Daily Archives: June 11, 2012

Build a Solar Window Greenhouse | Waccabuc NY Real Estate

“Going solar” doesn’t have to cost you an arm and a leg … nor does it necessarily mean a big investment of time and materials. In fact, you can complete the small-scale sun energy project pictured here in only a few minutes—using a handful of common household items—for as little as 15¢. And, once the device is assembled, the efficient little window greenhouse can be employed to start early garden seedlings or to raise greens and radishes through the winter.

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Supplies and Construction

The first step in constructing the cardboard conservatory is to gather the necessary materials … all of which can probably be found right in your own home. If you have a closet or attic full of empty cardboard boxes, choose one that measures about 12″ X 12″ X 16″. (Folks who don’t have a ready supply of containers on hand can usually pick up cartons—for free—at large supermarkets.)

 

Next, you’ll need a 24″ X 30″ (11-gallon capacity) plastic garbage bag. For best results, the bag should be translucent white, and at least 1.75 mil thick. You’ll also want to collect a few feet of aluminum foil, some strong glue, thumbtacks or tape, a few clothespins, and a generous quantity of garden earth or commercial potting soil.

To make the simple device, cut off the top of the box diagonally, but be sure to do so at an angle that will leave a 4″ lip on the container’s front. Then glue a length of aluminum foil (with its shiny side out) to the inner surfaces of the carton’s three large sides (this protective layer helps to insulate the greenhouse and to concentrate the solar heat on your seedlings). Next, spread the trash bag out flat and slit it open along the sides and the bottom, creating two rectangular pieces of about 24″ X 30″ each. Cover the bottom of the greenhouse with one of those plastic sheets, and fasten its edges securely—with tape or thumbtacks—about three or four inches up the inner sides of the box. The plastic layer provides further insulation, and prevents any water from leaking through the cardboard. (If you want to ensure doubly effective protection, you might decide to use a whole garbage bag … but doing so could boost the final cost of your sun-grabber by as much as another dime!)

A Moveable Pig Pen That Saves Money | North Salem NY Real Estate

Because pigs seem to produce more edible meat per pound of feed than do other four-footed animals, we’ve found that the critters represent a relatively secure and profitable homestead investment. As an added advantage, the porkers — if the need arises — can be butchered at any age, without regard to their stage of growth and meat preparedness.
We became concerned, however, that our swine were able to wallow idly during a good part of the year, while the grain they consumed was costing us more by the month. In fact, our frustration over rising feed costs inspired us to start thumbing through back issues of MOTHER EARTH NEWS and scanning the feed grain sections of seed catalogs in search of some money-saving alternatives.

How to Save Money While Raising Pigs

Our solution was developed (after a good bit of head scratching) from ideas we found in Gary Nelson’s article “Pigs Plow My Garden,” which suggests putting the animals’ snouts to work as rototillers and in an R.H. Shumway Seeds catalog, which listed an “Annual Hog Pasture Mixture” containing 11 different seed varieties (field peas, soybeans, hairy vetch, clover, rape, sorghum, millet, turnips, barley, oats, and rutabagas) that are ready for grazing in six weeks.
We concluded, therefore, that if we set aside some pasture for pork, our pigs’ grain consumption would be less for at least six months of the year. Also, as they ate, the animals would automatically “till” the fields for subsequent plantings. The idea became even more appealing when we realized that pasturing pigs, whether young stock or pregnant sows, makes excellent nutritional sense. It seems that most green foods — especially grasses — provide carotene, which is converted to vitamin A and stored in the liver. Shortages of this vitamin may cause piglets to be stillborn or to die shortly afterbirth. (Furthermore, if pigs receive only the bare minimum requirement of vitamin A, they may still suffer a retardation of growth: In a short time the pig’s head becomes too large in proportion to its body.)