hi i'm desi and this is my little blog
a great step by step guide in how to easily grow your own herbs from cuttings.
sustainable-sam:

 
How To Clone Your Herbs 

a great step by step guide in how to easily grow your own herbs from cuttings.

sustainable-sam:

How To Clone Your Herbs 

If today’s church does not recapture the sacrificial spirit of the early church, it will lose its authenticity, forfeit the loyalty of millions, and be dismissed as an irrelevant social club with no meaning for the twentieth century.
Dr. Martin Luther King
interesting story about non consumtion.
unconsumption:

Zero-waste home in California:

On trash day in Mill Valley, California, the Johnson home has no garbage. Nothing. There is a hefty compost bin and a teeny recycling bin—one that Béa Johnson is embarrassed exists at all. “So much recycling really goes to waste, so you need to try to reduce that too.”
Garbage, though, is something that happens rarely in this modern, minimalistically decorated house. That’s by day-to-day intention—to live simpler and lighter on the planet. Their quest started three years ago when Béa and husband Scott downsized from a 3,000-square-foot home to their current 1,400 square feet. But it had been on Béa’s mind ever since she’d nannied for a family that lost everything in a fire. Béa decided she wanted to truly love and use and know everything she kept in her home. “Even down to the vegetable peeler,” she says. (Via Sunset.com. Hat tip to Susan C.)

Even their toothbrushes are compostable! For various tips and other information, look at Béa Johnson’s blog here.
See also earlier Unconsumption post about another couple, Amy and Adam Korst, who lived almost trash-free for one year.

interesting story about non consumtion.

unconsumption:

Zero-waste home in California:

On trash day in Mill Valley, California, the Johnson home has no garbage. Nothing. There is a hefty compost bin and a teeny recycling bin—one that Béa Johnson is embarrassed exists at all. “So much recycling really goes to waste, so you need to try to reduce that too.”

Garbage, though, is something that happens rarely in this modern, minimalistically decorated house. That’s by day-to-day intention—to live simpler and lighter on the planet. Their quest started three years ago when Béa and husband Scott downsized from a 3,000-square-foot home to their current 1,400 square feet. But it had been on Béa’s mind ever since she’d nannied for a family that lost everything in a fire. Béa decided she wanted to truly love and use and know everything she kept in her home. “Even down to the vegetable peeler,” she says. (Via Sunset.com. Hat tip to Susan C.)

Even their toothbrushes are compostable! For various tips and other information, look at Béa Johnson’s blog here.

See also earlier Unconsumption post about another couple, Amy and Adam Korst, who lived almost trash-free for one year.

YUM!
pennyforurthoughts:

YEAHHH!!!!!!!!!!!

YUM!

pennyforurthoughts:

YEAHHH!!!!!!!!!!!

love IS the answer.

love IS the answer.

darlindame:

(via templeofdood)
darlindame:

For ca1ty.
(via cakesilike)
x-men restroom sign = funny funny.

x-men restroom sign = funny funny.