Micro Laundry Setup; Hot-Water Thrift

Hi everyone! Just thought I’d share a snippet of my routine around laundry; hot-water use.

I have repurposed a wide-mouth plastic jar, which originally contained salty snacks, as a micro “washing-machine” for very small items. (“Small items” could be napkins, handkerchiefs, a pair or two of underwear. The other day it was a week’s worth of toilet-cloth squares. BTW I have found the best source of toilet-cloth squares is old bedsheets that have become too worn-out, such as having holes in them etc. The worn-outness gives them a nice soft texture that makes them ideal for TC.)

For washing, I use regular hand-soap, and sometimes baking soda with it for extra oomph. The other day I used part of a detergent pod that had been left by some past housemate. (The pods are super purple in color, really turn the water purple, and have a strong “artificial fragrance” smell even though I use just a portion of the pod! To be honest, I really don’t like artificial scents of any kind — and I know a lot of you are very allergic or otherwise sensitive to same. I’m looking forward to when the little stash of pods is used up. There’s actually only a pod and a half left; if it were more, I’d really feel a wish to get rid of them. Would probably give to a neighbor or something.)

Water temp: Sometimes I use just cold water; sometimes I add a bit of hot water (from the electric kettle that I typically boil in the morning) to make warm water.

Kettle: Any hot water from the electric kettle that’s not used right away for my morning coffee, or to add to the laundry or dish-washing tub, goes into a thermos so I have very-warm water for 24 hours without needing to boil another batch. The thermos is an old-fashioned metal one I bought for almost nothing at a yard sale. It looks cool and works great!!

The couple of liters of water I boil in the kettle are almost always the only hot water I need all day. Many times I don’t even need that much!

Once the laundry water cools, it can go outdoors around the shrubs, mulch-pile, etc.

Want to see photos? Visit the corresponding post on my DEEP GREEN Facebook page. (In case you are wondering why I don’t post photos here — I used to occasionally in the past, but have stopped — there are multiple reasons. First, I’m trying to keep this site as low-bandwidth as possible, not only to make it easy for anyone to load regardless of the quality of their internet connection, but also to keep my “online footprint” to a minimum by only posting photos in one location (usually Facebook or Twitter). Servers use significant bandwidth, and I’m trying to do my part to minimize our collective footprint there.

Also, I want to help you strengthen your mind’s eye. Being able to visualize from a written description is a valuable skill. (That said, I don’t wanna torture you, which is why I include a link to the FB post with photos.)

And finally, esteemed readers, I am trying to encourage you to engage in “inter-platform travel.” If you are willing to follow me on multiple channels, it greatly multiplies the quality and quantity of valuable resources I’m able to share with you.

Enjoy your day! And when in doubt, use the smallest container possible for the job you want to do — be it washing clothes or heating water or whatever!

Why Take a PDC?

Someone in one of the online permie groups* shared this article from PermacultureNews.org, about why one might want to take a Permaculture Design Certificate course.

An excerpt from the article by Jonathon Engels:

The concepts within permaculture design change the way you see the world. Looking from the window on a bus ride or walking through the park, the landscape becomes this vibrant piece of the planet thirsty for life. You’ll want to design it. You’ll want to fix mistakes you see in lawns and houses. You’ll have this enrapturing understanding of what trees, animals, streets, machines, and corporations are doing.

Rather than giving you a petition to sign or senator to call, as we see at the end of life-altering documentaries, permaculture texts give a blueprint for how to start making changes at home. In fact, they almost demand that you do so.

And my own experiene: I took my first PDC in 2005. Same as many other people who have taken Permaculture Design Certificate courses, I had a profound shift. For me, it was so profound that I immediately knew I’d found “what I wanted to do for real.” I immediately started a new career, helping my local permaculture teachers publicize and fill their classes. I also have co-taught parts of PDCs over the years.

AND — over the years, I have been a student at multiple PDCs, including ones that I helped organize. Each one brought me different layers of awareness and practical application, and each one formed its own community — and I still keep in touch with at least some of the fellow students from each class. We form a multi-layered, geographically decentralized network of resilience, shared skills, and emotional support.

Currently I am taking my fifth PDC! The online experience is very powerful and introduces a whole new dimension. The community I’ve met through the Transformative Adventures PDC feels like some sort of deep cosmic tribe. Soul-puppies, I call us!

And, I’m really looking forward to participating in the online PDC from my fellow Floridians at Grow Permaculture as well!

All of the time and money I’ve invested in PDCs and other non-mainstream education (most notably consciousness training) has come back to me many thousand-fold. Monetarily, AND socially. (And I consider the social capital far more valuable and durable than the monetary ROI, tho I certainly recognize the need for that monetary ROI in our current society!)

* Permaculture Money, Livelihoods, and Society via Transformative Adventures — that Facebook group I’m constantly raving about lately. It’s great to see so many of you joining the rich community we are weaving there!

Our Lives Have “Already Been Designed”

Extremely astute and soulful observation from David at Raptitude (he’s one of my perennial favorites in the realm of mindfulness and mental wellness and “being human”; I often quote him on this blog):

But the 8-hour workday is too profitable for big business, not because of the amount of work people get done in eight hours (the average office worker gets less than three hours of actual work done in 8 hours) but because it makes for such a purchase-happy public. Keeping free time scarce means people pay a lot more for convenience, gratification, and any other relief they can buy. It keeps them watching television, and its commercials. It keeps them unambitious outside of work.

We’ve been led into a culture that has been engineered to leave us tired, hungry for indulgence, willing to pay a lot for convenience and entertainment, and most importantly, vaguely dissatisfied with our lives so that we continue wanting things we don’t have. We buy so much because it always seems like something is still missing.

And, my own add-on to David’s train of thought: AND, we pay the airline industry and hotels etc lots of money for “vacation” because we have built insanely hectic, noisy lives and a (non)-culture that we need to “escape” from. In the process of our invasion, we degrade ecosystems and economies and culture in other people’s lands too.

And – our lives may already have been designed. But we can take charge, and redesign them.

All of this is why I’m so passionate about leading a low-footprint, low-financial-overhead life, and helping you do the same. Not only does it reduce the burden on earth’s ecosystems, but also it gives us all more self-determination over my time and energy. Space to think and create, and be the humans we want to see in the world!

Further Exploration:

• Read David at Raptitude dot com’s full post “Your Lifestyle Has Already Been Designed“; it is an absolute gem, as his posts always are! My quote above is just the tip of the iceberg of its wonderfulness. He goes into many related topics such as why he spent far less money while backpack-traveling the world for months than he does at home, and enjoyed a better quality of life to boot.

• Join a group of people who are taking charge of redesigning our lives, and helping others do the same! Taking back our agency; changing the drab and soulless reality we have been enduring. It’s that Transformative Adventures group on Facebook that I keep telling you about! Several of you have already recently joined us over there, and I look forward to seeing more of you! Type into the Facebook search field “Permaculture Money, Livelihoods and Society via Transformative Adventures.” Sorry I don’t seem to be able to get a link for you to just click on, but the group is well worth that initial investment of your typing labor! The work you deep-down long to do most can energize you, revitalize your community, and help the planet.

Jars and Bottles of Different Widths

Jars and bottles come in so many shapes and sizes. Short; tall; narrow-mouthed; wide-mouthed.

I have always liked to collect and save certain bottles (used mason jars because they are super handy and versatile, and the wide mouth makes them easy to wash; used wine and liquor bottles because they are often pretty, as well as handy for using as water bottles around the house; used salad-dressing bottles for mixing and dispensing my own salad dressing, since I dislike most store-bought salad dressing).

But it wasn’t until I got several months into my latest experiment of living without a fridge that it occurred to me that narrow-mouth containers are better at delaying spoilage (which I assume is because the narrow mouth reduces the surface area of the contents that’s exposed to air).

There is a tradeoff, however. Narrow-mouthed containers are much harder to clean, and also, they are not suitable for storing any substance that’s too thick and not easy to pour. (Way back in the 1960s-70s, Heinz ketchup based an entire ad campaign on this concept, that its product is hard to pour — presumably because it’s yummy and thick, not runny and thin.)

Glass containers are much easier to wash than plastic ones. I try to avoid storing dairy or anything else with much fat content in a plastic container. On the other hand, plastic containers are non-shattering and are much lighter in weight, making them great for picnics, travel, and errands.

If you want to see some super pretty and cool-shaped bottles, check out Damiana liqueur, Ocean organic vodka, and Porfidio tequila bottles. (The cactus sticking up stalagmite-like inside the bottle, like a mini desert-in-a-bottle, is just way super cool.)

Speaking of containers, the other week I went to get a dozen donuts for a friend’s birthday celebration. (Public-health note: There were just five of us in the party, and we met outdoors in a park by the beach.)

I went to the donut shop by bicycle. When I got the box, I realized something that I should have remembered from seeing many other dozen-donut boxes: The box was very wide and flat, which would make it impossible to carry while riding my bike. So, I ended up having to walk with the donut box in one hand and pushing the bike with the other hand, a distance of about a mile to the park.

If memory from the olden days serves me, a box of a dozen donuts used to be shaped more like a shoebox, making it much easier to carry. The donuts would be lined up sideways, which of course meant sometimes the toppings would get smeared.

I suppose the wide flat boxes were developed as an improvement to eliminate smeared toppings and allow prettier presentation of the donuts. But in making that improvement, the designers of donut-boxes created a box that (unless you happen to have super phenomenal balance and coordination) would be hard to carry any distance by hand or on a bicycle. Which probably didn’t seem like a big deal to the package design team, or didn’t even cross their minds, because the default assumption in the USA is that “people are getting around by car.”

(A longwinded tale about something that’s trivial on the surface but ended up creating food for thought.)

How about you: Are there any jars or bottles, or boxes or other containers, that you particularly love for their color, shape, or other qualities? And are there any containers you find extremely inconvenient?

Further Exploration:

• Fridgeless living: I’m not suggesting anyone needs to live without a fridge in order to be “green.” Refrigeration makes life a lot easier and in many cases safer. However, I like to push the envelope in my own life, as the findings are potentially useful for disaster-preparedness, freedom from sudden huge repair bills, and so on. Here is the page of search results from this blog, showing my posts that refer to my adventures in fridgeless living. My first such experiment was over a decade ago, when I lived without a fridge for a summer in Austin. My current experiment is my longest so far, about a year and a half and counting.

When You Can’t Get Volunteers

Starting a list of suggestions, in response to things I’ve seen in my community with nonprofits, citizen advisory boards, neighborhood association groups, grassroots organizations, and others.

• If no one wants to do it, maybe it doesn’t need to be done. Look into streamlining your processes and procedures. Eliminate unnecessary work.

• A whole separate category of unnecessary work is in-person meetings. Of all the real silver linings of the pandemic, the popularization of Zoom and other online platforms is high on the list. Keep using the vast array of freely available technology for meeting virtually (why would we stop, now that the gate has been opened!); save people including yourself time, money, and effort (while reducing carbon footprint).

• Maybe the work you’re asking volunteers to do is work that needs to be compensated in some way.

• Compensation can be money (or a gift card or similar), but think of compensation in wider terms as well. If someone has a stake in your organization or issue, they are in a sense getting paid to volunteer. Example: business bigwigs happy to serve on an advisory board related to downtown development. By serving on the board they are protecting and advancing their financial interests. Another example: If I volunteer to work a shift at the plant sale of our local native plant society, I’m getting “paid” because the work they are doing is supporting my occupation as a sustainability educator and permaculture-landscaping consultant. Also, it’s inherently delightful to be outdoors surrounded by beautiful plants.

• Which brings me to another point: If you’re having trouble attracting volunteers, add elements of fun and beauty to the work.

• Reach wider; don’t just keep tapping the “usual suspects” you know off the top of your head. “Board fatigue” is real.

• If you’re trying to get people to do work you’re not willing to do yourself, ask yourself why that is. Maybe this part of the work needs to be cut, streamlined, re-thought. For instance, if no one is willing to take detailed notes of a meeting, maybe you don’t need notes.

• As a rule, if you are starting an organization, don’t ask other people to do work you’re not willing to do yourself. It’s your organization; create it in the shape you want from the start. This is a version of the Golden Rule: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.

• For nonprofits: If compliance with your nonprofit status requires more labor than you are able to find volunteers for, maybe you don’t need to be a nonprofit.

• If you yourself are getting paid (or seeking to get paid), but are looking to volunteers to support your organization, take a good long hard think about that.

• Citizens’ advisory boards: Don’t ask people to show up and give of their time if their ideas aren’t going to be listened to or taken seriously. These days it’s very easy for people to get their ideas out there via email, social media, etc., and a lot of government officials are making an effort to be more accessible. If you’re asking people to serve on an advisory board, they need some assurance that they will have a bigger impact by serving on this board than by simply communicating from the comfort of their own home, on their own time.

• But really my big tip is always, When in doubt, cut it out! Eliminate excess labor; convoluted processes; meetings about meetings; etc. Organizations that perennially have trouble attracting volunteers (which unfortunately is many volunteer-based organizations I know) are unsustainable. They suck resources and energy. If you’re having trouble attracting volunteers, stop fighting against the current, and instead look for the root cause of the difficulty.

Off-Grid Living, Here and Now

A lot of people these days are talking about how they dream of living in a sustainable off-grid community. Often their comments take on a wistful tone, as if what they’re looking for is only possible in some other place and some far-off time.

My advice if you want to live in a sustainable off-grid community: Start now, where you are. Reduce your dependence on centralized water, electricity, gas, and other “grid” systems. You can live an essentially off-grid life even while connected to the grid.

I offer tips throughout my book and this blog for constructively disengaging from dependence on large centralized systems. Note, if you live in a city you’ll still most likely need to maintain an account with the power company, city water/sewer service, and so on. Even so, you can save yourself a lot of money by minimizing your need for electricity and city water and all that. I live in a conventional, fully on-grid house, but have reduced my electricity use to less than 5 percent of the average USA household’s! My electric bill when I’m here by myself is only about $11; even with housemates it’s generally under $20.

But the real prize, beyond money savings, is the peace of mind that comes from being able to rely on natural resources readily at hand (sunlight, rainwater, wind, microbes) rather than being vulnerable to failures of large centralized infrastructure.

Now, there’s one grid you don’t want to try to go “off” of, and that’s the social grid. Unless you really want to live all alone out in the woods and grow or forage or kill all your own food and make your own shoes and never deal with another person again, you’re going to need to build and maintain some kind of ties with your neighbors. You don’t have to be best buddies but you do need to find ways to get along and work together; we all do.

Social cooperation is the most important element of building a sustainable community. Everything else follows from that. Growing food, sharing tools, sharing labor, avoiding unnecessary duplication of effort.

If your dream is to live in an off-grid community, your dream starts now, at home, right where you live. Even if you rent rather than own; even if you don’t have a roof over your head right now.

Off-grid living starts with unplugging your dependency on something. Pick something. Start where you want, and expand from there.

Some ideas:

• Cancel a subscription (streaming service, etc.) that’s expensive, especially if you’re not using it.

• Try doing without an appliance you’ve always used, such as a clothes-dryer or dishwasher.

• Start collecting rainwater, even if it’s just a bucket under your roof-line.

• Learn how to make (or mend) something you’ve been relying on large faraway corporations to supply you with.

• Get a little solar charger as an emergency backup to charge your cellphone and laptop.

• If you’re not already growing or foraging at least a bit of your own food, start today. If you’re already growing or foraging some, take steps today to expand the amount or variety.

• If you love some food or drink that comes from far away, requires a lot of processing, etc., see if you can find a local substitute. Extra bonus points if you learn how to grow or make a substitute yourself! (Some local dried fruit, a tea made from a plant native to your area, etc.).

And finally, while disengaging from excess dependence on physical grids, boost your local social grid. If you haven’t done so already, go meet your neighbors, at least your immediately adjacent ones. You could also make a post on NextDoor (or another online channel such as your neighborhood watch’s email list or Facebook page) asking if anyone else shares your interest in building sustainable community.

If you don’t get any responses to that, try making a post offering to share something. Extra seeds are always popular, as are plants. I’ve met a lot of neighbors by offering seeds and plants via NextDoor.

Also: Buy from local growers and other local businesses as much as you can. Buying local is where the social grid and the physical grid intersect in a most abundant and beneficial way.

And a final note: Living off-grid isn’t about being self-sufficient and independent, not needing anyone. Rather, it’s about being self-reliant, and being inter-dependent with neighbors and other local people who genuinely have a stake in your physical and social and economic wellbeing. And, to the greatest extent possible, eliminating dependency on faraway, impersonal and/or centralized entities who don’t have any vested interest in any aspect of you other than your wallet.

Likeminded people are out there. We saw that just now when someone in a gardening group asked if anyone knew of any off-grid sustainable communities where people are growing food, etc. There are many, many of us doing this, as evidenced by the many people who responded to just that thread. The only difference between a lone person and a community, is that the lone person reached out and found their people. You can’t judge a book by its cover and you can’t judge a person by their clothing or their front yard. Until you take the time to talk with a person, you just never know who might be your people! And oftentimes they are much closer at hand than you ever imagined.

Further Exploration:

Grow Permaculture / Our Permaculture Farm (727-495-6145; located in Brooksville, FL) offers tele-consults to people interested in forming intentional community. The following is from my friend and colleague Koreen Brennan, one of the resident-principals of the farm. (She was responding to a question from someone in one of the gardening groups, who asked, “I have a dream of a community dedicated to growing food, solar power and sustainable living in Florida. Does this exist?” I thought her response might be helpful to some of you too, so I’m sharing it here.) “There is some misinfo in this thread that could be discouraging. Living in these communities can be heaven, it’s truly a smart way to go and there are many ways to do it. In most of Florida, you can be strictly on solar and battery power, but need to also have a grid hookup. You can catch all the rainwater you want in most places in FL and some counties will even give you rain barrels and teach you how to do it. There are a number of intentional communities in Florida, in various stages of existence. One place some are listed is ic.org. There are all different kinds of these. There are people creating them in their neighborhoods. We are doing that in Brooksville with our permaculture farm (growpermaculture.com). Don’t let anybody discourage you if you want to start a community or join one! It’s a really wonderful way to live, especially if you know a few things about how to avoid the pitfalls. We do counseling for existing or forming communities to avoid common pitfalls. There are some great books out there on the topic too, and other materials. Don’t let anybody discourage you, if you want to do this! The most successful ones are ones where the people forming it are dedicated to being persistent and are willing to get educated on the process and their options.”

Online Permaculture Design Certificate Course from Grow Permaculture/Our Permaculture Farm: This just in!! Course starts May 15; visit the link for details, and register now to secure your space. At this time, the ONLY courses and events I am endorsing are either online; or outdoors AND within walking or cycling distance of where you live. This is GP/OPF’s first-ever online PDC, and is a golden opportunity for people anywhere to study and practice the permaculture design principles with some highly experienced and successful practitioners.

Taming the Mind

It struck me the other day that taming one’s mind is a service to the planet. A mind that’s calmed and collected (by steady use of mind-taming tools) is also a really nice place to hang out and operate from.

I may have more to say about this, but it’ll wait til another time. I am getting ready to have very limited-to-no internet access til late tonight.

(Bike Week is in town all week, and, similar to other events such as the NASCAR races that attract lots of visitors (yes even with pandemic restrictions), internet access — at least for those of us who use our cellphones as our internet node — gets squeezed down to virtually nil from about 10am til after midnight, as many thousands of extra people are using the cellular data infrastructure.

This used to irk me when I was trying to get my online work such as writing and social-media posting done, but I’ve gotten better at working around it. Moreover, in keeping with the permaculture design principle of “obtaining a yield” / “turn problems into assets,” I actually take the constraint as a fabulous opportunity to focus on non-internet-related stuff all day. Painting, stitching, taking care of plants and humans and other fellow residents.)

Further Exploration:

• To watch some great video talks about taming the mind, visit the Avatar video page of the Avatar(R) Course website. All of Harry’s talks are superb. For starters I particularly recommend “Life Challenges” and “Impressions.” (And, if you’re in more of a mood to read, you can explore elsewhere on the website where a wealth of articles and exercises await.)