Welcome!

  • The little community radio show that assumes we all want to change our lives for the planet, and aren't sure where to start, and can't afford expensive alternatives.

  • For twelve weeks, I'll take something you think you may never give up and weigh the alternatives. They are easier than you realise!

  • If maybe at the end of the show, you think more seriously about your next purchase, my job is done.

  • Whether humanity is on the verge of self destruction or not, trying new things is a great experiment! You'll learn about yourself, a process that never ends.

  • Theres a lot to say for knowing that at the end of the day, you'll be a little less reliant on an unstable economy/world/etc. and a little more reliant on yourself. Even if you don't get as far into sustainable living as others, every option presented today stimulates your local economy, keeping more money here where it's needed.

Monday, June 30, 2008

JULY 1st - VINEGAR!

I asked members of the show's Facebook group to pass on their tips for green cleaning. There was alot of overlap, and vinegar/baking soda were mentioned a lot. I decided to turn this weeks show into an homage to vinegar in celebration of all the things it can replace!

Finding links for green cleaning was the easiest thing I've ever done. Lots of people out there are looking to save cash (eco-fan or not) and green cleaning does a great job of that. I'm spending the show reading off of the Good Human website because it's list was the most extensive.

THE STARS OF ECO-HOME CLEANING:

  • Vinegar!
  • Warm Water
  • Baking Soda
  • Borax
  • Lemon & Lemon Juice
  • Lime & Lime juice
  • Salt
  • Olive Oil

*note that none of these are poisonous (but children should stay away from borax)!
One Person's experience with using vinegar for the first time.

Below are the eco-home tips that The Good Human didn't cover:

  • Clothes too destroyed for donation? Cut them up into rags!
  • Keep old toothbrushes after they're no good for your mouth, they are still good for getting into nooks and crannies in your dishes, or nick knacks.
  • Avoid wall-to-wall carpeting at all costs! Once you have it you are doomed to needing a working vacuum cleaner. Not to mentions that all the ways to clean hard surfaces, don't require electricity!
  • Cornstarch – Not only is it good for thickening sauces, but also it also absorbs oil and grease.
  • Isopropyl Alcohol – Great to use as a disinfectant when added to water, but use sparingly around children.
  • Optimize Your Fridge:
    • Refrigerators are major energy consumers, but there are ways you can fine-tune your fridge without replacing it. Defrost the freezer regularly, keeping frost levels under 6mm. Keep your fridge full so that less air escapes when you open it - but don't fill it so much that circulation is blocked altogether. Don't keep the fridge cooler than is necessary. Clean the coils behind the fridge and the grill below the doors about four times a year.
  • Laundry Tips
    • For stains, try soaking fabrics in water mixed with one of the following: Borax, lemon juice, hydrogen peroxide, or white vinegar.
    • For fabric softening, add a quarter cup of baking soda to the wash cycle.
    • For static cling, add a quarter cup of white vinegar to the wash water.
    • To soften water, use a soap-based, rather than detergent-based, cleaner.
    • Buy laundry products in containers that are recyclable.
    • Still got static cling? Try a ball of aluminum foil in the dryer. It works!
  • Indoor Climate Control:
    • Curtains and window coverings are your best friend in the summer.
    • Clear plastic, and white sheets are your best friend in the winter.
    • Use floor length curtains around the bottom of your stairs to keep the top floor from overheating, and the main floor from over cooling.
  • Floors:
    • Hempseed oil and beeswax are fantastic non-toxic, pure and safe finishing oils that provide clean coatings as well as protect wood grains and painted surfaces. Both can be used for walls, decks, furniture, antiques, and floors. They’re safe to use on your children’s wooden toys, cutting boards, and butchers block countertops!
    • Here’s a great recipes to add to your home collection: 1/8 cup hemp oil (olive oil or vegetable oil works just as well); 1 tbsp vinegar; 1 tbsp vodka; and try grading some beeswax into the mix – this will give you sparkling floors!
  • BBQ: try creating a paste of baking soda and water for your barbecue or grill, soak the surface overnight and then scrub away the next day with a strong, coarse sponge.
  • Hand Soap Recipe:
    • Supplies

    • 4 oz. bar of natural soap
    • Grater
    • 1 gallon of distilled water
    • 1 big pot
    • Hand mixer

Here are the steps, summarized from Suite 101:

  1. Grate your bar of soap.
  2. Heat the water just enough to steam.
  3. Add the grated soap to the water.
  4. Take the mixture off of the heat, and let it sit for 15 minutes.
  5. Blend the mixture, with a hand mixer if you have one.
  6. Let it sit overnight.
  7. Make sure the mixture is completely blended. If not, blend again, and let it sit. Then, blend again.
  8. Pour it into an olive oil bottle and wash your hands!
Artist Links:
The Gertrudes
Beirut
Wendy McNeill
The Ghost Bees
The Fugitives

Thanks to Stephanein and Erica for their enthusiastic input this week! Lets have a soap-making party!


Friday, June 20, 2008

JUNE 24th - SEAFOOD

Sorry for the total lack of post last week.
Alot has been going on leading up to an important trip this week.
I hope you enjoy the pre-recording and my first podcast!

Bad Seafood links:

Sustainable Seafood links:
Local Fish Links:
What can I do?
  • Try to eat as much local fish as possible, avoid imported sea food unless you are visiting the coast.
  • Fish only with a licence! This helps the MNR know exactly how much fishing is going on, and they can make accurate limits and predictions for the following year.
  • Ask YOUR favourite sea food restaurant where everything comes from. If they don't know or if it is fished in an unsustainable way, it is best to take caution's side and stay away.
  • Eat Bi-valves! Mussels, scallops, oysters, cockles and clams grow like mad, and are almost totally harvested in a sustainable way.
  • Read the Good Fish Guide print out a copy and keep it in mind while making your selection.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

June 8th - CHOCOLATE


Long story short on chocolate:
  • It has a long, messy history of slavery, despair, and pain.
  • Human/child trafficking in the chocolate industry still happens today. (article)(actual report)
  • No easily-available chocolate is fair trade. (another article)
  • If you already buy higher end-chocolate, the price difference for fair trade is very close.
  • Cocoa travels a LONG WAY to get to your lips!
  • Most organic chocolate is fair trade.
  • Not all fair-trade chocolate is organic.
  • Eating less chocolate can help you afford fair-trade.
  • You gotta taste Single-origin anything!
Good Chocolate Reads:

Fair Trade Co-op and Union Chocolate Links:


Organic Chocolate Links:
(All of these, with the exception of SOMA are available at The Bulk Zone, and all health food store in town!)

Dagoba Chocolate
Endangered Species Chocolate
SOMA
Cocoa Camino




WHOA:
Another make-me-sustainable Blog!
Green is Sexy


ARTIST LINKS.......
on the way!

Monday, June 2, 2008

June 2nd - Fast Food

Sweet Pea Home Catering (locally made frozen meals)

Artist Links:

Sybris
White Hinterland
Away Ri'o!
Yael Wand
The Gertrudes
KoRn
Maurice Jarre
Peter Nevland

Some more thoughts on growing your own food...and fast!
It takes a lot of work. Its very true that most people don't even have the time to cook for themselves nevermind tend their own garden . I have taken that into account in listing my alternatives. The great thing about the Farmers markets is that about half of it is full of pre-made dishes. For example, I regularly buy these monster cookies full of oats, flax and other healthy grains for breakfast. For lunch, I can pre-buy for the week, all the quesadillas, spring rolls, thai noodles, mini meat pies, and soups that I feel like eating for lunch throughout the week. Depending on what I get, the meals work out to $1.50-3.00 each. Not everyone can afford to even spend that per meal, so on nights that I take the time to make a good dinner I make at least twice what what we're going to eat that night and pre-pack the lunches for later that week. Its not a perfect system. Sometimes you forget to bring food, sleep in and miss the market, or what you want to buy from the market is sold out that week. What does that have to do with sustainable living? Thats the way life goes no matter what you're buying. Long story short; don't have time for good food? Pay someone at the market to do it for you!
The advantage of having the odd house plant that grows your own ingredients, is how little effort goes into them. Of course, you need the initial afternoon mucking around with pots and soil, but after that, its simply a matter of watering, and maybe adding the occasional fertilizer every now and then. Once certain plants are established (like the chili pepper) they just keep on putting out edible goodness as long as you don't take too much. Note the emphasis on not taking too much. The wee little basil plant in a house of bruscetta fanatics could be a good metaphor for resources and luxury-ridden developed nations. We all want bruscetta tonight, and our basil is down to the last 3 leaves. It will take at least four to sate our hunger. uh oh.

So here we are figuring who is going to get bruschetta and who isn't. Suddenly the cost of basil sky rockets and no one in the household can figure out why. So lets all learn how to only take our share using this simple little exercise of growing our favourite herbs in our window sill and seeing if we can keep it alive while still eating it at the same time.