MaryJanesFarm | Farm Life

Simple Solutions for Everyday Organic

In December 1999, a newspaper reporter from Washington called. He was writing a review of the book Seven Wonders: Everyday Things for a Healthier Planet by John C. Ryan. Michael Guilfoil of the The Spokesman Review newspaper asked me if I had my own “seven wonders.” The story that ensued was headlined “Simple Solutions.” Here, then, is the continuation of that story. Each issue of MaryJanesFarm will feature in detail new solutions, and will give you all the information you need to make them your own.

   

    Attitude of Gratitude Solutions:

  • Seven Ways to Save Water (pdf file)
    Conserving water when I worked for the Forest Service on a fire lookout tower wasn’t a choice, it was a requirement. Fetching water by hand taught me in no uncertain terms how to make every drop count. I used my bath water to wash my clothes by hand, then I cleaned with it, and after that, I watered my garden with it. Up until the time my children were teenagers, I washed our clothes in a wringer washing machine parked next to our bathtub because I could use a bucket to transfer the still warm, soapy bath water into the wringer’s tub to give our clothes a bath. If you want a lesson in gratitude, haul all the water you’ll need in a week. The invention of piped water improved our lives, but it also allows us to take water for granted.

    This issue’s seven solutions came from my friend, Gail Taber, a water saver extraordinaire. Gail says, “My household water conservation began simply, with a five-gallon bucket by the bathtub. One morning, after watching gallons of fresh, clean water go down the drain while waiting for warm water to arrive for my shower, I decided to capture and reuse this precious resource. Next came a kitchen sink water bucket to save water from rinsed or cooked vegetables and fruits. I was stunned to see the amount of water that had previously gone down the drain. My kitchen conservation system now consists of two buckets: one for ‘pre-use water,’ or water collected directly from the tap while rinsing or waiting for warm water, and one for ‘re-use water,’ like water from boiling pasta or corn on the cob.” Following are seven ways Gail puts her water-saving efforts to use. If you have young children in the house, get them involved too, by creating a family “bucket brigade.” Each child can have their own color-coded bucket and an assigned task for using their saved water.

Lay of the Land Solutions:

  • Seven Ways to Revitalize with Simple Work (pdf file)
    Sometimes the daily grind has a way of grinding us to a halt. With work, kids, and never-ending to-do lists, we’re so busy that when we do get a precious moment of quiet, we often feel like we’ve forgotten how to embrace unbridled freedom. And so we tend to turn to technology for much-needed relaxation. Televisions, telephones, the Internet, and e-mail have become our “comfort” zones—the paths of least resistance. But, the truth is, technological timeouts can be more taxing than relaxing, leaving us unfulfilled and even more scattered. I’m no exception. My spare moments are few and far between, but when one surprises me, it’s hard to stop my head from spinning. I’ve never been big on television, but it takes discipline to disconnect from my laptop! The trick I use to wind down and get grounded again is simple hands-on work. I credit my mother for teaching me this vital life skill. Back when the only blackberries we knew grew plump and purple on the bush, I remember watching Mom’s steady hands as she knitted, folded, kneaded, and scrubbed. These were the tasks that needed doing in order to keep a home running smoothly, but she was rarely harried, and stress was just a kink that was worked out by hand.

    Today, we can still unwind by unplugging and putting our hands to good use. There’s something about completing straightforward tasks with concrete results that changes brain chemistry for the better. By dedicating full focus to detail and making each movement a meditation, women like me are discovering that we can stitch away stresses, mop up life’s grit, and hang the hustle-and-bustle out to dry. So shut off the TV, the computer, and the chaos, and get ready to recharge. Here are some down-to-earth ideas from the women on my website chatroom (www.maryjanesfarm.org/snitz) who are finding renewed vitality in life’s simplest tasks.

Sentimental Journeys Solutions:

  • Seven Steps for Lowering Your Grocery Bill (pdf file)
    The part of your budget that has the most flexibility is often the dollars you spend on food. If you’re feeling the pinch in this challenging economic climate, don’t trade quality for quantity—with my simple solutions, your savings are in the bag.

Garden Secrets Solutions:

  • Seven Ways to “Green” Your Spring Cleaning (pdf file)
    Ah, the balmy tickle of spring is in the air. Time to throw open your windows and beat that dust from your rugs! Relishing the ritual of spring cleaning is a sure way to start fresh.

Things We Love Solutions:

  • Seven Ways to Tap into Your Own Brilliance (pdf file)
    Ready to connect with your inner brilliance? The secret recipe for discovering your innate ability to shine is simple: Take a cup of curiosity, add a pinch of pampering, simmer to satisfaction, and then savor the inspiration that springs to life.

Old Fashioned Christmas Solutions:

  • Seven Resolutions for a Green New Year (pdf file)
    There’s something about a new year that emboldens us to reinvent our lives. So with 2010 fast approaching, it’s the perfect time to muster good intentions and gear up for the opportunity to “go green.”

Tried-n-True Solutions:

  • Seven Ways to Celebrate Food (pdf file)
    To eat is human; to embrace the art of carefully prepared food is divine! When imbued with love, even the simplest meal can nurture like nothing else. Let’s celebrate food at its finest.

Makin’ Hay Solutions:

  • Seven Ways to Preserve the Harvest (pdf file)
    My family of seven grew enough produce on less than an acre of ground to feed us each year, but since most of the produce came ready at the same time (summer and autumn), we preserved it to extend our bounty.

Plum-Easy Solutions:

  • Seven Ways to Switch to an Organic Lifestyle (pdf file)
    Organic living encompasses so much more than just food choices. With all of the chemicals creeping into our homes daily, it’s important to find natural alternatives. Why? Because organic is clean, vibrant, and healthy—it keeps us young! And it all begins with agricultural practices that are gentler on the environment. So, here are seven simple ways to make a full-spectrum switch.

Glamour Camping Solutions:

  • Seven Ways to Go Wild (pdf file)
    Even if it’s a settee on the porch, we need it—gotta have it. The wild, that is. Know it, grow it, show it—just let it out.

Simply Bee Solutions:

  • Seven Ways to Help Our Pollinators (pdf file)
    The plight of the European honeybee has garnered the public’s attention largely because of its crucial role as a crop pollinator. Native bees may not make honey, but they do pollinate, along with bumblebees, beetles, birds, butterflies, and moths—even wasps, flies, and mosquitoes. Wild pollinator populations are also on the decline due to loss of healthy habitat in our overcrowded world. You can do your part to help these other pollinators pick up the slack.

Live to Give Solutions:

  • Seven Ways to Give (pdf file)
    ‘Tis the season for generosity, and the spirit is catching. When others share their harvests, we get inspired to do the same. A wonderful thing to pass around, isn’t it? If you’d like to donate a bit of your bounty to a worthy cause, here are seven wondrous ways to share.

Ladyslipper Solutions:

  • Seven Ways to Lift Your Spirits (pdf file)
    The inevitable bumps and rough patches that life dishes out can be smoothed out by incorporating a few simple habits into your daily routine—a kiss here, a care there, better food NOW ... flavored with a bit of shopping and creative make-do! Here are my favorite seven salvations.

Raising Jane Solutions:

  • Make It Do Or Do Without (pdf file)
    Momma said it best: “Make it do or do without.” I’ll give you lots of ideas for the modern-day “3 Rs” (Reduce, Reuse, Recycle). But if you’re finally ready to give that old thing a new home, you can add a new R to your to-do’s: Recirculate! Here are seven ways to recirculate. Remember, one woman’s trash just might be another woman’s treasure!

She's a Keeper Solution:

  • Be a Discard Diehard! (pdf file)
    Treasures await you! In this issue, you’ll find ideas and instructions for lots of make-do, can-do, re-do projects!
    • “BeTogether” and celebrate with handmade pinkeepers, picnic fare, and games ...
    • “BeGuiled” by pretty pillows, curtains, doilies, aprons, and more ...
    • “BeDecked” with outdoor planters, and wind chimes and more made from discarded silverware ...
    • “BeJeweled” with button bouquets and jewelry ideas ...
    • “BeLoved” when you adopt or make a hand-did doll ...

Artists in Aprons Solution:

  • Rags to Riches(pdf file)
    If you don’t have a bag, basket, or bin set aside exclusively for rags, it’s never too late to discover their many uses—everything from holding up your up-do to piecing together an heirloom quilt. Had you asked my mother about her stash of rags, she would have told you it was akin to having money in the bank. Taught to value rags by my mother, I never feel poor when I can dip into a bin of rags ... oh, the textures, the colors, the possibilities!! ... a little something for my hair, a “ribbon” for a jar of flowers, a tiny bit of yellow for a daffodil. Once you decide to value and collect rags, you’ve entered the soul-satisfying world of farmer-girl make-do!

Farm Kitchen Solution:

  • Mother of Invention
    For rural women, necessity is the mother of invention. Being imaginative and making-do is just part of the job. Actually, it is the job. It comes with the territory. Not only are stores sometimes hours away, but frittering away money on things you can make yourself will most certainly run a farm short of money.

No Place Like Home Solution:

  • Root Cellars
    My root cellar was built around 1910. In it now are potatoes, beets, parsnips, sunchokes, carrots and cabbage. It’s an easy, “free” way to refrigerate food.

Handful Solution:

  • Hand Pumps
    Last summer, I contacted the original 1800s company that made hand water pumps. They were about to quit when Y2K brought them a surge of orders. If the eletricity goes out, I can walk to my pump and with 15 easy strokes, a stream of water from 400 feet underground spews out of the spout.

Plateful Solution:

  • Sauerkraut and Kimchi
    Sauerkraut and kimchi (pickled cabbage) are family staples. I make them in five-gallon crocks. I chop or shred vegetables, add a bit of dry salt and cover them for six weeks. Fermented vegetables aid in digestion, and they’re very tasty.

Shoulder to the Wheel Solution:

  • Lawn Alternatives
    As an adult, I’ve never had a lawn. Americans spend about a billion hours a year caring for lawns, and apply 67 million pounds of pesticides. When my grandpa moved to the city, he amused his neighbors by turning his front yard into a vegetable and flower garden. Early one morning, when he was around 85, he fell over while picking beans and died in his beloved patch of food and flowers. What a nicer way to go than behind a gas mower!

The Art of the Egg Issue Solution:

  • Hand-Powered Kitchen Duty
    I use a hand vegetable mill to grate or slice all of our cheese, potatoes, carrots — even shelled walnuts. It’s permanently mounted in my kitchen and has four different attachments. It’s faster and easier than an electric grinder. And it’s a great way to involve kids in the kitchen.

Backcountry Food Issue Solution:

  • Treadle Sewing Machines
    I come from a family of seamstresses. When I left home, my mother purchased a new electric sewing machine for me. Within a year, I sold it and switched to a Singer treadle machine. I’ve reupholstered couches with my treadle, sewn sleeping bags, made car seat covers and, of course, clothes. You can’t beat the stitch and reliability of a treadle.

Premiére Issue Solution:

  • Wooden Drying Racks
    I’ve never owned an electric or gas clothes dryer. But I have a beautiful collection of wooden racks. Over the years I’ve found them in antique stores, or purchased them new from an Amish catalogue. Laundry is a religion for me. I love it when I’m all caught up. I love it when I have a bunch to do. I love the smell and repetitive reward of laundry.

 


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