Archive for category Gardening
Dandelions are Super Foods
Posted by Abby Quillen in Gardening, Health, Herbs on March 4, 2010
It’s almost spring, which means some people are stocking up on Round Up and Weed-B-Gon to prepare themselves for battle against my favorite flower – the humble dandelion. If you’re not as big a fan as I am of these yellow-headed “weeds”, which grow in lawns and sunny open spaces throughout the world, I know of a great way to get rid of them. Eat them.
Every part of the dandelion is edible – leaves, roots, and flowers. And they are nutritional power-houses. They’re rich in beta-carotene, fiber, potassium, iron, calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, B vitamins, and protein.
Over the years, dandelions have been used as cures for countless conditions including:
- kidney stones
- acne
- high blood pressure
- obesity
- diarrhea
- high cholesterol
- anemia
- cancer
- diabetes
- stomach pain
- hepatitis
“There is probably no existing condition that would not benefit from regularly consuming dandelions,” Joyce A Wardwell writes in The Herbal Home Remedy Book.
She also says that dandelion is “one herb to allow yourself the full range of freedom to explore,” because it has “no known cautionary drug interactions, cumulative toxic effects, or contraindications for use.”
So why not harvest the dandelions in your yard this spring? And I’m sure your neighbors wouldn’t mind if you uprooted some of theirs too. (But you probably want to avoid harvesting near streets or from lawns where herbicides or fertilizers are used.)
The leaves
Dandelion leaves have more beta-carotene than carrots and more iron and calcium than spinach. The best time to harvest them is early spring, before the flowers appear, because that’s when they’re the least bitter.
How can you eat dandelion leaves?
- Toss them in salads
- Steam them
- Saute them with garlic, onions, and olive oil
- Infuse them with boiling water to make a tea
- Dry them to use for tea
The flowers
Dandelion flowers are a rich source of the nutrient lecithin. The best time to harvest them is mid-spring, when they’re usually the most abundant. If you cut off the green base, the flowers aren’t bitter.
How can you eat dandelion flowers?
- Toss them in salad
- Steam them with other vegetables
- Make wine
- Make fritters
- Make Dandelion Flower Cookies
The roots
Dandelion roots are full of vitamins and minerals. They are also in rich in a substance called inulin, which may help diabetics to regulate blood sugar. Dandelion roots are often used to treat liver disorders. They’re also a safe natural diuretic, because they’re rich in potassium. The best time to harvest dandelion roots is early spring and late fall.
How can you eat dandelion roots?
- Boil them for 20 minutes to make a tea
- Chop, dry, and roast them to make a tasty coffee substitute.
- Add them to soup stock or miso
- Steam them with other vegetables
As most gardeners know, dandelions are virile (some say pernicious) plants. Why not treat them as allies, rather than enemies, this spring?
Do you eat dandelions? Do you have a favorite dandelion recipe?
Do-it-yourselfing
Posted by Abby Quillen in Family life, Gardening, Household on January 26, 2010
Sometimes, just occasionally, I’ve been known to go a tad over-the-top when it comes to do-it-yourselfing.
My husband’s a good sport, but he’s been a much-needed balance when I come up with a new lofty idea.
For instance, several years ago, he (and every gardening book I read) warned me that I should start with a nice, small, manageable vegetable garden for my first few years. (Of course, I did exactly the opposite and predictably regretted it.)
And occasionally when I’m giddily filling my husband in on a new craft that I’m eager to tackle, which might require the purchase of a loom or something, he is good about gently reminding me of a certain short-lived obsession I had with making mosaics several years ago. It lasted, oh, about a week and a half.
And while my husband has been on board, I’ve noticed a certain look cross his face when I’ve insisted on making the pizza dough, the sauce, and all of the toppings from scratch; or baking all of our bread; or adopting four baby chicks when we were already overwhelmed caring for an infant and 3 cats; or making my own herbal tinctures; or fermenting kombucha on our counter-top.
So yes, over the years, I’ve been known to get a tiny bit carried away with do-it-yourselfing, and fortunately my husband has been here as a voice of reason…
Until he started brewing beer.
Of course, I was thrilled that he was embarking on a do-it-yourself hobby that may also save us some money.
He started by brewing a few pre-prepared kits from the brewery store. Great.
Then he began buying his ingredients separately and mixing up recipes from books. Splendid.
Then he discovered an old folded-up recipe in the back of a book he found at a yard sale, and decided he needed to tackle that one. Okay.
And now he’s talking about tearing up half of the backyard to plant barley, buying a temperature-controlled refrigerator, and learning how to malt barley in the garage. Uh oh.
I’m a tad terrified. But I also can’t help but admire his can-do spirit.
This post is for Steady Mom’s 30 Minute Blog Challenge.
Detroit: From Motor City to Farm City?
Posted by Abby Quillen in Gardening, Social movements on December 9, 2009
Detroit is a sea of vacant blocks, abandoned factories, dilapidated houses, and boarded-up businesses.
The Motor City’s population peaked at 2 million during its boom days in the 1950s. It’s now 900,000 and falling. The city has one of the highest unemployment rates in the country. 47% of its residents are functionally illiterate. And its violent crime rate of 1,220 violent crimes committed per 100,000 people earns it the top spot on Forbes.com’s list of most dangerous cities.
But Matt Allen, a business man and Senior Vice President of Hantz Farms, thinks all those vacant acres in Detroit’s core can be used to transform the city. And he doesn’t want to put in fancy developments or build malls. He wants to tear up the concrete and create the “world’s largest urban farm”.
Allen envisions “a year-round operation, providing spring vegetables, a bounty of summer produce, pick-your-own pumpkins and Christmas trees.” He argues that his plan will create hundreds of green jobs; provide Detroiters with a supply of fresh, local produce; and create a cleaner, greener environment for Detroit’s children.
You can read more about Matt Allen and Hantz Farms and their controversial plan to transform Detroit here, here, here, or here.
From the Archives: Business is Booming
Posted by Abby Quillen in Alternative transportation, Gardening, Household, Simple Living, Whole foods cooking on November 4, 2009
*I’m taking the week off for my birthday. This post was originally published in March. I’ll be back with new posts next week, including an update to the Hen Diaries. We’ve had some dramatic ups and downs in chicken-keeping lately, which I can’t wait to share.*

These are just a few of the headlines that blared off Google’s News feed last week:
- “World economy to shrink by 1-2 percent in 2009”
- “Unemployment rises in 99.7 percent of metro areas”
- “Rescuing the Economy Just Got Harder”.
Pass the St. John’s wort, please.
It’s hard not to despair about the state of the world these days – and not just when you turn on the news. We all know someone – if not many – affected by the “worst recession since the Great Depression.” Depleted retirement accounts, foreclosed homes, lost jobs – personal calamities and real human anguish. And the downturn isn’t just touching those corrupt day-traders, bankers, and mortgage brokers, or hitting the realtors, developers, and fresh faces on Flip This House, who were getting drunk off the housing bubble a couple years ago. It’s taking out teachers, bureaucrats, factory workers, and seemingly half the state of California too. So, we can probably all use some good news about now.
For those of us who weren’t quite so inebriated on the manic consumerism of the last few decades, it’s not hard to find silver linings. So, here goes – five reasons you might want to celebrate a little.
1. Seed companies can hardly keep up with their orders.
Philadelphia-based Burpee Seed Company estimates that $10 in seeds can produce vegetables that would cost $650 in a grocery store. When the economy started its collapse, they marketed the “money garden” – six easy-to-grow seed packs for ten dollars. Not surprisingly, Burpee’s business is up twenty percent from last year.
Burpee’s not alone. Washington-based Irish Eyes Garden Seeds is getting a hundred calls a day – a 20 to 30 percent increase over last year. At Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds, a small company in the Ozarks, sales are up two and a half times. They’re having trouble keeping their catalogs stocked, and their most popular seed varieties are sold out for the season. Oregon’s Territorial Seeds is experiencing the same phenomenon. It’s official – the backyard garden is the hottest thing growing this spring. Even the Obamas are doing it.
2. Americans are rediscovering their kitchens.
Epicurious.com predicted that one of the hallmarks of 2009 would be “a return to families cooking together and eating at home more than they have in decades,” and they seem to be right so far. Sales of cookbooks, cookware, and cooking magazines are up. Websites devoted to helping newbies navigate the kitchen are thriving. And people aren’t just tossing jars of pasta on noodles or popping boxes in the microwave; they’re cooking from scratch. Staples like white flour, dried beans and legumes, and eggs are flying off grocery store shelves. And according to market researcher Nielsen Co., canning and freezing supplies were the supermarket sales category with the highest annual growth rate (as of last November) – a trend they haven’t seen since the 1930s.
3. Libraries have become hip.
Libraries across the nation are reporting more visits and higher circulation. Lawrence Public Library director Bruce Flanders says his numbers are in a “rapidly ascending trajectory.” Library card requests rose 27% in San Francisco in the last months of 2008. And CBS Evening News reported that nationwide more people applied for library cards last year than anytime since libraries started keeping records in 1990.
Public libraries are awesome, not just for all the money individuals save by borrowing books, DVDs, and computers rather than buying their own, or the resources we keep out of the landfills when we share. Libraries are also refuges for the lonely-types of the world – punk teens, new parents, retired grandfathers, and information seekers of all kind. And librarians are downright edgy. They read banned books, thumb their noses at the Patriot Act, and they’ll answer just about any question in the stratosphere, no matter how bizarre. Plus, as Dale Carnegie knew, there’s no better place to retool your resume than a public library. (Now if only library budgets were also in that rapidly ascending trajectory.)
4. Craftiness is chic
According to Entrepeneur.com, “tough times tend to spur creativity”. And sure enough, crafting is cool right now. Craft and Hobby Association reported that in 2007, craft sales reached nearly $32 billion, and almost 57 percent of U.S. households engaged in crafting. Crafts – especially sewing, scrapbooking, and knitting – are just getting more popular as the economy sours. Etsy.com, a site where small crafters sell the wares, reported a more than three-fold increase in sales in 2008. And despite the general gloomy reports coming out of the publishing industry, craft books are making big profits. It’s not just craftiness – the recession is inspiring people to hunker down and enjoy other old-fashioned activities, like board games and playing music together.
5. Bike service shops are booming
Car lots might be vacant these days, but some bike shops are teeming with customers. Bike industry news is mixed. Sales for higher-end models and mountain bikes are down. But shops offering utility city cycles - entry-level, commuting, hybrid, and cargo models – are faring much better. And service-oriented shops in bike-friendly locales are rolling right along. The $4 a gallon gas last spring inspired quite a few people to dust the cobwebs off their old bikes and teeter them in for tune-ups. And recession-era frugality has kept that trend alive. People may feel uneasy laying down the cash for a new bike right now, but even with plunging gas prices, folks are discovering it’s cheaper to tune up that old cruiser than to keep the station wagon on the road.
So, let’s raise our glasses (of homebrew) to the resurgence of bikes, crafts, cooking, gardens, and libraries. They’re nourishing to people’s bodies, minds, and souls, not to mention their pocket books. The more people who love them, the better.
Ditch the Gym and Get Fit: 7 ways to stay active as the weather gets colder
Posted by Abby Quillen in Alternative transportation, Family life, Gardening, Health, Household, Parenting on October 12, 2009

I used to run a few miles every morning. On the rare days I didn’t run, I swam laps, played tennis, hiked in the woods, or went on a bike ride. And I owned a library of yoga and pilates DVDs.
These days I hardly even think about exercise, and the tennis rackets and workout DVDs are in the closet gathering dust. But the weird thing is – I think I might be fitter now.
I spend most of my days carrying or chasing my active 16-month old baby, and my house, yard, and gardens require nearly constant labor. My family walks or rides bikes most everywhere we go – to the grocery store, library, park, and to friends’ houses. And I rarely stop moving during the day, except when I’m writing. Sure, sometimes I miss those long solo runs and challenging yoga workouts, but I just don’t have much energy to spare at the end of my days.
Mayo Clinic physician Dr. James Levine’s research makes me think it might not just be my imagination. I may actually be in better shape now than back when my idea of relaxation was a Rodney Yee or Seane Corn power yoga session. The results of Levine’s study on obesity (Science, January 28, 2005) indicate that if you want to achieve a healthy body weight, it’s more effective to put more of what Levine calls NEAT — “Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis” — into your life than to seek out organized exercise. NEAT includes the activities of daily life that are not planned physical activity, like standing, walking, talking, cleaning, fidgeting, or diving to rescue a sixteen-month old before he pulls the Oxford English Dictionary onto his head.
Moreover another large study suggests that the frequent moderate activity of daily life helps prevent cancer better than more infrequent, but intense recreational activity. In the nine-country European breast cancer study of more than 200,000 women, of all the household and recreational exercise women did, household activity – including housework, home repair, gardening, and stair climbing – was the only activity that significantly reduced breast cancer risk. (Physical Activity and Breast Cancer Risk: The European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition, Cancer Epedemiology Biomarkers & Prevention, 2006)
Increasing your daily activity, or NEAT, is easy, and the best part is, you not only get a healthy body, you get to mark things off your to-do list. Plus, increasing your NEAT usually means turning off power tools and ramping up human-power. And that means burning less coal and gasoline, contributing to a cleaner, healthier planet for all of us.
Here are 7 great ways to increase your NEAT as the weather gets colder.
1. Hang laundry.

Depending on where you live, take advantage of the sunny autumn days to hang laundry on the line. Drying diapers or whites in the sun helps bleach and disinfect them. Line-drying also saves money, conserves energy, and helps clothes last longer. During the winter, you can dry clothes on a rack inside in most climates, which also helps to humidify dry indoor air.
2. Split and stack fire wood.

Burning wood is arguably not the greenest way to heat a house, but it can be remarkably economical (and cozy). Plus, preparing winter wood stores is an excellent workout for a crisp autumn day.
3. Prepare the gardens for winter.

In most climates, it’s time to plant bulbs, harvest and dry or freeze herbs, save seeds, clear away dead foliage, and plant cover crops.
4. Rake leaves

Several years ago, I lived next to a dental office with the most manicured lawn I’ve ever seen. Teams of landscapers descended on it every day with gas-powered leaf blowers, lawn mowers, and shrub trimmers. The noise was deafening. Since then, I’ve become a huge fan of the humble (and quiet) rake.
5. Hand wash dishes

The jury’s still out on whether it’s greener to hand wash or machine wash dishes. It depends on how you’re hand-washing and rinsing and on how energy-efficient your dishwasher is. (See an analysis of the carbon footprint of each method here.) In our household, hand washing conserves both money and energy. On the downside, it hogs a lot of precious counter space. However, I tend to actually prefer hand washing. It’s a pleasant, meditative task, and it’s just the sort of frequent, moderate exercise those studies suggest is so good for us.
6. Leave the car at home.

How can you increase your physical activity, be healthier, feel better, make the world a cleaner, more beautiful place while you get where you need to go? Stop driving, or at least significantly reduce your car-use. Whether you bike, walk, or take public transportation, you’re certain to add more activity to your day when you ditch the automobile. And as a perk, alternative transportation is usually more fun than sitting in traffic, searching for parking spots, and being on the road with enraged drivers.
7. Play

If you have little ones in your life, you already know how much energy you can burn jumping into piles of leaves, building forts, playing Red Rover, or just carrying or chasing after the little speed-racers. If you don’t have kids, I’m sure a neighbor, friend, or family member would be happy to share the fun for a few hours (so he or she can take a nap).
What are your favorite ways to stay active as winter approaches?
How’s your garden growing?
Posted by Abby Quillen in Gardening, New Urban Habitat on August 6, 2009


We haven’t seen any eggs yet … but we’ve got fruit, lots of fruit! Our garden bounty has been mixed this year. We’ve had plenty of lettuce and expect to be overwhelmed with tomatoes in a few weeks. But our broccoli and cauliflower plants became chicken scratch (Note to fledgling chicken-keepers: a fence around the garden is a must!); our beans and carrots never took off; and our peppers got buried in all the tomatoes. The best surprise of the year?: our plum tree and our neighbor’s cherry tree and blackberry bushes (which hang into our yard) produced lots of tasty treats.
So … how’s your garden growing?
The Creative Life: Buy less, create more, and transform your life
Posted by Abby Quillen in Gardening, Household, Simple Living, Whole foods cooking on May 13, 2009
When you type the phrase “American consumers” into Google, you get 976,000 results. That two-word phrase is mentioned 1,494 times in Google News stories just today. I don’t know about you, but I’m a little tired of hearing about American consumers. I’m all for supporting farmers, booksellers, manufacturers, craftsmen, bakers, and artisans with my dollars – especially those doing business in a fair, sustainable way. I’m just convinced that this meme that Americans are essentially consumers is destructive, not just to the environment, but to our psyches.

Consumption is passive, bland, and boring. Consumption requires little of us. We humans are creative and innovative creatures. Our minds churn with thoughts, impressions, and opinions. We erupt with ideas. We produce symphonies, skyscrapers, bridges, frescoes, novels, poems, quilts, ocean liners, and airplanes. We’re not mindless buyers, purchasers, or consumers. We are producers, inventors … creators.
How can we buck this oppressive notion that our most important role in life is consuming? Easy. We can buy less and get creative. I’m all for art. Draw, paint, sew, knit, crochet, sing, and dance! But what I’m talking about is more accessible. It doesn’t require a paint brush, knitting needles, a sewing machine … or talent. All you have to do is bring imagination to the day-to-day.
Look at your shopping list; think outside the box, bottle, or container; and ask yourself, Can I make this? Sometimes the answer will be no … or the learning curve, labor, or time you’d spend make it a bad candidate for your efforts. But often you can make things.
It may be hard to shift your consciousness from buying to creating at first. Most of us have watched and listened to literally years of commercials selling everything from boxed rice, to jarred baby food, to taco seasoning, to deodorant. Corporations have convinced us we need loads of products. And the government and media have even conflated consuming with civic responsibility. So it may seem strange that a lot of the products and packaged food we buy are unnecessary. Some don’t even save us time; many are inferior to what we can make ourselves; and worse, many (and their packages) are destructive to our health and to the planet.
When you start thinking about what you can make and start practicing that first (and most ignored) part of the recycling mantra – reduce, reuse, recycle, your grocery bills will inevitably shrink. You’ll probably experience an incomparable glow of satisfaction when your creations taste fabulous or nail the job they’re intended for. You might also notice positive changes in your health. But the best part is you’ll begin to see yourself as the imaginative, resourceful, amazing creator that you are.
Four easy ways to start buying less and getting creative:
1. Grow food
Turn your lawn into an edible landscape, put a few containers of tomatoes on your balcony, plant a fruit tree, or just grow some herbs in your kitchen window. When you garden, you and nature become co-creators in a grand project. And fruit, veggies, and herbs are never again something you mindlessly buy at the supermarket year-round.

2. Cook from scratch
You can easily afford some good cookbooks with all the money you’ll save by ditching expensive, nutritionally-deficient, processed food. Cooking is easy. If you’re a newby, just follow the recipes closely. Of course, cooking with whole foods takes more time than heating up processed food or spinning through the drive through. But you’ll save buckets of cash, eat healthier, and the taste difference is nothing short of astounding. Some of my favorite cookbooks: Cooking for the Whole Family by Cynthia Lair, Laurel’s Kitchen by Laurel Robertson, and America’s Test Kitchen Family Cookbook.

3. Make bread
The authors of Laurel’s Kitchen Bread Book insist there are “subtle, far-reaching, and distinctly positive changes that can take place when you begin to bake (bread) regularly.” They claim the process is therapeutic, creative, calming, and can transform a house into a home. I agree. I’ve been making my family’s bread for much of the past year, and I’m amazed by how much I look forward to bread-making day, not just because the house smells delectable and I get to eat slices of steaming hot bread fresh from the oven. There’s also something about the process. It leaves a lot of room for learning and growing. Bread-making undeniably takes time, but you can use a bread machine, stand-up mixer, or food processor to help with the kneading, and for most of the rest of the process, the dough simply rests and rises on the counter, leaving you free to kick back or attend to some other chore. Start with a basic loaf, and you might find yourself moving onto more complicated recipes, like desem or sourdough, before you know it.

4. Mix up green cleaners
Years ago my friend Beth told me she started looking forward to cleaning when she started making her own cleaners, but it took me years to heed her advice. It seemed complicated. It’s not. Trust me, you do not need to be a chemist for this. All you need is distilled white vinegar, baking soda, and liquid castile soap (Think: Dr. Bronner’s). And Beth’s right – homemade cleaners make housework more fun. You can mix up an all-purpose bathroom cleaner with 50/50 vinegar and water. Find more recipes for everything from furniture polish to mildew remover in The Urban Homestead: Your Guide to Self-Sufficient Living in the Heart of the City by Kelly Coyne and Erik Knutzen or Organic Housekeeping by Ellen Sandbeck.

You don’t have to stop there. You can make herbal teas, tonics, tinctures, cosmetics, lotions, salves, yogurt, butter, ice cream, beer, wine, kimchi, sauerkraut, kombucha, pickles, jams, and so much more. And for the more crafty – of course, you can sew clothes; crochet blankets; knit sweaters; create art for your walls; or build furniture. You may find that the more you create, the more creative you become.
Are you already buying less and getting creative? I’d love to hear what you’re doing!
Living better, living longer
Posted by Abby Quillen in Alternative transportation, Family life, Gardening, New Urban Habitat, Simple Living, Whole foods cooking on May 2, 2009

Great news! We’re not only living the good life in the New Urban Habitat. By downsizing, gardening, walking, biking, drinking herbal teas, eating a whole-foods diet, and building community – we’ll probably also live longer. Have you heard of Blue Zones? Dan Buettner put together a team of researchers who’ve been travelling to the pockets of the world where people live the longest, healthiest lives. They’ve visited Northern Costa Rica; Sardinia, Italy; Okinawa, Japan; and most recently Ikaria, an isolated Greek island. What they’ve learned about longevity probably won’t surprise you, but hopefully it will reinforce your healthy habits. Check out their video on Ikaria, and their top ten ways to add 14 years to your life.
Business is Booming: 5 Rays of Recession-Era Hope
Posted by Abby Quillen in Alternative transportation, Gardening, Whole foods cooking on March 29, 2009

These are just a few of the headlines that blared off Google’s News feed last week:
- “World economy to shrink by 1-2 percent in 2009”
- “Unemployment rises in 99.7 percent of metro areas”
- “Rescuing the Economy Just Got Harder”.
Pass the St. John’s wort, please.
It’s hard not to despair about the state of the world these days – and not just when you turn on the news. We all know someone – if not many – affected by the “worst recession since the Great Depression.” Depleted retirement accounts, foreclosed homes, lost jobs – personal calamities and real human anguish. And the downturn isn’t just touching those corrupt day-traders, bankers, and mortgage brokers, or hitting the realtors, developers, and fresh faces on Flip This House, who were getting drunk off the housing bubble a couple years ago. It’s taking out teachers, bureaucrats, factory workers, and seemingly half the state of California too. So, we can probably all use some good news about now.
For those of us who weren’t quite so inebriated on the manic consumerism of the last few decades, it’s not hard to find silver linings. So, here goes – five reasons you might want to celebrate a little.
1. Seed companies can hardly keep up with their orders.
Philadelphia-based Burpee Seed Company estimates that $10 in seeds can produce vegetables that would cost $650 in a grocery store. When the economy started its collapse, they marketed the “money garden” – six easy-to-grow seed packs for ten dollars. Not surprisingly, Burpee’s business is up twenty percent from last year.
Burpee’s not alone. Washington-based Irish Eyes Garden Seeds is getting a hundred calls a day – a 20 to 30 percent increase over last year. At Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds, a small company in the Ozarks, sales are up two and a half times. They’re having trouble keeping their catalogs stocked, and their most popular seed varieties are sold out for the season. Oregon’s Territorial Seeds is experiencing the same phenomenon. It’s official – the backyard garden is the hottest thing growing this spring. Even the Obamas are doing it.
2. Americans are rediscovering their kitchens.
Epicurious.com predicted that one of the hallmarks of 2009 would be “a return to families cooking together and eating at home more than they have in decades,” and they seem to be right so far. Sales of cookbooks, cookware, and cooking magazines are up. Websites devoted to helping newbies navigate the kitchen are thriving. And people aren’t just tossing jars of pasta on noodles or popping boxes in the microwave; they’re cooking from scratch. Staples like white flour, dried beans and legumes, and eggs are flying off grocery store shelves. And according to market researcher Nielsen Co., canning and freezing supplies were the supermarket sales category with the highest annual growth rate (as of last November) – a trend they haven’t seen since the 1930s.
3. Libraries have become hip.
Libraries across the nation are reporting more visits and higher circulation. Lawrence Public Library director Bruce Flanders says his numbers are in a “rapidly ascending trajectory.” Library card requests rose 27% in San Francisco in the last months of 2008. And CBS Evening News reported that nationwide more people applied for library cards last year than anytime since libraries started keeping records in 1990.
At New Urban Habitat, we’ve been sweet on public libraries for a long time, not just for all the money individuals save by borrowing books, DVDs, and computers rather than buying their own, or the resources we keep out of the landfills when we share. Libraries are also refuges for the lonely-types of the world – punk teens, new parents, retired grandfathers, and information seekers of all kind. And librarians are downright edgy. They read banned books, thumb their noses at the Patriot Act, and they’ll answer just about any question in the stratosphere, no matter how bizarre. Plus, as Dale Carnegie knew, there’s no better place to retool your resume than a public library. (Now if only library budgets were also in that rapidly ascending trajectory.)
4. Craftiness is chic
According to Entrepeneur.com, “tough times tend to spur creativity”. And sure enough, crafting is cool right now. Craft and Hobby Association reported that in 2007, craft sales reached nearly $32 billion, and almost 57 percent of U.S. households engaged in crafting. Crafts – especially sewing, scrapbooking, and knitting – are just getting more popular as the economy sours. Etsy.com, a site where small crafters sell the wares, reported a more than three-fold increase in sales in 2008. And despite the general gloomy reports coming out of the publishing industry, craft books are making big profits. It’s not just craftiness – the recession is inspiring people to hunker down and enjoy other old-fashioned activities, like board games and playing music together.
5. Bike service shops are booming
Car lots might be vacant these days, but some bike shops are teeming with customers. Bike industry news is mixed. Sales for higher-end models and mountain bikes are down. But shops offering utility city cycles - entry-level, commuting, hybrid, and cargo models – are faring much better. And service-oriented shops in bike-friendly locales are rolling right along. The $4 a gallon gas last spring inspired quite a few people to dust the cobwebs off their old bikes and teeter them in for tune-ups. And recession-era frugality has kept that trend alive. People may feel uneasy laying down the cash for a new bike right now, but even with plunging gas prices, folks are discovering it’s cheaper to tune up that old cruiser than to keep the station wagon on the road.
So, let’s raise our glasses (of homebrew) to the resurgence of bikes, crafts, cooking, gardens, and libraries. As we’ve all known for awhile, they are nourishing to people’s bodies, minds, and souls, not to mention their pocket books. The more people who love them, the better.




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