we made it work: For our first set, I did not buy white cloth napkins, I chose navy blue.  The napkins are washed with the towels weekly, all germs are killed.  I have also found that washcloths are great for napkins too, and they are even more frugal. To keep it easy, I have a small square basket that I keep stocked with cloth napkins on the kitchen table ready for use.

Speaking of washcloths, I use those in place of paper towels for kitchen clean up.  I have no regrets.  I do still use a paper towel on occasion for blotting the grease from my pizza or bacon and the semi regular piles of pet barf that magically appear on my living room carpet.  I used to purchase a twelve roll package of paper towels per month, now I can say I use four rolls of paper towels per year.

As for window/mirror washing, I have heard many people rave about newspaper.  I really wanted it to work for me…it didn’t.  What does work for me are the microfiber towels you can get at an auto parts store.  I bought a package of twenty for around $15.00.  These I also wash with towels, do not use fabric softener though, as it ruins the towels.

I save about $120 per year by not buying paper towels and disposable napkins every month.  My initial investment in the reusables is as follows: cloth napkins, $.75 x 8 = $6, microfiber towels 20 count, =$15.00 and washcloths 9 count, $3.00 x 2= $6.00.  That is a grand total of $27.00.  I am still using the same items I bought over two years ago and I have only needed to do a little mending of the washcloths.  Now for the green savings, in the last two years my husband and I have saved our landfill from 23,040 sheets of paper towels and 30,660 paper napkins!

A Little Day Trip

I have a confession, I am obsessed with barns. This morning while surfing the net, I was looking for a new antique store to visit at a later date.  I found this one…it’s in Buffalo, MN.

I made Chris drive me there. Today. We actually didn’t find anything to buy at the Buffalo Nickle Antique Store, but we found some good deals at a few of the other shops in the area.  I love vintage linens and found these napkins…

I also found this thing, I plan on putting it on the doorstep with a candle inside.

My favorite photo from the day…

Homemade Laundry Detergent

I have been making my own laundry detergent for about a year now.  No, I’m not crazy;  I do it because I like it more than the store-bought stuff, it cleans just as well and it is better for the environment.  No big plastic jugs to lug home that take energy and resources to produce and deliver.  Oh, did I mention that it costs less than $0.05 per load?  Well, it does. Only one tablespoon is required to get clothes clean.  I admit that I was a little skeptical at first, especially since my husband and I both get dirty at work.  I wear scrubs and Chris is always covered in chalk coming home from work (don’t worry he’s not out playing hopscotch, he’s marking hail hits on rooftops.)  So I needed a strong cleaner that was gentle on our clothes and skin.

I did a lot of internet research and tried a few recipes, but this is the one that we liked the best.  Here are the tools you’ll need:

A grater, a blender or one could also use a food processor, measuring cups and a storage container with a measuring spoon one tablespoon)
A grater, a blender, measuring cups and a storage container with a measuring spoon (one tablespoon)

I have been able to find all of the ingredients locally in the laundry aisle, but not usually at the same store.  Fels-Naptha is the hardest to find, it’s located in the laundry aisle (bottom shelf) of Festival Foods, Rainbow Foods and Fleet Farm but not at Target or Cub. The Super Washing Soda is at Festival, Rainbow and Cub…DO NOT substitute baking soda, as they are a different compounds.  Borax is available at all of my local stores.  For the oxygen cleaner, any brand should do, I use the generic.  The ingredients and measurements for the blender method:

Fels Naptha Soap, Arm & Hammer Super Washing Soda, 20 Mule Team Borax and Oxygen Cleaner
Fels Naptha Soap, Arm & Hammer Super Washing Soda, 20 Mule Team Borax and Oxygen Cleaner

1 cup Fels Naptha grated, this can be done by hand but I like to use my grater attachment for my mixer, it’s faster.  You could also use a food processor.

1/2 cup Arm & Hammer Super Washing Soda

1/2 cup Borax

1/4 cup Oxygen Cleaner

Add these to the blender and blend.  The blender makes it a fine powder which dissolves easily even in a cold wash. Now that you have a powder, scoop into your storage container and pour the rest (try not to breathe the dust).  To store the powder, I use a plastic container that I used to keep sugar in.  It has a tight fitting lid and is unbreakable.

Grate soap, blend and store!
Grate soap, blend and store in laundry room with 1 T measuring spoon inside.

There should still be roughly two cups of the Fels Naptha soap left, repeat this process 2 times and you are done.  There is a reason I don’t put it all in at once, I almost killed our blender.  If it sounds/smells/looks like your blender is working too hard just split the recipe again, it doesn’t take that much longer.  Besides, you don’t want a dead blender…or maybe you do; I don’t honestly know.

With one batch (using the full bar of soap) I think I get a minimum of 55 loads.  When I make my laundry soap I usually get 3 bars of soap and spend less than 25 minutes making and cleaning up.  Cleanup is easy, everything goes in the dishwasher and all soap residue is washed away.

“But where are the suds??”

One last note, when I first started using this detergent I noticed it does not make any suds…but suds were coming out in the wash tub for about a month.  I presume this was leftover soap residue in our clothes and washing machine.  Gross.  Also, I don’t use this for delicate sweaters…I just use plain oxygen cleaner.

Give it a try.  If it works out, drop me a line.

Cabin Showers

When I was younger, going up to my grandparents cabin was always great.  My sister and I could essentially run wild and free.  Okay, I was never the wild one, but moving on, there were only a few rules: no running on the dock, don’t get lost in the woods and taking a “cabin shower” or bathing in the lake were the only options for getting clean. I was never about to take a bath in the lake, on account of the fish pee…and weeds; lotsa weeds.  You could barely get me out of my inner tube.

My Grandpa Cone’s maximum shower length was two minutes for males and three minutes for the ladies.  As a kid I thought this was impossible!  How could I possibly get clean and wash my hair that fast?

Fast-forward 25 years, it’s 2009.  Chris and I visited the Science Museum of Minnesota this weekend to check out the new Omni Theater movie, “Grand Canyon Adventure” and the special exhibit, “Water.” I have been looking forward to this for a couple of months, you see H2O happens to be my favorite chemical compound, I know quite a lot about it’s chemical properties and not so much about its use around the globe.  At the exhibit I learned more about water than I ever thought possible and I encourage everyone to check it out.  To summarize briefly what I learned at the SMM: if we don’t make some drastic changes we will run out of water. To a Minnesotan it may sound unrealistic, especially since we live in the “Land of 10,000 Lakes.”  However, last year in Atlanta, Georgia water was running out, a dental office there installed an outhouse to help conserve resources.

In our city, a request has been made by local officials to reduce overall water usage to 75 gallons per person per day.  We were informed that using more than the recommended water amounts would result in an  increase cost for us on our quarterly bill as well.  Chris and I checked our water bill and we were over the limit by a lot.  I made a little list of the things we could do to decrease our water consumption: wash only full loads of clothes, keep a pitcher of water in the fridge for drinking, less lawn watering and no more 20 minute showers…That’s when I remembered the “Cabin Shower” theory.

To take a “Cabin Shower” one gets wet and then turns off the water when not rinsing off soap.  I do this three times and the water runs for less than four minutes total.  It’s not the three minute shower that my grandpa thought was possible but an honest effort and a huge improvement on my old ways.

Not only have we reduced our water waste, we are saving money and our not-so-infinite resource.

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