The weather here this weekend was gorgeous, so Jason and I went out and did some weed warrioring at a park near our place. Weed Warriors is a Montgomery County parks program which trains ordinary citizens to become certified to identify and remove non-native invasive species of plants in the local parks. It's a fun and rewarding way to help the local environment as non-natives can really wreak havoc and throw entire ecosystems off-kilter. So look into it if interested to see if there might be a similar program in your area. But, anyway, while we were out, we gathered some trash and made a little sculpture and then threw the trash away. I was thinking it would be cool to try this on a larger scale, by perhaps organizing a community trash clean-up day and having a trash sculpture contest as a fun way to clean up the Earth and get creative! Find a particularly trash-ridden area, gather some folks (you could work in teams or individually), gather trash and then make sculptures. Then, if you wanted to make it a competition you could have some type of judge or have people vote on the sculpture they think is best. Then, of course, have everyone throw the trash away. As I'm writing this I'm thinking someone has probably already come up with this idea...I'll look into it, but in the mean time if someone wants to make a trash sculpture and post a picture of it on the Idea Farm, it would make me really happy! Ours kinda sucked because thankfully there really wasn't that much trash to work with and it was very windy, but some more artistically gifted folks like yourselves could probably come up with something really rad. Just an idea.
This made me think of one of my favorite documentaries, Rivers & Tides, about the artist Andy Goldsworthy, who makes nature sculptures. If you haven't seen it, do yourself a favor and witness the beauty of his creations and patience. Here's a clip:
Monday, February 9, 2009
Trash Sculpture
Posted by lovely you at 7:03 AM 3 comments
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Buckwheat and Banana Pancakes
BUCKWHEAT AND BANANA PANCAKES
So, I admit I am not very creative but I do love to cook which is a form of creativity in its own right. I love to find healthy recipes that still taste good and this is a good example. Saying that, I love pancakes. I especially love the taste of banana with the sticky syrup. You could sprinkle chopped walnuts on the pancakes as they’re cooking for a full-on pancake-meets-banana bread experience. These happen to be vegan, but don’t taste like it. Buckwheat flour adds a lot of value to the plain white flour – it’s rich in nutrients like calcium, iron, B vitamins and protein, and it's gluten-free. Definitely worth a trip to the health food store.
Serves: about 3-4 (makes about a dozen)
Time: 15 minutes
• 1 1/4 cups soy or rice milk
• 1 tablespoon lemon juice
• 1 tablespoon vegetable oil
• 1 tablespoon maple syrup, plus more for serving
• 1/2 cup buckwheat flour
• 1 teaspoon baking soda
• 1/2 cup unbleached all-purpose flour or white spelt flour (substitute rice flour to make pancakes completely gluten-free)
• 1/2 teaspoon salt
• 2 bananas, thinly sliced
Mix all the wet ingredients together in a small bowl. Mix all the dry ingredients together in a slightly bigger bowl. Add the wet to the dry and stir just enough to combine – be careful not to over-mix (that’s how you get tough pancakes).
Heat a large nonstick skillet or griddle over medium-high heat. Ladle as many pancakes as possible onto your griddle. Place a few slices of banana on top of each pancake. Cook for about a minute and a half on the first side or until the surface is covered with small bubbles and the underside is nicely browned. Flip and cook for about a minute on the second side. Repeat the process until you run out of batter. Serve stacked high with plenty of maple syrup.
Posted by Holly Grant at 2:39 PM 4 comments
Lullaby
So much time spent in anger
Understanding not the danger
Of refusing this transition
Never accepting the mission
So many years spent charming
Promises disarming
Life on the horizon
Unable to envision
The golden promise
Afraid of the crucible's furnace
Transforming ore of childhood
Soon hard-won metal of adulthood
Sleep in peace tonight
Wake up with insight
My beloved
Posted by Janet Jergins at 8:12 AM 2 comments
Sunday, February 1, 2009
101 things I am grateful for
I'm not sure about you, but this is within my realm of creativity. Prompted by my recent free will horoscope, I have written up 101 things I am grateful for. Mere mere, myself and our friend did this together and shared. It was fun and really grounding.
- Noodles!
- Mere mere
- My first name
- My middle name b/c it was my grandmas and then I inherited a ring from her (that I would never wear) and then I sold it to my uncle and got a beautiful tattoo and now i can go to grad school without going into MAJOR debt (only minor)
- Grad school
- Hero and Saka
- Rumi
- Food
- Freedom
- Lovemaking
- Ducking (but it actually starts with an F)
- Music
- Dancing Hard
- Dancing Soft
- Dancing Weird
- Symbols
- Pema Chodron
- My sister
- Squishy lettuce
- Mere-mere's bread
- Stars
- Dusk
- Rowing machines
- Pole beans
- parsnips and Jerusalem artichokes
- Silliness
- fountain pens
- libraries
- best friends
- friendly neighbours
- compost
- Mary mother of Jesus
- turtles
- prayer flags
- healing
- therapy
- Jesus
- my job
- strong teeth
- bells
- permaculture
- prayer
- the buddha
- sledding
- story telling
- radio lab
- anger
- micro-organisms
- herb gardens
- chocolate
- chocolate milk (hot or cold)
- bees
- beeswax candles
- honey
- cows
- alpacas
- compassion from suffering
- bass beats
- beer and wine
- pudding
- dumplings
- mosaics
- tattoos
- amazing natural facts
- myths
- family
- vibrators
- shells
- gaia
- my goddess necklace
- intuition and listening to it
- balance
- self-awareness
- willingness
- healers
- skinny dipping
- salmon
- being easy on myself
- sleeping in and staring out the window
- games (especially on cold days)
- bicycles
- spices
- possibilities
- choice
- celebration
- moderation
- remembering truths
- connection connecting connectedness
- hymns
- strength
- weakness
- beauty
- horizons
- waves
- metaphors
- farmer's markets
- trees
- inspirations
- outer space
- paradoxes
- mere's smell
Posted by anise at 12:54 PM 2 comments
Labels: gratefultility