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Learning to live a sustainable life.

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Reusing the waste: Crafters Edition

Reducing the waste is the first step to being more sustainable. Reusing what you cannot reduce is a good second step. In this issue we will discuss how to reuse waste products in crafts. Below are some ideas, with links to some places you can get more information.

I started this issue by going to our local Saturday Market to check out what they had. They had some cool stuff that people came up with. Check them out below. Not all of them have web sites, those that do I provide a link for. I took pictures at some places. I recommend getting permission before taking pictures at places like this. The crafts are the artists property. They have the right to tell you no pictures.

Metal Bugs

These bugs are made out of scrap metal, old tools, silverware, what have you. He was selling some really big ones for nearly $200. The price tag of one is hanging in the picture. He did not have a website. Says it was more work than it was worth so he dropped it.

They really are cool bugs. He is in Portland's Saturday Market regularly. Anyone with some minor metal working skills could make one of their own as well. I'm not that skilled with a torch, so I'll not be making one for my self right away.

Saw Signs

A little further into the market, I saw a space that was selling metal crafts again. This time, he had taken some old hand saws and turned them into signs. This was cool. Unfortunately he left his stall unmanned while I was there, so I could not talk to him about the signs. I snapped the picture anyway, I hope he does not mind.

Mugwump Bags

Next I stumbled upon a real find. Suzanne Keolker is designing this great bags out of reclaimed materials. She used golden books, maps, board games, air mattresses, and more. Quite a wonderful collection!

Experienced Materials

Gina Nash of Experienced Materials had some wonderful lights made out of tin cans. It sounds so cheesy, but they were really lovely. Her website is still under construction, but you can see some of the cans there. Soon you will be able to purchase some of her line.

Spoonman

Finally at the end of the day, I ran across Spoonman. His whimsical collection of kitchen utincils gone astray is quite fun. He looks like the kind of lunatic who would be spending his days bending spoons and turning cleavers into hats and dinner sets into clocks.

Make a rose from a leaf

I  ran across this cool little idea while surfing.  Leaves usually go into the yard debris bin.  If you have a compost pile, you will toss them there.  How about making your dining table look a little nicer for a while with one of these great maple leaves to rose center pieces.

Shoes from tires

Making a shoe from a tire is common practice in many parts of the world.  Many people third world countries have no shoes, so these are common.  Learn to make them from a blown truck tire.



Upsidedown planters: video post

Today I uploaded my first video to YouTube. I made this video to tell how to make your own hanging tomato planter using kitty litter buckets.



Planning your tire garden

Ready to start your tire garden? The first step is to plan it. There are three steps to planning your garden. Once you have planned it, you can start putting it all together.

The steps:
1. Measure
2. Draw
3. Organize

Measure

First decide where to put your garden. We recommend at least 9 feet wide for two rows of tires. This will give you two rows with space between for a path. Alternatively you can but the tires together, if you can get to them from each side. This later option works well for the folk that like to have their garden right in the middle of the yard.

Now that you know where you want it, measure out the space. You might want to do a rough sketch in the garden so you can be sure you get the measurements are in the right place. Sketch in everything that is currently there, and will stay.

Draw

Take that rough sketch you did and turn it into a scale drawing. You should draw the scale to 1 inch = 4 feet. If you are using semi-truck tires, they are about 40" wide. A quarter is about 15/16th of an inch wide. So the quarter will be a little bigger on your drawing that the tires, but not much.

Be sure to draw in all the features that are currently there, but don't draw in anything you WANT there just yet. If there are fences there, draw them in. This might change what we plant there. Be sure to label which way is north, so we know where the sun hits.

It is a good idea to go out there once in a while and see where the sun hits when. Mark the number of hours different areas of the garden get sun on your map. Again, this will effect what we plant there.

Now is the time to add what we want there. Have some quarters ready. Lay them out on your paper. This will show you about how many tires you can fit where. You can also re-arrange them until you get them the way you want them, without worrying about erasing things. You should have about 36 inches for your path. This will give you space to get a wheel barrow down and then turn it around.

Since your quarters are a little bigger than scale (about 45 inches to scale), you may find you have a little more space than you thought, but for most gardens this will not be much. You also want to draw in a couple of inches space, because the tires will not fit as snugly up next to each other as quarters do, so you really only have a difference of 2-3 inches per quarter. If your garden is larger than about 15 tires in a row, you might consider using paper cutout at .9 inches diameter.

Once you have it all set the way you like it, it is time to draw in the tires. Remember that the quarters are a little bigger than scale tires. You should also measure the tires you have collected to make sure they are about 40 inches in diameter. Once you have verified that, draw them to scale, leaving a couple inches between each tire. If you don't care about it being perfectly to scale, you can use the quarters to draw around, otherwise use a compass.

Organize

Now that the garden is drawn, we need to start saying what we are putting where. Think about succession planting, companion planting, and other organic techniques that cut down on herbicide/pesticide use as well as get you more food in your space.

Number each tire. I like to start at one end of a row and number left to right, top to bottom, just like you read.

Take another paper (or a spreadsheet). On the top put the following headers:
Tire Number
Plant Name
Plant Date
Harvest Date

Under tire number you will put the tire you are planting in. Since you kept track of how much sun hit which spot when and you researched what plants do well living together, you can start planning out what goes where. For each tire, keep a full list of what you will plant when and when you will harvest it. This allows us to do succession planting as well. Lets take an example.

We have a space with 3 rows of 5 tires, in full sun The three sisters (corn, beans, and squash) is a good crop for here. So, we get some good sweet corn, various beans and various squash. We know that we want to plant the corn a few weeks before the beans, this will give it time to grow, and act as the support for the beans. The squash will be planted in the neighboring tires.

Tire # Plant Name Plant Date Harvest Date
1 Peas; Sugar Sprint 23-Feb 26-April
1 Sweet Corn (Peaches and Cream) 14-June 4-Aug
1 Pole Beans 12-July 23-Aug
2 Peas; Sugar Sprint 1-Mar 3-May
2 Jumbo Pink Banana Squash 14-June 27-Sept
3 Lettuce Mix 7-Mar 19-Apr to 14- June
3 Sweet Corn (Peaches and Cream) 14-June 4-Aug
3 Pole Beans 12-July 23-Aug
4 Lettuce Mix 7-Mar 19-Apr to 14- June
4 Spaghetti Squash 14-June 20-Sept
5 Lettuce Mix 7-Mar 19-Apr to 14- June
5 Sweet Corn (Peaches and Cream) 14-June 4-Aug
5 Pole Beans 12-July 23-Aug
6 Peas; Sugar Sprint 1-Mar 3-May
6 Jack be Little Pumpkin 28-June 4-Oct
7 Peas; Sugar Sprint 23-Feb 26-April
7 Sweet Corn (Peaches and Cream) 14-June 4-Aug
7 Pole Beans 5-July 16-Aug
8 Peas; Sugar Sprint 1-Mar 3-May
8 Zucchini Squash 14-June 7-Aug
9 Spinach 1-Mar 26-Apr
9 Sweet Corn (Peaches and Cream) 14-June 4-Aug
9 Pole Beans 5-July 16-Aug
10 Spinach 1-Mar 26-Apr
10 Zucchini Squash 14-June 7-Aug
11 Spinach 1-Mar 26-Apr
11 Sweet Corn (Peaches and Cream) 14-June 4-Aug
11 Pole Beans 5-July 16-Aug
12 Carrots 15-Mar 24-May
12 Yellow Summer Squash 14-June 7-Aug
13 Carrots 15-Mar 24-May
13 Sweet Corn (Peaches and Cream) 14-June 4-Aug
13 Pole Beans 12-July 23-Aug
14 Carrots 15-Mar 24-May
14 Yellow Summer Squash 14-June 7-Aug
15 Carrots 15-Mar 24-May
15 Sweet Corn (Peaches and Cream) 14-June 4-Aug
15 Pole Beans 12-July 23-Aug

Some plants (corn) you need to pick fairly close to the harvest date. Others, like your lettuce and peas, you can keep harvesting throughout. The harvest date is "maturity" based on what the package says under "days to harvest" or whatever it says. This just gives you an idea of when you should be out there looking to pick them, and when you will be able to reclaim the space for another crop.

We have a long growing season here, so we start early. If you cannot start as early, you may not be able to get two crops in a single space, but play with it, and you might find out you can. I would probably like to do another late season crop as well. Peas, Lettuce, Carrots, Spinach, etc all do well with a late summer crop. You can also plant your seeds for one crop before the other crop is harvested. You have a week or two before germination, so you can overlap slightly, if harvesting will not disturb your seedlings. This would not be good with carrots, but planting shade loving lettuce around your about to be harvested corn is a good idea.

You may want to stagger your planting and harvesting more as well. If you plant your carrots every week, you will have fresh carrots for a longer period.

Make a Tire Garden

Our namesake is the Tire Garden, so it is fitting that this will be the first article written for the site.

What is a tire garden?

A tire garden is a raised be garden using old automobile tires as the bed walls.

Why tires?

1. They are free. You can walk into any tire store and tell them that you want to take some of their old tires. They have to pay to get them hauled off, they are happy to let you take some away.

2. Tires loose their usefulness once they go bald... what happens with them then? Usually they get piled up somewhere. Sometimes they will get shredded up and turned into asphalt, running tracks, or something else, but not all tires are used. According to the EPA 80.4% of scrap tires are re-used. The remaining 19.6% are piled up or added to landfills. They do not degrade and they make great mosquito breeding areas. Using them in the garden is another way to get rid of them.

3. Raised beds warm up faster in the spring as they are above the frost line and there is more air circulating. With tires you get the black color, which holds the suns rays, so it warms even better.

4. Compaction and drainage. This is true with all raised beds, but since you are not stepping in them, they don't compact. They also drain well. If you leave the walls on, this prevents evaporation allowing you to go longer between waterings.

5. Less bending. If you don't like to bend down, stack the tires 2 or 3 tall, so you bend less. Or you get the really big tractor tires that are 3-4 feet thick!

Too many other reasons to list! If you know some, add a comment.

Are they safe?

It appears so. What I have read says that once the tires have been driven for a few hundred miles they stabalize. So if you are using used tires, and not brand new ones, then it should be safe. My source is not anyone official, so if you know of anthing more official, please let me know.

Getting the tires.

This part is easy. Just walk into your local tire store and say "Hey, can I haul off some of your scrap tires?" They might look at you funny or say "Why the heck would you want our garbage?" but they will let you have them. If you want big tires, bring a truck and visit a tire store that deals with truck tires. If you want REALLY big tires, bring a big truck and visit a store that deals with that kind of tire. They will most likely be around where big rigs are sold. You may also find them in agricultural areas.

Cleaning the tires.

Get a good cleaner or degreaser. Of course use one that is environmentally friendly! Spray it on the outside of the tire and clean it up really good. Clean the inside as well. Spray it down with the hose till all the cleaner is off.

Preparing the tire.

At this point you have a few choices. You can cut the sidewalls off and turn them inside out. This gives maximum surface space. You can leave them as is and stack them. This gets them higher and keeps the water in better. You can also cut them into pretty flowers. I like to leave them as is and stack them. See the links below for some other ideas. So, basically, the tire was prepared when you got it cleaned.

Layout your garden.

Plan ahead. Measure out your garden. You want your tires to be of uniform size (usually), so figure that will be the width of your bed. Your paths should be about 3 feet wide. This will give you the soil you need to fill the tires and a path big enough for you and your wheelbarrow and still allow you to turn around.

For more on how to plan your layout, read our Tire Garden Planning Article

Setup.

Get all your tires put into place, 1 tire high. Dig about 18 inches down in your path area and place this soil into your tires. If you want the bed hire, fill the first layer with compost or topsoil and add another tire. Leave about 4 inches at the top. This will allow you to add mulch and will keep the soil warmer in the early spring.

Plan and enjoy.

That is it. Now get to work!

Links

Bob's Open Air Mulched Tire Garden
Blooming Tire Planters
A new use for old tires
Used Tires

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