welcome to DEEP GREEN blog!

Greetings! This blog is dedicated to helping you reduce your eco-footprint for personal and planetary benefit.

Although a low-footprint lifestyle is fun and rewarding, it is not always easy, even if you are doing it for your own benefit (for example, to attain financial freedom; to free up your time; to radically simplify your life so you can focus on what really matters to you.) The dominant mainstream culture has waste and hyper-consumerism baked into every layer of life. A person setting out to live light on the earth encounters many obstacles both physical and cultural. (Car-dependent housing developments; unavoidable single-use plastics; buildings designed to require climate control 24-7 … to name just a few.)

That’s where this blog comes in. I’m here to offer you tips, resources, and moral support. The posts aren’t in any particular order; I write about things as they pop into my mind. This blog does have a search tool, which I hope will help you find topics you’re most interested in. If you ever can’t find a topic, please feel free to give me a shout and I will try to dig it up for you.

You could also start by reading my book DEEP GREEN, a concise orderly guide to crafting your own ultra-low-footprint lifestyle. You can read it for free here on this blog; and you can order your own print copy as well. The book was published way back in 2017, and a lot has happened since then! But the basic premise still applies.

Also, I have added a 2023 preface (which is currently available only here online since I didn’t get it done before deciding to make a mini print run of 50 copies for the FRESH Book Festival).

A final note: I don’t post here every day. I might even go weeks or months without posting. Important as writing is to my mission, it’s only one of my channels for actualizing the “Grassroots Green Mobilization.” Whether or not you see new posts on this blog, I am always active and always here for you. You can engage with me on Facebook (DEEP GREEN book by jenny nazak). I’m also on Twitter, YouTube, and Tiktok; look for me under my name on any of those platforms.

Enjoy this blog, and thanks for joining me in the grassroots green mobilization to create a kinder, saner, greener, equitable world!

Sudden impromptu micro yard sale

This is a post I made yesterday.

jenny’s sudden impromptu micro yard-sale! First come first served. No sincere offers refused. (Actually, it’s a FREE “yard sale” lol.)

BTW fun fact: Almost everything here were things I scored from the curbside bounty (Neighbors were throwing away), or purchased secondhand from thrift shop or local online marketplace etc.

It’s great to keep the flow of things going to the next people who will put them fully into use. Around this house, once we stop using something to the point that we even forget we have it, and / or it is simply in the way and hard to stow, it goes!

The bicycles are already spoken for but everything else is available. Update, some of the dishes are moved on to new owners. Air fryer is still available as are the cute seahorse bowl/cups.

Pickup only. jenny’s corner
NOTE I am no longer on messenger.
Please contact me by phone. (Either voice-call or text message is fine.)

PS. Added right here for this blog post: As of yesterday, I officially do not own any bicycles.

One (the one that was too short for me although I loved it’s super simple beach cruiser design) went to a neighbor down the street who will be able to use it, as will her daughter and tenant.

The other (my beautiful single speed fixie that I just couldn’t keep in repair) went to a leader of a local Critical Mass chapter.

But, you might ask, why would I get rid of bicycles? The fact is that without a bicycle shop in the neighborhood, and me not having mechanical skills, And the bicycle shops several miles away abolishing their mobile repair service or not having any in the first place, and the unofficial underground bike repair guy ceasing his operations after finding some steady handyman work out of town, I really don’t have a good way to keep a bicycle in repair.

When I first moved to this neighborhood, the pedicab company where I got a part-time job as a pedicab driver was right down the block, and it was additionally a bicycle repair shop in addition to being our garage. But it closed a few years ago.

None of this is meant to sound whiny. It’s meant to illustrate the challenges for people attempting to get around by foot, bicycle, or bus in a car-centric society where there’s not enough supporting infrastructure. either physically, or socially. Some areas are remarkably socially unsupportive towards pedestrians and cyclists, and this is one such place. And yet there are many many people here who cannot drive, cannot afford to own a car, etc. I work on behalf of those people as well as on behalf of my own needs and wishes.

On the positive side, being almost exclusively on foot has forced me to become more knowledgeable about the bus routes, which is part of my community activist mission.

If I had had a working bicycle the other day instead of walking/jogging the 9 miles from my friends’ place in Ormond by the Sea back to my place, I would not have ever realized how very few bus stops there are above Grenada. (Now, as of March, all bus service above Granada is being eliminated.)

Fixed-route bus service, and the availability of bicycle shops in every neighborhood, are essential in order to have true sustainability of transportation. We have work to do.

Regarding bicycles, I would love to have community bicycle sheds and repair clinics in each neighborhood, where we learn together and maintain a small leak of shared bicycles. With perhaps a membership fee, especially for those of us like me who pretty much have zero mechanical skills. So far my efforts to start something like that haven’t attracted any interest, but you never know when the next person arriving in the neighborhood is somebody who would also want to help create such a community asset.

Can we say goodbye to condiment packets?

A friend and fellow resident of Daytona Beach posted a lament about her favorite restaurant condiment packets at her when she asked for ketchup. Meanwhile condiments were right there in bottles, behind the counter.

Packets don’t allow a person to choose how much of a condiment they want. Also, packets are very wasteful because a lot of product stays stuck inside of the packet.

My response focused on the plastic-trash aspect:

So true! Bring back the ketchup bottle and the mustard bottle, and ditch the packets.

As residents of a coastal town, we see more than our share of plastic trash because it washes up in the water and on the wind.

Public service announcement: Packets are trashy; they trash the beach and the planet because almost all of them end up as trash floating around somewhere.

Let’s start insisting on common sense, bring back the ketchup container and salsa container and mustard container etc. etc. etc.

Also, locals, if you’re just grabbing food to take home, then don’t accept the packets. You already have your condiments at home.

Same with the plastic cutlery and paper napkins. Every bit we say NO to when we don’t need it, is one less bit of trash.

Also, when you have a favorite restaurant or food / drink vendor who lets you use your reusable cup etc., support them and tip them extra! Food and drink taste so much better when we don’t have to generate single-use-plastic trash in order to enjoy our favorite treats.

Oh, and three cheers for those of you who actually carry your own reusable silverware, cloth napkin, and reusable cup. Urban survival belts are a fun and cool and functional element of style.

Citrus peel: A wonderful resource

Many people don’t like to compost citrus peel because it’s fairly resistant to being broken down. But did you know that there are lots of great uses for household citrus peel scraps.

I said the pills from oranges, grapefruit, etc. in bags in the freezer until I have a bunch. I had had a bunch saved up for quite a while and been meaning to finally use it.

Finally got around to taking my stash of frozen citrus peel scraps and starting the process of turning it into the usual wonderful things.

1) Citrus peel gets boiled two or three times and the water gets poured off. I use some of the poured-off water for a tea, and some of it as an ingredient in a natural household cleaner.

The other ingredient in this cleaner is cleaning vinegar which I obtained at a community event when jugs of it was being handed out. I filled up to the top of the curvy part of the wine-bottle with the citrus boil water, and then topped off the rest of the bottle with the lavender-scented cleaning vinegar.

2) Once the multiple boilings are completed (this is to leach the bitterness out of the peel), then I will be boiling the citrus pieces in sugar water, until they are almost transparent at which point they become a yummy sweet treat. Candied citrus peel.

The first couple of boils I did in the solar oven yesterday, as it was nice and sunny. I’m doing the third boil now on the stove-burner because it’s evening and I forgot to stick them in the solar oven today, and I want to finish the project.

The high-temperature boiling-down part with the sugar-water will also be done on the electric stove burner as opposed to in the solar oven. This is because the solar oven is more like a crockpot. Gentle even heat. Wonderful for many things but not for jelly making or candy making per se. (I have made syrups in the solar oven though, so it can be done.)

You can see some pics here on my deep green Facebook page.

#SolarOven #NaturalCleaner #CitrusPeel

Data centers

(Comment I posted in a local citizens group in response to post expressing major opposition to data center proposed for our county.)

OK, I think that if we want to keep using data and search engines etc. as much as we do, it’s going to be hard to prevent stuff like this from happening. That said, some communities have launched lawsuits and may be having some success. Also, even if we don’t have success keeping out a data center, these things have absolutely huge roofs and there is no reason on earth why they can’t be collecting their own rainwater for use in their operations. It would help offset flooding caused by the new construction as well.

Screenshot from NAACP newsletter for your reference. Regarding lawsuits that some communities have launched against data centers for reasons of harm to ecosystems and communities.

PS. Another way to prevent things we don’t want from being built is to reduce the demand such that the business would no longer find it profitable. That could be quite a challenge in this case but not impossible. Every single drop adds up to the ocean.

See this comment here with photos on my DEEP GREEN Facebook page.

PS. One of my favorite examples of making use of a very large factory roof was some thing I read in the book cradle to cradle by McDonough. They made it into sort of a park garden for employees. I also think they were collecting rainwater off of it. We really need to stop regarding the existence of roofs as a rainwater collection service. We kind of look foolish if not outright suicidal by continuing to ignore this.

“Puffy landscaping” mini-festo — 2

I posted a list of these bullet points a while back, but couldn’t remember if I actually had posted them here (turns out I did, back in summer 2024; you can find it under puffy landscaping mini-festo).

Yesterday as I was walking to a downtown destination, I started a list in my mind again, and I like it so I’m posting it here too. It contains several of the same bullet items as the other list, but also some new items, and also some variation on the wording.

Leave the leaves

Prioritize potability (landscaping practices can be very harmful to water quality, or they can be helpful)

Mulch mindfully: veto the (mulch) volcano; swear off the “shredded cheese” (In other words don’t go out of your way to buy dyed mulch when there are many naturally available forms of mulch such as fallen leaves and fallen pine needles)

Cherish the canopy (guard our shade & heat mitigation – only trim trees very sparingly and when absolutely necessary)

Blow off blowing

Mellow out on mowing

Cut back on cutting

Protect their pay (we have to make choices that enable landscaping services to earn good money without degrading the environment)

Cease the ‘cides (stop using pesticides and herbicides)

Secure the sponge

Foster food (growing as much food as possible locally is a must)

Nurture native plants, protect the pollinators

Support all species

Save the palms, don’t shave the palms; stop flipping the bird to mother nature (I swear some of those deeply mutilated palm trees look just like a giant middle finger)

We can’t do someone else’s part, but we can each do our own part!

One of the messages I have consistently strive to convey, largely without success, is the idea that each of us can do our own part regardless of what others are doing.

Can, AND MUST.

Yes, rich people are trashing the planet. Billionaires and private jets yada yada yada.

You and I cannot mitigate of billionaires footprint, or, more to the point, the extremely large consumer footprint of our middle-class friends and neighbors who are REALLY driving the demand via sheer numbers, but that does not exempt us from each doing our own part.

All we can do is what we can do. All each person can do is their share. But we do have to do that share! Nothing exempts us from each doing our share. And the more of us who are striving to do our part, do our bit, the more it will catch on because doing one’s own part will be more normalized.

Whatever your part is, there are no police or government agencies or official measuring stick for that. All you can do is what you can do.

One thing I got wrong in my book is that main stream USA culture defines what school. That’s actually not the case. Rather than saying our dominant culture defines what’s cool, it would be more accurate to say the dominant mainstream USA culture defines what’s normal and necessary.

If you want to help fix things, stop normalizing hyperconsumerism. Instead, through your actions and shares on social media, start to delegitimize hoggish consumption and celebrate thrift and creativity.

There are everyday people right around you who have entire extra houses and cars. Stop celebrating that. There are everyday people right around you who Jetset off to Paris or Dubai for a wedding or their fifth grand-nephew’s soccer pictures. Stop celebrating that. Yes, a big part of doing our part is recognizing what we are socially reinforcing – or not. Social norms are a more powerful influence on the planet than almost any other force.

Building a high-trust society

For the record, my favorite kind of societies, where I feel most comfortable living, are high-trust and low-regulation.

The dominant culture in which most of us reading this now live is the opposite: low-trust and high-regulation.

But how do you build trust? How do you make a more high-trust society. No one can do it alone, but tiny gestures well-placed can add up.

One of what I consider the strongest components of a high-trust society is citizens who insist on speaking directly with each other, instead of letting the media and politicians be our entire mouthpiece for us.

For those of us deeply conditioned and socialized in the dominant mainstream culture, it can be challenging to have discourse across differences and divides, but it’s really the only way to arrive at meaningful solutions.

Small-scale simple things many of us can do to help build a higher-trust society include starting a little free library; saying good morning to people we pass on the street in our neighborhood; offering water to people on a hot day.

Another thing I do is when I have a 24 hour bus pass and I’m not going to end up using it for the whole 24 hours, I’ll find someone to give it to. This morning I actually taped a bus pass to a nearby bus-stop pole, with a note saying “24-hour bus pass good till 11 AM Friday.”

It occurs to me that the benefits of taping that bus pass to a bus-stop pole are

1) out there, it might have greater odds of finding someone who needs it; and

2) even if lots of people who see it don’t need it, it increases trust by conveying the idea that “this is the kind of neighborhood or society we are”; “this is the kind of neighborhood and society where we share extra resources with each other.”

BTW in Permaculture Design, the sharing of a bus pass that would otherwise go unused is an example of one of the three ethics: “sharing surplus.”

(The first two ethics of permaculture design are 1) care of the earth; and 2) care of people and all other living things.)

I did a search on high trust, low regulation society and found some nice chewy links for you guys!

Further Exploration:

• “Is the United States drifting from a high trust society to a low trust society?” (Avinash Saravanan, medium.com) https://medium.com/@asarav/is-the-united-states-drifting-from-a-high-trust-society-to-a-low-trust-society-34db302ab353 “A high trust society is one where most people believe strangers will honor commitments, where institutions are seen as legitimate and fair, and where cooperation extends beyond kinship to broad civic life. … In [low-trust societies], rules multiply because promises alone are not believed. …”

• “How trust affects societies and careers” (Viktor Kyosev, LinkedIn) https://www.linkedin.com/posts/viktorkyosev_im-writing-an-essay-on-high-trust-vs-low-trust-activity-7322166104183689216-kwpG “I’m writing an essay on high-trust vs low-trust cultures. Here are some early notes: …”

• “Economic Fallout from becoming a low trust society” (Analyzing Finance with Nick podcast, YouTube). https://youtu.be/dnXIFWlVjuc?si=auVqJ-bI3M8zhSnb