Monday, March 25, 2013
Sunday, March 24, 2013
Saturday, March 23, 2013
Free Food: Eat Your Weeds
Great photo identification slide show for "weeds". Identify them and then find out if they are edible. See here. See here too.
Weeds have many vitamins and minerals, and they are free for the taking. See here: Five Healthiest Backyard Weeds.
The Forager's Harvest: A Guide to Identifying, Harvesting, and Preparing Edible Wild Plants
Saturday, March 16, 2013
The Longest Sun: American Indian Cultural Studies
Story in Tewa language with subtitles. Tewa is the dying language of Pueblo Indians in northern New Mexico.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Slow Cooking Outside
With found curbside logs from downed trees, leaves, twigs, cardboard boxes, and a little charcoal to get it started, I was able to cook an 11 pound turkey and 10 pounds of chicken outside in my cast iron lidded pot. I found it cooked better after I added rocks up around the pot to keep the heat in(not shown in picture). I made this fire pit with chunks of found concrete and an old oven rack. The bottom is lined with pebbles and smaller concrete chunks.
It took many hours, but while it cooked I was able to clean up and compost all those leaves! ; ) The fresh air and sunshine was nice too.
The turkey turned out moist and delicious! If you have a day to do this, it's fun and produces a great result. You can't leave this like a crock pot and come back. The fire and food must be tended and watched the entire time. It certainly makes me appreciate the labor that goes into cooking on an outdoor fire for a family.
A more efficient and environmentally friendly option would be a rocket stove which maximizes combustion requiring very little fuel.This one is portable, but you can build one too with 16 bricks. Rocket stoves burn without smoke which makes them better for maintaining air quality. That's a project for another day.
It took many hours, but while it cooked I was able to clean up and compost all those leaves! ; ) The fresh air and sunshine was nice too.
The turkey turned out moist and delicious! If you have a day to do this, it's fun and produces a great result. You can't leave this like a crock pot and come back. The fire and food must be tended and watched the entire time. It certainly makes me appreciate the labor that goes into cooking on an outdoor fire for a family.
A more efficient and environmentally friendly option would be a rocket stove which maximizes combustion requiring very little fuel.This one is portable, but you can build one too with 16 bricks. Rocket stoves burn without smoke which makes them better for maintaining air quality. That's a project for another day.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Monday, March 11, 2013
Hugelkultur Low Irrigation Garden Progress
Inexpensive Powder Room Remodel Progress
We ripped out the tile instead of keeping it. It was too difficult to figure out how to marry the concrete that needed to be poured in the area of the old vanity with the existing tile floor. We are going to lay concrete over the entire floor rather than skim coating over the tile and filling in a small area.
A bag of concrete was five dollars, and we will probably need two 80 pound bags. I also got a black color additive for a few dollars. We'll need to purchase a concrete sealer as well.
Other plans include paint for the wall, making a faux concrete floating counter with the existing sink, and the addition of a large mirror after the hole in the wall where the medicine cabinet was is filled.
We were quoted $900.00 for the remodel of our powder room, so this is by far a much less expensive way to go.
A bag of concrete was five dollars, and we will probably need two 80 pound bags. I also got a black color additive for a few dollars. We'll need to purchase a concrete sealer as well.
Other plans include paint for the wall, making a faux concrete floating counter with the existing sink, and the addition of a large mirror after the hole in the wall where the medicine cabinet was is filled.
We were quoted $900.00 for the remodel of our powder room, so this is by far a much less expensive way to go.
Friday, March 08, 2013
Thursday, March 07, 2013
Wise Old Owl Vintage Bookmark
Old book plate which would make a cute bookmark!
Source: aquieterstorm.tumblr.com via Alexandra on Pinterest
Wednesday, March 06, 2013
Frugal DIY Concrete Overlay for Floors and Countertops
We are remodeling our downstairs powder room and decided to try a skim coat of concrete over the existing older cracked tile. The substrate is solid, the tiles are just old, 40+ years old. We took out the vanity, sink, and mirror. I kind of like the old sink, so I'll use the old counter off the vanity as a template, cut out some new MDF board, and skim coat it with concrete. The vanity could not be saved; it was falling apart from water damage and old age.
The concrete that we plan to use is a resurfacing polymer concrete that will resist cracking. You can't use acid stain with this, but can add color.
I plan to use products from a big box store: a concrete resurfacer and a concrete bonding agent, sold by the gallon.
This is will be a very inexpensive remodel with nice results. I'll share when we are done.
Here's a video on how to do the floor:
The concrete that we plan to use is a resurfacing polymer concrete that will resist cracking. You can't use acid stain with this, but can add color.
I plan to use products from a big box store: a concrete resurfacer and a concrete bonding agent, sold by the gallon.
This is will be a very inexpensive remodel with nice results. I'll share when we are done.
Here's a video on how to do the floor:
And one for counter tops:
Monday, March 04, 2013
Healthy Make-And-Go Refrigerator Oatmeal Recipes
Friday, March 01, 2013
Hugelkultur Low or No Irrigation Garden Beds
"Hugelkultur is a German term that roughly translates to “mound culture”. The hugelkultur gardening method has been used in Eastern Europe for centuries and is essentially a sheet-composting method that involves burying woody debris (logs, branches, sticks) and other organic matter under a mound of earth. This gardening method mimics nutrient cycling that occurs in nature. When trees and branches fall to the floor of a forest, they act like a sponge as they decay. That sponge-like property allows the wood to soak up rainfall and then release it slowly into the soil use by surrounding plants. Hugelkultur beds are designed to take advantage of this natural water-retention cycle – so much so that some gardeners who use this method claim they never water at all." Read more here.
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