Archive for the ‘Home & Ranch’ Category

October is Non-GMO Month

Saturday, October 1st, 2011

by Catherine Haug, Sept 2011

Would you like to see products containing GMO foods be labeled as such? Would you like to see GMO crops curtailed? Would you like to learn more about what GMO is, to decide if you are for or against this technology?

This month is an excellent opportunity to learn more and support the anti-GMO movement. See Non-GMO Month.org.

California has an item on their November ballot to force labeling of GMOs in foods. Other states and communities are taking positive action for GMO labeling. Here in the Flathead, there are GMO crops growing in local fields – mostly canola. And I’ve written several posts on GMOs: (more…)

Gathering Summary: Repurposing & Other Innovations, September 21, 2011

Thursday, September 29th, 2011

by Catherine Haug, September 29, 2011; updated Oct 7, 2011 to add upgraded video of slideshow

(clip art from PlanetPals.com)

We were a small but enthusiastic audience for the Repurposing-2011 event, with good discussion. None of our presenters were able to come in  person, but eight different projects were represented in the slideshow.

Updated YouTube Video of Slideshow

You can view a NEW video version on You Tube (see video screen below) with upgraded slide quality and a new soundtrack! (more…)

Sugar Trees

Sunday, September 25th, 2011

by Catherine Haug, September 23, 2011

Our last gathering of the year was sugar-tapping. See the Gathering Summary: Sugar Tapping with Kathie Lapcevic, October 19, 2011. And in September, Arbor Day featured the Sugar Maple tree (Acer saccharium), which is native to North America (north of Mexico), primarily along the eastern seaboard of the US and Canada. However, as Kathie will explain, while the sugar maple produces far more sugar, even our own mountain maple and white birch trees can be tapped.

(more…)

Fall Harvest and Winter Storage of Cabbages & Other Crops

Saturday, September 24th, 2011

by Catherine Haug, September 23, 2011

This was definitely a strange year for my garden. Everything got a late start and are finishing late as well. Some things just never produced anything edible. Like my radishes. They grew great, but  the root was very woody, even before it had grown to any size. Very disappointing.

However, my late cabbage is doing better than in the 2 prior years of my garden, so I want to do the harvest right. In addition to researching on the web, I asked Don Bates, one of our experienced gardeners who grows a lot of cabbage. (more…)

Taming Stormwater with Trees

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

by Catherine Haug, September 23, 2011

Bigfork is currently under construction to build a new stormwater system. The project started last year from the top of Grand Drive near the school, to downtown at the intersection with Electric Ave. This year, the system is extended south along Electric Ave to River Street. In future years, it will continue south to the old bridge.

This system involves a series of plastic or fiberglass filtration systems, piping, and manholes under the surface of the streets, to keep toxic substances from entering the Swan River and Bigfork Bay. But did you know there is a better, more natural way to accomplish the same end, and at the same time provide an even more beautiful city landscape? (more…)

Dumpster Diving & Repurposing

Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

by Catherine Haug, September 14, 2011

Flathead County wants to curtail all dumpster diving in the county. The cited reasons for the ban have to do with public safety: one can get hurt or sick scrounging in the dumpsters, or attacked by fellow divers who want what you found. But how much of that really happens at our rural drop sites?

Back in June, the County Solid Waste District Board heard public comments (see the minutes for the comments), and on July 1, they adopted a ban on dumpster diving at the Columbia Falls green boxes, as an experiment to be monitored. In August the Daily Inter Lake reported that there has been no significant increase in waste hauled from the Columbia Falls container site.

So it must be OK to continue with the ban, and expand it to other container sites?

Well, not if you support reuse and repurposing. If perfectly useable but cast-off items must not be saved from going to the dump, finding those items for repurposing becomes much more difficult, and possibly expensive. The only reasonable options remaining are yard and rummage sales.

Come to ESP’s Repurposing Show & Tell, Sept 21, to see some great examples of repurposing, and also to discuss the dumpster diving issue.

And for a bit of entertaining reading, see: My LIfe as a (Dumpster) Diver by Natalya Savka, on the Sierra Club website. From the post: “Some people scavenge food from dumpsters not because they need to, but because they hate to see so much go to waste. They bring flashlights and strong stomachs, and are ready to run.”