Archive for September, 2009

Old is the new new

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My parents are tightwads, and I love them for that. When I grew up, I continuously witnessed my mom and dad fixing things that went bad. Hole in the sock? Mended. False contact in my walkman (I date myself here)? Soldered back on. Bad haircut? Well, sometimes they went too far.

It took me a while to realize that even though I grew up that way, I diverged greatly from my parent’s guiding principle about things: buy good quality items and make them last. When I started my adult life, I did not fix anything. When something got bad, I would hide behind the lack of time and get a replacement.

One day, my dad paid me a visit and found my all dismembered trash bin. He asked me what I was going to do about it. I told him “don’t worry, the trash company will replace it”. But he couldn’t “not worry” about it. One hour later, he had the trash bin as good as new by reinforcing it with a metal cloth hanger woven into its hinges. That put me to shame.

From then on, I decided to try to fix things. I got to test my resolve when my dryer died last year. Instead of getting a new one, I took it all apart (to my wife’s dismay), identified the issue, got a $10 part from the net and put it right back to work. I was pretty proud.

Starting to fix things got me to think differently about purchases. I no longer focus on price only but on quality and maintainability. And even though I do spend more in the short term, I save quite a bit in the long run. Since my drier fix already added one year to my drier’s 5 years life, it saved me the equivalent of 20% of the cost of the dryer.

It is interesting to me how most we naturally emphasize quality during our car purchases (cf. Toyota annihilation of GM) but not when making smaller ones. I guess the high price of cars forces us to think our purchase.  At least, it shows that we can do it.

Some will say that our economy is consumption-driven and that some short-term adverse effects could be felt if we all decided to consume less but better quality products. I agree to to a certain point but in the long run, I think a change in the consumption mindset could also have positive repercussions:

  • It would allow US companies to focus on quality instead of cost cutting, therefore slowing the import of low quality goods and keeping valuable jobs in the US.
  • It would create a new industry to serve the people that need their things fixed but don’t have the time to do it. This would definitely create jobs. Think of all the cobblers that went out of business in the last 20 years.

When we fix things, we reduce waste,  save money, have better quality stuff and gather valuable skills. So, I believe that if we were all a bit less Walmart and a bit more Wall-E, we would make our world a better place. Don’t hesitate to disagree with me. Looking forward to hear from you.

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My trash is my worms’ treasure

mushroom_1_bg_072803Once upon a time, as I was taking out the trash, a whole new world opened to me right there, under the lid…  About 100 maggots were happily chomping on the previous day’s bits. The revelation was immediate: trash can sustain life!

We throw out a lot of stuff that could be of great use in the circle of life (yes, maggots are part of it). That gave me the idea of setting up a vermicomposting bin (aka. worms composting). The instructions looked simple : first, a bed of brown stuff, then green stuff, a couple hundreds worms to loosen up the guests and lots of organic trash. White trash (as in Cauliflower) and green trash preferably. Organic meat does not qualify. Add water. This is pretty simple indeed.

So, let’s meet the actors:

  • The container: anything that breathes and has a lid is fine. It should be placed in a semi-shaded location and in in a well drained spot. The container can be as small as 12 inches tall (for a two layers bin). I am not sure if it is wise but some people even set this up right in their kitchen. Mine will be outside.
  • The brown stuff: egg containers, toilet paper middles, dry leaves, wood clippings and chips, paper or manure. It should be moistened before being laid in the bottom of the bin.
  • The green stuff: kitchen scraps, plant clippings, grass, coffee grounds, tea bags, fruits skins…
  • The worms: choose them wisely, liberally and squiggly. Red worms are best. One pound worth is a good start. They can even be bought online. European nightcrawlers can also be used but tend to not do as well as the red worms because of the composting bin’s moisture and temperature. Worms cost about $30 per pound. The red worms can eat their weight every day and reproduce happily, leaving you with plenty of their nutrient-rich castings.
  • The undesirables: meats, very cooked foodstuff, bones. They rot and attract flies.

The layers of green stuff and brown stuff should be alternated every 6 to 12 inches. It is a good idea to add some garden soil throughout.

From there, the microorganisms and the worms will take over. A heap that is not remixed regularly -or cool heap- can  take up to one year to compost. But if you took it upon yourself to replenish the brown layer regularly and kept the heap moist -and therefore hot-, the composting would happen in about 4 months. Note that your heap should not stink.

Harvesting can be tricky as you may not want live worms in you house plants. Shining a light on the heap makes the worms go deeper in the pile therefore letting you harvest the top layer of compost.

Your new pet worms will love you for this and you will prevent that much waste from ending in the landfill. And the best thing is: you will never buy another $10 bag of soil again.

Let me know how yours works out!

Resources:

http://lancaster.unl.edu/pest/resources/Vermicompost107.shtml

http://www.wormwoman.com

http://www.ciwmb.ca.gov/Organics/Worms/WrmSuply.htm

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Project Un-Clutter!

It’s been almost a year since we’ve been offline, but I am still continually battling with clutter. I think it’s almost sort of a .. syndrome, which is why I’ve started up Project Un-Clutter! My friends automatically assume that I am cleaning whenever they ask what I’ve been busy doing at home. Sadly, usually, they are right. So in starting this Project Un-Clutter, perhaps I will be more responsible to myself if I have to document my travels navigating through my stuff on AimSimple. I will focus on my problem areas one by one (which many of you may also encounter) that seem to crop up again and again, as well as focus on areas that I seem to be making some headway.

I only have a small room to deal with, but it seems as though the “stuff” seems to build up, and build up. My last public battles helped during the time, but I find that I have difficulty sticking with a plan. I devote a weekend, and things seem to be okay, but I then fall back into the traps of papers, books, junk mail just thrown around, in hopes that I will one day “look at it again”.

For inspiration, I usually visit Unclutterer’s Workspace of the Week to get at my clutter, not only to be neat, but dust-ball free. I also look to A&E’s Television show Hoarders sometimes to get myself moving. These people do not describe the general population, but have a sickness of hoarding and being unable to detach themselves from any of the objects they own, including garbage. It’s eye-opening, sad, yet strangely motivating at the same time.

So join me in my goal to a start of a clean free, dust free, clutter free area!

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We Are Back!

It’s been a long time coming back folks. Most of it would be my fault, since I accidentally forgot that aimsimple.com was on an old webhost of mine that was shared with another personal web site of mine, sparkling-grace.net. We are using the trusty asmallorange.com web host that another domain of mine resides on. I have a few things to fix (I just noticed), but otherwise, the content is there.

After a few bumps in the road, I’ve finally got this web site up and running, and I’ve got lots of things to say and share. I know delayedllama has asked me several times about it, and I almost forgot it, had we not had a discussion about goals this morning. Plus, I’ve missed writing about topics that truly matter to me.

So let’s hope this continues and there are no bumps in the future thanks to my forgetful brain!