Archive for the ‘Self-Sufficiency’ Category

What it’s all about…

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

There are some things which will always remain foreign to our friends and family. Things which, no matter how many times explained, are alien and weird. Before leaving the States I had a conversation with a friend of mine. Much was discussed, including why, when and for how long we would be in Europe, one of the most important things was explained, but I don’t think it will ever be widely understood.

We wish to live in a world (or a part of the world) which understands us. Not ‘accepts us’, as if we were different, or wrong, and you tolerated us, but lived with us, truly understanding, and even sharing the same values as us.

Cars are not vital for survival. They are not essential for your well-being. They are not the key to success or the path to happiness. When you tell people that you don’t own a car, or you sold you car, and you now ride your bicycle everywhere, you are questioned as to how your life could possibly function. I’m not kidding. Some people only ask a couple questions, while others inquire for several minutes, inferring that we are so ‘lost’ and incorrect in our thinking.

I’m not going to preach the evils of automobiles, or even digress into the ‘alternative fuels’ which are being developed. It’s a mindset that every single person needs their own person vehicle, which will honestly do more, if changed, than any fuel being developed. The costs of vehicles, plus insurance, plus gas, plus repair and maintenance all add up. If you want to pay it, go ahead. The look, or reaction that I give you, is one of bewilderment, but you won’t notice it because you live in society where your decision is the norm.

Organic foods are a great way to have people give you that look like you’ve just told them you eat dirt. People do not care about the quality of their food. They just don’t. You can’t say that you do, when your purchasing and eating habits speak differently. Your beef is fed by potato chips and chocolate, how could that be remotely healthy? Your public water is full of drug particles which you can’t remove. But we’re the ‘weird’ ones for trying only to put natural substances into natural bodies.

You don’t have to get defensive though, because you’re part of the majority. No matter how different we are, you will never have to feel like an outsider. You won’t be referred to as hippie, or granola. There are those who do wish to make a statement, to go against the status quo, and they identify with that, but we are not. We want to live the way we want to, and it’s not a political statement, nor it is something irrational.

In Bellingham, we hung our clothes to dry on a line. We got funny looks. We even got asked to take down the line by our property management company because it ‘didn’t look pretty’. It saves energy. Plain and simple. You can look at it from an environmental point of view, as well as a practical point of view. Less energy means a smaller bill. I spend less money by just hanging up the clothes.

In Hamburg, you *must* hang up your clothes. Our apartment building does not have a dryer. It is the norm to hang up your clothes to dry. No strange looks, no nicknames, nothing. It’s practical. It’s not a political statement.

In Bellingham, bicycles were present, but they were a burden to the local populace on certain streets. It was also dangerous for the cyclists in the downtown area, with cars blindly pulling out of parking spaces. However, in Bellingham you couldn’t do what we did below.

In Hamburg, cyclists have their own portion of the sidewalk, so they need not compete with cars or pedestrians for space. Not to long ago we biked 16 kilometers to IKEA and back. We put all of our new houseware on our bicycles. Granted, it wasn’t a lot, but it was significant enough to require a good amount of twine. In Bellingham you would have received some interesting looks if you rode by with a bike like this. In Hamburg, it’s just how things are done.

 

I know this has been *quite* a long message, but I felt finally it was time. We left the States, expecting to find what we found. We are not granola, nor hippies, nor ‘green’ or whatever other nicknames you have for people who do not live the typical American lifestyle. What we did in Bellingham as ‘weird’ people, we do here, in Hamburg, as normal residents. Bicycles, organic food, fresh food (there are markets everywhere), and hanging your clothes to dry. This is why we moved, to live in a place which embraces, not just tolerates, our way of living.

Hurrah for the Bicycle!

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

The most efficient machine ever made is back, and the world is taking notice.

After my return from war, I was wholly drawn to the tranquility and freedom of a bicycle. I found a most serene cycle, and used it for everything. To me, my bicycle was what a car seems to be to most Americans–a place that was entirely mine, a new calm, a feeling of independence. And now, while the rest of America, strapped for gas money, is finally starting to take notice of the humble machine, its practalicity is once again on our minds.

Being a follower of Copenhangen Cycle Chic and a few other pretty, practical bike blogs, I knew before I came to Europe that bicycles here are much more an article of daily transportation, and less of the get-muddy-and-sweaty type I shied away from in the States. I didn’t know just how many of them were in Hamburg, cruising around with pretty, casual riders on the cycle paths.

In my much-imagined Copenhagen, cycle chic haven, one third of the population uses their bicycles each day to get to work or school. For Denmark on the whole, 18% of trips are made by bicycle. When compared to the 1% of trips in the US, or even the mid-summer surge of cyclists in Bellingham, that’s quite a dreamy figure!

Here in Germany, according to the magazine Deutschland Online (available in 10 languages!), 80% of households own a bicycle, with 68 million bicycles throughout the country. Of course not all of them are used, and many are locked up outside in a perpetual rust during which they fuse with other bikes or racks. In Hamburg, daily trips by bicycle is somewhere around 8%, with plans to increase bike traffic to 18% by 2015. While Germany’s 10% and Hamburg’s 18% are not quite comparable with Denmark and Copenhagen, they’re a remarkable increase from the US average! If such a habit was taken up in Bellingham, the streets would see at least 7,000 cyclists!

This sort of cycling causes citizens of a city to experience that city in a new way, to breathe its air and be brushed by its trees and other residents, truly living in a place instead of just on it. In a large city, one arrives sooner than he or she would in a car, but the general speed of life slows down to a more human pace. Life can become more like life, and less like an always-powered treadmill.

Hurrah for the bicycle!

Laundry Soap

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

We’re asked a lot about this important product, so here’s something small about it.

We ran out of laundry soap last week, so I made some more. For me, it’s a fairly unexact science, but when I make it I grate the equivalant of two bars of regular soap. I use soap that I’ve made from oils and lye, but you can easily use store-bought soap, such as Ivory. I melt the grated soap in a pot of water on the stove at medium heat, which takes a while, but the soap does eventually melt. Meanwhile, I fill my laundry soap bucket, one of those large Tide jugs, about a quarter of the way full with warm tap water, and add a half cup of borax and a half cup of washing soda, both of which you can find in the laundry section of your grocery store. Then, when the soap has disolved, add it to the bucket, and mix well. As it cools, the mixture will sort of congeal, with the soap rising to the top, so I stir with my hand, grabbing the soap globs and disolving them. Then, I’ve got a lumpy mixture that cleans my clothes nicely. To use, we measure the soap with the cap from the soap jug, filling the cap full–slightly more than you’d use the Tide, and wash normally. It’s also very simple to add fragrance to the soap with essential oils. My favorite is lavender.

Self-Sufficiency

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

I’ve just woken up to The Thomas Jefferson Hour on the clock radio, set to KMRE, a lovely station I love for it’s simplicity. On the show, recorded in Bismark, a farmer portrays Thomas Jefferson in interviews, expounding upon Jeffersons agrarian values. I also value living close to the earth in this way, taking account of the earth’s economy in all actions, to the point of forgetting the money economy. I suppose those values are the point of this blog: how do we attempt to live those values now, in the city, removed from the farm. For the record, Nick and I attempted to start a community farm and eco-village a few months ago, but the interest was not such to get the project off the ground. The heart of that project and of the radio show this morning was self-sufficiency; we also try to make it the heart of our lives.

First, why is it important to us to sustain ourselves? While working on projects for the last weeks, I’ve listened to a lot of radio shows, mostly on NPR, and its filled with the words “financial crisis”, oh god, oh god! Honestly, we’ve not been affected by this at all (although we haven’t yet looked at our bond fund statements), but it does bring up the issue: Our economy is centered on mostly non-existant money (watch Zeittgeist Addendum for more on this–it’s a fabulously shocking show). With the economy’s instability, as well as the growing scarcity of the oil upon which modern life is built (or one’s desire not to use that oil), comes the distant but real possibility that the American system for creation and distribution of products will fail. I ‘normal’ American produces nearly nothing of his or her own use, purchasing everything from TVs to packaged food to Chinese-made, poorly machine knitted T-shirts and other clothes (the cheapness of clothing is my particular issue), all of these products causing exploitation an many points of their creation. If this system fails and there are no cans of tomatoes or fresh foods or bakery bread, if Target doesn’t sell clothes and shoes and laundry soap, if one cannot run a car, it seems everyone would starve.

Of course, systems always have the posibility of failing, and we cannot constantly live our lives in the fear that they will. However, my self-sufficiency is not founded on that fear, but rather a belief in the importance of creating for oneself, of relying on oneself at least for something greater than the earning of money. I want to produce something real.

So, then, how are we self-sufficient. Firstly, what we do not do: As I said, we live in the city, in a poorly-made apartment, lacking any land, so we do not grow our food (except for the pots and pots of failed tomatoes–it was far, far too cold in our little balcony). We don’t create our electricity, although it is certainly our goal for the future. Instead, we have reduced our use of electricity and oil and we purchase our food from directly from the farmer. So I am able to create our meals from raw ingredients. I also create our soaps and laundry soaps, knit and (I’m learning to) sew our clothes. I don’t weave the cloth, but I do spin the yarn. Nick bakes our bread, and together we have lovely journies by bicycle. This is a very limited list of accomplishment. To see the full possibilities, pick up a copy of John Seymour’s Self-Sufficiency book. The point is, though, that some of the things, we create for ourselves. We are not completely reliant on the American distribution system, and we’ve been able to eliminate many opportunities for exploitation of ourselves and others from our life. By doing these things, we feel less like slaves to wages and consuming and more like real humans with an undeniable connection to the earth and the life around us, as well as to each other. Our motivation for this blog is to show how we accomplish those things, and a few of the many, many possibilities for other people, ways in which you can become more self-sufficient without needing to (although it would be wonderful) go back to the land.

Paper or Plastic? No, Thank You!

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

Of course, if given the choice, no is the best answer. Why be ugly and wasteful when you can have pretty, soft, infinitely usable things to carry your groceries? Last week at the Farmer’s Market, two friendly farmers praised the cotton knit shopping bags I load down with fresh food each week, and offered to trade vegetables for their own bag and a mason jar/water bottle cozy. How fun, a knitting comission for food! I took them up on the chance, but put it off for a few days and ended up with a small knitting frenzy to have them ready this week.

Here’s what I created: I used two strands of navy organic cotton warp yarn (which I bought at Northwest Handspun Yarns) to make the shopping bag based on this pattern. The bag is deliciously soft and strong (holding a pumpkin in the photo!).

The mason jar cozy is a carrier for the farmer’s water jar, intended to fit tightly on the jar and support its weight, so I used three strands of the same yarn, knit increasing rounds of a solid base with size four needles to just wider than the jar, then decreased every stitch for one round, and worked in Turkish stitch with size 9 needles up to the level of the jar, and finished off with a few garter stitch rounds and a strap. It ended up pretty perfect, with a nice mesh. Very practical. And more than enough knitting for one day!