Wednesday, June 17, 2009

June 5, 2009

A pile of wood chips from the county landfill, and a rainwater collection "roof" built on the ground in the background from recycled roofing metal and recycled wood pallets.
Part of living sustainably seems to mean accumulating materials. The second photo is four trailerloads of llama manure from our neighbor. Great for the garden, and the llama's a lot happier not having to stand in it all day long.
Third photo shows some of the 2000 square feet of recycled roofing metal we salvaged from a local roofer that didn't want to have to pay to get rid of it.
Pallets R US! Today's photos and entry are about "waste" and "resources". Putting an emphasis on sustainable living has really made us see that we live in a throw-away society. Part of the reason for this is that recycling wastes and repairing used tools and equipment takes time, and time is money (wages). For most people, it doesn't make economic sense to spend 10 hours trying to fix their car when they are busy working 40 to 80 hours/week, and can just leave the car at the shop and have someone else do it for them. Then, they just need to work a little more to pay the repairman. The problem is, that a lot of repairs end up costing too much to make it worth doing (due to high labor costs) so it becomes cheaper to throw out the car, tool or appliance.
Why are wages, and the cost of living so high? Part of it, I think, is because we live in a society that is artificially accelerated by relatively cheap fossil fuels.
We're finding that part of trying to live sustainably involves looking at wastes as a resource. This is better for the whole, and better for us too. Using what others view as waste involves moving backward a bit on the wage scale. We spend less time working for money, but more time doing things for ourselves. Instead of buying a new car, you buy an old car, and fix it yourself. You may find that you achieve the same result (transportation) for a tenth of what others spend per year to achieve the same result (except maybe your car isn't as shiny and trendy as theirs). But, the time that you spend fixing the thing may look like you are only making $5 to $10/hr, mainly because it takes you longer than a professional mechanic might take to do the work. Then again, from our experience, the pros are under the gun to get things done FAST and cheap, so the end result when you do your own work is often much higher quality. Plus, strangely enough, a lot of the "pros" don't really like what they are doing, and so aren't really willing to look up critical information involved in repairing something. In other words, they often do really lousy work.
We've found that doing things for ourselves gives us a lot of satisfaction. There's no need for company moral boosting sessions and company slogans, just the sound of the birds chirping and the wind in the trees as you work away at home and, OUCH!, skin your knuckles on that exhaust clamp again. There's a good feel to this lifestyle, and a lot of mental challenge at times, trying to find ways to do more with less, and to turn wastes into a resource.
What about wastes? People throw out EVERYTHING. And it just goes into a big whole in the ground and is covered up with dirt, or in some cases, is incinerated for power production, leaving behind interesting pollutants, both airborne and solid. What kind of society would spend all of that energy extracting non-renewable resources from the only planet that they have, use the resource for a short period, and then bury it to decompose, in many cases contaminating their drinking water in the process? Not one we want to encourage. So, we look at these waste products as a resource.
We collected 2000 square feet of heavy gauge roofing metal from a roofing contractor who had carefully taken it off of a roof and placed it on a trailer prior to taking it to the dump where he would have had to pay a fee to get rid of it. He was quite happy to give it to us. We've used it for roofing the summer kitchen, putting a roof over the camper trailer, for fabricating metal skirting around the platform of the yurt, for siding our compost bins, and smaller pieces keep coming in handy for various projects.
The local hardware store has piles of wooden pallets out back, many of them constructed of oak. They periodically truck them off to the landfill, or burn them, so were happy to give us as many as we could take. We find them invaluable around the place, for supporting tanks, stacking materials on, including firewood, up off the ground, as work tables. This year we hope to build an entire woodshed out of rocks (foundation), pallets (walls and roof framing), and recycled roofing metal (roof). I'm sure there will be other pallet buildings in our future.
The county landfill is starting to look at ways to cut down on wastes entering the landfill, as they are running out of space to pile it all. They're looking at buying a crusher/baler to make glass sand, bale metals, paper and plastics for recycling. They're one step behind the next county over, which does all that, plus chips all non-reuseable wood (construction and yard waste) and gives away the wood chips. They shipped some over to our county, and we collected a truck and trailerload to use in mulching our garden beds. We're now thinking of buying a small wood chipper/mulcher to use on our land, to chip the smaller branches.
But what about our wastes? The ultimate in sustainability is to close the loop as close to home as you can. So, what wastes do we produce that can be re-used. Hmm.... Well, there's an obvious one, but someone else has written about it a lot better than I can. Check out http://www.jenkinspublishing.com/humanure.html We've been using the methods outlined in that book now for years, and when we return to modern society's method of dealing with this waste product, it feels totally wrong. There's something really strange about doing your business in your drinking water, then flushing it down a long pipe to a complex treatment plant where chemicals are added to it, then sending that into the river, then taking water back out and adding more chemicals and treatment to repeat the whole process again. Then, since our farms don't have enough fertilizer, they use artificially made fertilizer that involves an enormous industrial process and kills the soil microorganisms. OK, I'll stop, but really, read that book.
We also recycle all of our graywater. The sink drains through a strainer into a bucket which we use to fill a watering can to water the garden. The food particles in the strainer get added to the compost pile. The compost pile will become humus that next year will be used to grow the plants that we eat. We harvest our firewood by hand, and use the extra heat for cooking, heating dishwater, etc. The wood ashes go on the garden. It feels great to reconnect ourselves to natural cycles, and to disconnect from artificial, overly complex ones.

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