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occasionally subtle
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izzy's playlists!
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@catalyst-collective
May you own property next to water and land with every fruit, vegetable, herb and flowers while sitting in your rocking chair being utterly in love with life.
HOWL'S MOVING CASTLE ハウルの動く城 2004, dir. Hayao Miyazaki
Trees for Life's 10-year Red Squirrel reintroduction project has expanded the species' range in the Scottish Highlands by more than 25%, est
Red Squirrel's range in the Scottish Highlands has increased by more than 25% following a decade of reintroductions led by charity Trees for Life.
Surveys co-ordinated by the charity show that a dozen new populations are now established, with many showing evidence of breeding and natural expansion.
Since the project began in 2015, some 259 squirrels have been relocated from healthy donor sites in Inverness-shire, Moray and Strathspey to 13 suitable woodlands across the north and north-west Highlands.
Red Squirrel returns
The species has now returned to areas from which it had been absent since the 1970s, including sites near Ullapool, Brora, Morvern and across much of the central Highlands as far north as Lairg.
The most recent releases saw 12 squirrels introduced to coastal woodlands between Letterfearn and Ratagan on the Glenelg peninsula, supplementing a small population established last autumn. All translocations are licensed by NatureScot and follow strict welfare protocols, with small numbers taken from each donor population and only healthy individuals moved.
Trees for Life says the project demonstrates how targeted rewilding can support the long-term recovery of one of Scotland's most iconic mammals. "This rewilding success story is offering hope for the long-term survival of Scotland's much-loved red squirrels," said Becky Priestley of Trees for Life.
A new charter formally recognises the entire catchment of the River Wye as a living ecosystem with intrinsic rights
The River Wye, which runs through Wales and England, has become the first river in the UK to be granted cross-border rights from source to sea. The charter means the river is valued with intrinsic rights, and means the river’s right to flow, maintain biodiversity, remain free from pollution, regeneration, to be supported by a healthy catchment, and have representation in decision-making processes are specifically protected. This landmark decision covers the river’s entire 130-mile catchment, from its source in the Cambrian mountains to the Bristol Channel. This Sunday, the charter was celebrated by a community event at the Hay-on-Wye festival. Jackie Charlton, the county council’s cabinet member for a greener Powys, said: “The River Wye is central to our environment, communities and heritage. By adopting this charter, we are making a clear statement that the river’s health matters and must be protected. The Wye is also at the centre of one of the UK biggest pollution cases, as locals have reported that in recent years the river turns regularly green in the summer and has become smelly and slimy. The status of the river has been downgraded to “unfavourable – declining” by Natural England. The charter has been endorsed by the councils of Herefordshire, the Forest of Dean, the Bannau Brycheniog National Parks Association and the Wye Valley National Landscape. “The river has a right to perform its natural functions and be free from pollution,” said Councillor Elissa Swinglehurst, who signed the charter on behalf of Herefordshire Council.
26 May 2026
Today I arranged a small menagerie, with a selection of creatures I've made over the years.
diy liquid soap from bar soap
grate a single 4oz bar of your favorite soap
boil a gallon* of water
slowly add the grated soap to the water, stirring constantly
stir well, until soap is completely dissolved
let cool, stirring occasionally to prevent it from setting up
using a funnel**, pour an appropriate amount into a liquid hand soap dispenser, to use in the kitchen or bathroom
store the rest in a well-cleaned gallon milk jug
congrats, you’ve made a gallon of perfectly good hand soap! i made a gallon of this soap at the beginning of the year, and at this rate it’ll last me well into next year. it’s a fraction of the cost of store-bought, and it uses a fraction of the packaging too, meaning less waste! this also cuts down on the carbon emissions of shipping (any time you buy a liquid product, most of the weight & volume is just water, making it unnecessarily bulky and heavy to transport. if you can buy a dehydrated, solid, or powdered version, you should.)
*a gallon per bar has given me a pretty thick and gelatinous liquid soap. you may be able to get away with more water if you’d prefer a runnier soap. the consistency may also depend on what kind of bar soap you start with
**if you don’t have a kitchen funnel, i highly recommend getting both a small-spouted one for pouring into very narrow bottles and a wide-spouted canning funnel for jars. the latter has been probably the most unexpectedly useful kitchen accessory i’ve ever gotten.
(originally inspired by this post, but this blogger is a big fan of essential oils and i have tweaked the recipe a hair & added my own notes, so i wanted to make my own post. here’s a list of other personal sustainability projects i’ve done. as always, any individual attempts to mitigate climate change are futile due to the scale of the problem, but it doesn’t hurt to make small lifestyle changes, and it’s good practice for eventually living in the solarpunk world we need)
hey just a reminder for those who need it now that everyone is washing their hands so much - it is fuckoff easy to make liquid soap from bar soap and this is how to do it!
How to build a garden with no money
It's a relatively modern problem, where you, a scrappy solarpunk with no money, want to begin a vegetable garden. The ground you have to work with is either dead as hell or flat out toxic or has no dirt at all. You want to build a raised bed but you have no money and the kits are expensive. There's a lot of ways to go about this, here's what I did: I built a wicker basket.
Step one: assemble your branches.
You want whippy ones at least 4' long, no thicker than two fingers, no thinner than a chopstick. Longer and bendier is better, but also get a bunch of thick stiff ones. I got mine from the Greenway near my lil condo, and from my neighbor's yards.
Protips: Wear gloves, because thorns. Carry clippers discretely, because people get nervous when they see sharp shiny things in your pocket. The branches in the above pic are one load of three, because that's how much I could carry.
Step two: hammer your stakes
(no pic for this part, sorry)
Take the thickest and straightest of your branches, and cut a length you want to be the height of your box plus a couple inches extra. Hammer them into the ground every 18" or so, and at each corner. Every side of your box must have at least three stakes.
Protip: if the ground is really hard, drive a hole ahead of the stick by hammering in a screwdriver.
Step three: get weaving
First weave your biggest branches in and out between the stakes. You can remove any leaves for free compost at this point.
Protip: this is the hardest part, so don't get discouraged! Here is also where you will find out of the stakes are thick enough or hammered in deep enough. Try not to cry if they fall over. Or break.
Step four: keep weaving
Now you put in the smaller branches. I found that long vine types like ivy and wild rose can be woven in more than one direction, so if you need to fill in some gaps you can get creative.
Protip: tamp down the walls you've made every so often do they stay nice and dense. They need to be closely woven enough to hold dirt later.
Step five: smaller, different weaving
By now you have gotten down to the sticks that aren't quite long enough to go between the stakes. Make them into smaller stakes, ones that don't go into the ground but nonetheless weave vertically through your box walls. Hey, it's starting to look more like a box!
Protip: break off the ends of the stakes and your new vertical weave so they don't have out too much, and WEAR YOUR GLOVES, don't be an idiot like me and think you're safe because you don't have thorns to deal with.
Step six: fill it with dirt.
If you have any budget, use it all here. Get good, organic dirt, get your compost bin empty, and be extra careful taking dirt from elsewhere if you don't know exactly what has been leaking into it.
Protip: get more dirt than you think you need. Dirt is fluffy. The second you get water on it all the air goes away and you have a three inches deep garden box. In the unlikely event that you get more dirt than you need, use it for your houseplants or porch containers.
And that's it! Plant what you like! Use the seeds you've stolen from other gardens and the insides of your daily fruit! If you've bothered your nosy neighbor and they have alerted the HOA or your landlord, take this time to brush up on your various rights. If your neighbor dislikes you because they believe you to be a witch and a lesbian and idk, a long haired hippy or some other deeply outdated derogatory term, get those middle fingers up because you are going to help the bees and they aren't.
Green can be very punk.
Dandelion Root Coffee
I was inspired to write about the magnificent dandelion today as an earthy caramel-like scent wafted through the house. The aroma of roasting dandelion roots is totally unlike anything I have ever smelled before, and definitely not what I expected (being well-accustomed to the smell of the bitter white latex in the leaves).
I’m a coffee addict: at minimum, I probably drink about half of a pot a day, as do most Scandinavians. I’ve worked in a fairtrade coffee cooperative before, and despite all the best efforts to improve the coffee industry, it is as exploitative and environmentally destructive as ever. Therefore, I am always on the lookout for local and/or temperate-hardy sustainable alternatives to get my bitter fix, like chicory and the Kentucky Coffeetree. I even grow my own coffee plants indoors.
Another delectable option for warm tannic satisfaction came today in the form of a dandelion. I was prepping an area to put in some new trees, so I had to clear out some flora. As I pulled up root after root, remembered tattiehoking’s post about dandelion coffee, and decided to give it a go.
I came to understand today that one of the many benefits that has come from covering the garden in mulch instead of grass has been the sheer size of the dandelion roots available for harvest. The dandelions that grow on the grass plane are wiry and stunted, but the behemoths I dug up in the mulched areas may as well be carrots.
With a little under 2 hours between harvest and steeping, I washed, chopped, and then oven-dried the roots at 100˚ C, turning it up to 180˚ C for the last 30 minutes to roast them. After steeping the resulting pellets for a good five minutes, I topped off my mug with a splash of maple syrup: my Canadian roots seemed to intuit that it was the right thing to do.
The result was a caramel-like brew that is an excellent tonic for the liver and gall bladder, which is also being researched as an anti-cancer medicine. [x] It was truly delicious, which–considering my habits–is bad news for the dandelions in the rest of the local area.
Unsure? Try it before you make it
More:
“Taraxacum—A review on its phytochemical and pharmacological profile,” in Journal of Ethnopharmacology Volume 107, Issue 3, 11 October 2006, Pages 313–323
Dandelion Research, University of Maryland Medical Centre
Uses, side effects, interactions of Dandelion extracts on WebMD
#eat the weeds #dandelions #coffee #medicinal plants #DIY #bioregionalism #recipes
little guys in ghibli movies
How to Build a Kilowatt Wind Turbine for Under $30
This is a Vertical Axis Wind Turbine which uses wind energy to drive things like an alternator/generator for producing electricity, or air and water pumps for cooling, irrigation and similar.
The turbine uses the 35-40% mechanically efficient Lenz2 lift+drag design. It is made almost entirely from scrap materials, and should cost about $15-$30 for the six vane version, which can be made by two people in four hours without much effort.
The three vane version has been successfully survival tested to 80 km/h sustained winds and the six vane version to 105 km. Both will do more, but exactly how much has not yet been ascertained. The current longest running version has been up since early 2014, through reasonable storms, with no noticeable wear and tear as of yet.
Read more…
EDIT: Old link broke, changed it out to a new one
Sustainability: Solitary Bee House
A while ago, I made a post about solitary bee houses and I’ve decided to share my own! This mofo is made of maple and bamboo, lacquered for weather resistance. Note the sizes of the holes: different sizes allow different species of solitary bees like mason bees or carpenter bees to make their homes, so any passerby can stop in to reproduce. (that means RAUNCHY BEE SEXXX). I also put it right above a no-till raised bed with flowers for added support. Right now the daffodils are in bloom, next up are my azaleas (not shown). Then, I plant morning glories around the base of the lattice at different intervals throughout the summer. This way, the bees have nutritional support throughout the seasons.
P.S. Put this shit in shaded areas in your yard to support pollinators because otherwise, our crops will fail and we will be forced to purchase even more food from other countries in order to fulfill our needs!
Cat and kitten door knocker, Clun, England
can't leave that in the notes 😂
[image description: a photo of four very very large, shaggy white dogs, sitting and lying in a forested area, each with a leaf much large than their heads placed on them like a hat. end description.]