5 Ways to Think and Grow Green

LIFE DESIGN

5 Ways to Think & Grow Green

Kelly Woods, writer

16 June 2017

Green living is all about being intentional. I love sharing the combination of actions and attitudes that keep me buoyant and inspired on a daily basis.

Green living shouldn’t be a struggle. For me, it is a fun challenge, that stems from a collection of values that I hold for the way I want to live my life and contribute to the world around me.  Having a  few perspectives in place that keep me on track, and hold me accountable to myself, really make a huge difference.  Here are my favourite ways to think and grow…green!

1. Make It Yourself

Making your own products is one of the easiest ways to ensure you are aware of the impacts they have on your health, and that of the planet. With carefully sourced materials, and a select list of known ingredients, you can make everything from laundry soap, to cosmetics, to clothing.

Start small, with a recipe you are keen to try, and integrate DIY into your life, one item at a time. When you do it this way, you can celebrate the little victories, and see how easy (and rewarding) it is to live and love handmade. In our household, we regularly make our own laundry soap and cleaners, based on these recipes, from David Suzuki’s Queen of Green.

2. Stop the Stuff

This is a big one. The only way to compete with our consumer culture, is to reduce our needs and wants. Our households can never be truly green if we continue to see the world through the eyes of unconscious consumers. By reducing (and carefully selecting) what comes into our homes, we can be conscious of the impact of our purchases on the world around us, and the homes we bring them into.  

I’ll be the first to admit – this is hard. We’re working towards becoming a zero-waste home, but we’ve got a long way to go! Don’t get discouraged. A perspective change is the first of many tiny steps that add up.

3. Get Outside

Study after study has shown that people need nature. Spending time outside helps with everything from stress-relief to creativity, to increased levels of fitness and general well-being. Aside from the positive impact nature can have on us, we have a lot to give to our natural spaces.

Getting in the habit of picking up litter, working to protect the natural spaces around us, and advocating for others to spend time in nature, increases the love all around. As we fall into deeper love with nature, our kids will, too. And when we love something, we value it, and make it a priority in our lives.  For our part, we adore our local parks, and couldn’t survive without them!

4. Tell A New Story

So often we hear the “bad news” about humanity’s relationship to the natural world. The news is full of sad tales, and a “too late” narrative. If we want to have a positive impact on our world, and that of the next generation, we have to tell ourselves a new story: one of beauty, compassion and a symbiotic relationship between humanity and nature. When we get into the habit of telling this tale, to ourselves, and to others, we contribute to a vision of a better world. This is often how the biggest changes start: a shared vision for something better. 

Want more on the topic? Read this book*. It was the impetus for my own new tale (and my efforts not to be an environmental “Debbie-Downer”).

5. Share It

If you want to live green, you’ll need support. You can’t go it alone. Find your community, and connect with other like-minded people. Then, as you share your knowledge, you will glean wisdom from others with a different set of skills and experiences. For me, one of the best things about being a green mama is being able to share my passion for the planet with others. Don’t go it alone. Seek support, and share your knowledge. The world needs what you have to give.

I’d love to hear about your favourite ways of going green, or the things you find the hardest about doing so. Do share your secrets and struggles (big or little) in the comments.

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CREATIVITY

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Waking Up to Spring

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I can hardly believe it is spring. Some days I am so giddy with the discoveries: the return of the robins, daffodils in the lawn, tree buds where there were none. Today, it was plum blossoms! We ventured out to the orchard, and there were the trees, alight with new blossoms that weren’t there the day before.

I always love winter. It’s my cozy, dreaming, cup-of-tea season. I do my serious thinking and feeling in winter. But, this year, spring feels just like magic!

The garden is sprouting everywhere. A wander, and we find new leaves on the roses, and curls of rhubarb working their way to the surface. A listen, and we hear new songs that the birds weren’t singing the last time we stopped to listen. The air feels fresh – and warm!

Living here, on Gambier, and connecting so deeply with place, has truly awakened us to the magic of the seasons. Seeing the same spaces day after day is entirely different than it is in the city. In nature, things hardly stay the same for two days in a row. The changes are almost imperceptible, but over a season, a slow and beautiful magic works its way over the land. Everyday I fall just a bit more in love with this place, and I see how my farming ancestors must have felt such a tie to their places, too.  With nature, it seems, familiarity breeds wonder.

I can hardly wait to get grubby in the garden this week, and pour a bit of my love into this ever-changing place. After a winter of exhaling, and giving mind and body rest, I feel ready to inhale the sights, sounds and buzzing activity of spring.

Welcome robins. Welcome bees. Welcome blossoms. Welcome spring.

With warmth,

Kelly

earth mama : beauty seeker : life learner : creative soul

 

In my enthusiasm, I have also put forth a flurry of library requests for my favourite garden books. Seasonal treasures that I rediscover every year. Picking them up and pouring through them is like Christmas (or perhaps an Easter gift?). If you have any gems to recommend, please do share!

Where in the World are the Woods?

Well, in accordance with a long-held dream,we have officially embarked on the next chapter of our inspired living adventure. In a still amazing, rather scary-awesome turn of events, we have connected with an amazing organization and community on Gambier Island (oh island of our dreams). In a leap of faith, in intentional fashion, we have decided to spend the winter living off-grid as volunteers for Camp Fircom.

What can I say about this place? On the one hand, Fircom is a summer camp. It’s also a retreat centre, and amazing wedding location. Its tag line is “a sanctuary found in nature,” which is really very clever and apt. Harder, though, is to put into details the spiritual soulfood that the place provides. It’s a place of dreamers, a place where the work one does really matters, where lives are changed, and where people go for refuge, peace and contemplation. It’s a place with a vision, and we’re honoured to be a small piece of that.

Logistically, what does this mean? It means moving. Packing up the house, putting our things in storage. It means my husband commuting to the city at least a few days a week, quite probably more. It means finding a foster family for our lovely rabbits, Moby & Ears, and our dear cat, Clea (we have, and I know they will bless their new homes immensely). It means hard goodbyes to our dear neighbours, and the park-like setting in which we’ve been experimenting with homesteading, living closer to the earth, and connecting to the seasons.

It also means following our hearts. It means taking a step back from the frenzy we have been in for the past few years, and taking some much-needed family time. Although we homeschool, and theoretically spend a great deal of time together, there is time together, and then there is being present. More of the latter.

It means continuing on this journey towards sustainable, meaningful, intentional living. It means hard things, and magic, too.

Do we have any idea of what we are truly in for? Not really. Are we certain that our work in the city can sustain itself. No. But, we’ve put everything in place, and we’re trusting in the process.  We’re trusting in surprises, we’re trusting in the value of challenge, and the goodness of humanity. Heck, we’re even trusting in the value of learning through mistakes, if it turns out that way.

Because we are ready for change, ready to continue down this path that we have chosen, and ready to contribute, simplify, and focus on what really matters.

What exactly is that? Well, I’m thinking we’re about to find out.

I can’t wait to write my way through this one. We’ll be writing, and blogging our challenges and joys, so please do follow along and support us on our way by checking in every once in awhile. It would mean the world to us.

Adventures in Zero Waste: The Plastic Purge

It always starts with a book. I don’t know whether it’s the librarian in me, or the dreamer, but my insatiable appetite for the written word finds me attempting to better myself once again.

So. This book.  I picked it up off the shelf at the bookstore, and made a random note to find it at the library. It looked a bit like a home-decor book, and was shelved alongside the design and gardening books. I didn’t think much about its ability to change my life.

I guess I’d heard of zero waste before, but I hadn’t quite transferred the concept to my home. When I read about Bea, and her family’s journey to zero waste, I felt challenged. There is someone else actually doing this. It can be done. And the question became, not, “how could I do this?” but “how could I not do this?”

Much like the purchase of our angora rabbits (brought on by another book), I ran with my enthusiasm. And, without further ado, I started.

My first challenge was to look at how I grocery shopped. I saw an immediate problem here. Particularly, as it was winter (no farmer’s market, scant availability of convenient local foods), I had let some of my usual food-conscience relax. The first time I went grocery shopping after diving into the book, I will admit I was actually shocked by the amount of plastic I brought home. Everything I bought (from apples, to pasta, to lentils and cauliflower) was wrapped in plastic. Bringing my own bags to the store (as I always do) was almost laughable, considering the amount of packaging that was coming home with me.

I started small. One day, I brought a glass container to the meat store, and kindly asked for them to put my meat inside. Bless the saleslady, she didn’t look at me too weirdly. My first success!

Another day, I set out with a glass jar to use at the fresh-ground peanut butter machine at the local health foods store. Sorting out how to account for the weight of my jar was a little tricky. But, it was doable!

The next time, emboldened by my success, I lined up my beautiful glass jars, wrote all of the tares (weights) on their lids, and set out. The fiasco at the checkout was what I’ll call a set-back. The local organic health foods store was wonderfully patient, but when I asked what the best way to do this in the future would be, the kind answer was, essentially, please don’t.

Thus far, I had learned a few things.

1. Make your own cloth bags for bulk items. Fussing with the extra weight of jars was not practical, or welcome.

2. Finding ways to buy in bulk, sans packaging, was essential.

3. In short, I needed to change my buying habits if I was going to make this work.

I began a grocery store audit. I shopped at three of our local large grocery chains, and the one organic foods store to see how each would rate.

Some were definitely better than others. One had more items in bulk. Another had more un-bagged organic fruits and vegetables. The organic store had the option of paper bags for bulk & veggies – for which I was very thankful. But the pre-packaged bulk foods were all in plastic baggies. And, although they had milk in bottles, it is clear you pay a premium for this service.

Two weeks ago, as I was sharing my plight with an acquaintance, she let me in on a little secret. One of my favourite local farms from the market grows year-round (in a wood-heated greenhouse). And they deliver! I now receive all my veggies (and am even able to get milk in a jar at a slightly lower price) through her! Last week, I asked her about not delivering in plastic bags, and, instead of looking at me strangely (something I’ve been getting very used to), she said many of her customers feel the same. They get deliveries in a re-useable box instead! So, this week, that will be me!

As for bulk dried goods, I’ve been re-using paper for the past few weeks. It’s been working until I can sit down and make myself some more cloth ones.

I’m still searching for zero-waste meat and cheese alternatives (that don’t include buying in tiny quantities from a deli), but I’m making strides. I’m on my way to eliminating buying veggies & fruit in plastic. This week, I intend to save money buying extra milk in a jar and making yogurt with it. The savings from my homemade yogurt (which is easy to make and delicious, anyways), should make up for the extra cost of milk (thanks to my sister for the idea). I have a pretty good rotation of grocery bags in my home and car, so I never have to resort to plastic (although I do need more mesh produce bags). And, I’m getting braver at refusing receipts (pretty sure it’s the polite Canadian in me that finds this so hard).

Anyways, the point it, it’s coming. And every little victory feels so good. There is something so wonderfully, oddly, satisfying, in conscious shopping. Alongside the many environmental benefits, zero-waste shopping is fun. It’s empowering. And, it’s kind of addicting.

My suggestion. Try it! You never know just how far it might take you.