Saturday 7 February 2009

Fat cats 1 - man on the street 0

This week BP announced that its annual profits soared by 39 per cent to £18.1 billion. This is a week after Shell announced profits of £13.9 billion. Now that strikes me as obscene on a number of levels. I know business needs to make a profit - that is after all what business is about, but 39% for crying out loud. If my salary went up by 39%..... well it wouldn't would it because that's not the real world!! But more concerning is the fact that this profit was made in a year that saw oil prices reach record highs - surely if the oil companies are having to pay more per barrel of oil their profits should drop or am I being too simplistic here? By my reckoning it means that at a time of spiralling energy costs the big corporations were capitalising on things and making a profit at our expense rather than limiting their profits to a reasonable increase and allowing us to pay less at the pumps! Who says polluting and destroying the environment won't pay?

Saturday 17 January 2009

Fairies and hens!

Forgot to update blog to say the missing hen returned safe and sound! The very nice neighbours caught her and returned her to the coop. Since then they have not been out into the extended and obviously escapable run! So today, having been ripped off at B&Q for some fencing posts I actually built a run for them (with the help of Mr Very Nice Neighbour) and tomorrow it will get a net roof and they can once again be free to roam more! It is interesting to see them stand at the end of the smaller run every day demanding to be let into the new run - no long to go now girls - just wish they'd start laying!
And also today we had a birthday party for our youngest - I have always scoffed at the idea of 'invite the number of kids equal to their age' but invariably find that the kids' parties completely floor me and leave me in a semi comatose state gasping for air and gin (not necessarily in that order!) But today we had 3 kids around for her 3rd birthday - and it was fab. Everyone really enjoyed (even liking the fairy cakes I made that looked like they had a squashed frog on top of them!) and no-one was too frazzled. Definitely the way forwards!

Thursday 15 January 2009

Heathrow gets go ahead

Not that it was unexpected but I am truly gobsmacked that the government has given the go ahead for the third runway at Heathrow! When will the government grow a pair and show some leadership on the issue of the environment in general and Climate Change in particular.
I fail to see how this move fits in with the Government's own target of an 80% reduction in greenhouse gases by 2050 when the expansion will generate 2.6m more tonnes of carbon dioxide a year and raise the annual number of flights from 480,000 to 702,000. Aviation accounts for nearly 6% of all C02 emissions in the UK and it could, according to the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, endanger the 80% target if it is allowed to grow unchecked. We cannot justify this!
Yet another example of the Fat Cats and Multinationals having more sway with Government than the man on the street!
Amidst this it is heartening to see some people taking some real action - Greenpeace, along with Emma Thompson, Alistair McGowan and Zac Goldsmith have bought a piece of land slap bang in the middle of the proposed site of the expansion aiming to attempt to hold things up. http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/climate/airplot/about-airplot

Friday 9 January 2009

One of our chickens is missing!

First of all as this is my first post of 2009 - happy new year to one and all and may the gods smile on you this year!
Last weekend I built (no too strong a word for it considering my level for DIY challengedness!) lets say I erected an extension to my chicken run - basically fenced off a veg bed with 1meter high chicken wire. A friend has a similar but larger version in 50 cm high wire and his hens don't attempt to get out so thought mine would be fine.
BUT NO! Last night I got in from work at 4.45pm to find a note from our neighbour to say one of the chickens was on the run but still in our garden. I went to have a good look around, later joined by the neighbour and their dog to no avail - Rusty has vanished! Hopefully she is being a sensible chook and is roosting up high and will appear later today for some food (I checked again this morning but it was still very dark at 7.15am)
I am annoyed at myself for this and my son is really upset.
RUSTY COME HOME!

Sunday 28 December 2008

The age of thrift!

Make do and mend! Use your leftovers!
Wisdom indeed from a bygone age - words that we often ignore in our modern/post modern world! But in a climate of recession and environmental disaster they are words we need to take on board again.
In the UK we waste about 1/3rd of the food we buy - that is a shameful statistic but it gets worse - it rises to 80% over the Christmas period! 80%! 80%! That is disgusting! How can we have the brass neck to waste so much food when many around the world go hungry? http://www.lovefoodhatewaste.com/
Anyway (puts soap box aside!) as mentioned in my Pressure Cooker post I made thCheck Spellinge annual turkey stock yesterday - another remnant of a bygone age it would seem. It is amazing how many folk look at you like you have 2 heads when you say you make your own stock. But what a waste of a carcass if you don't and once you taste home made stock shop bought stuff is never the same. So we made 7 pots of stock (about 500ml each which will need diluting before use as is very strong stuff!) and we eked out 8 meals from the meat (most are now frozen) so all in all this makes an organic free range turkey go a long long way and actually hugely economical.
We have made the conscious decision to only eat organic meat and the majority of this comes from a farm we support in the Scottish Borders (http://www.whitmuirorganics.co.uk/) and we feel that it is respectful to get the most out of each animal/cut of meat. It is amazing when you hear of people who only use the breast meat from a chicken and then throw the rest of the carcass in the bin! No wonder meat is too expensive then!!

The pressure is on!!

Went and bought a pressure cooker yesterday!! I had been planning this for a while and had been doing online research but the crunch came when it was time to make the annual stock from the turkey carcass. Suddenly the thought of boiling away for 4 hours seemed a silly idea when it would take a fraction of the time in a pressure cooker. Add to that the fact that our house does not like condensation at all (a wall was blistering on Christmas day despite having windows open and the dehumidifier on!) So an emergency trip to Argos later and one new pressure cooker was mine. A quick read of the instructions and hey presto the carcass was in and 1 hour later perfect stock resulted! The wife was/is a bit dubious re the new cooker - scared it will explode but having seen the stock and now boiled spuds in it today is coming around to it!
So why bother? For me it is all about reducing further our fossil fuel reliance - using the Pressure cooker reduces cooking times by about 2/3 so that is an amazing reduction in gas usage also and so less CO2 production. That can only be a good thing! And in an age of increasing fuel bills hopefully the savings will pay back the outlay on the pressure cooker pretty soon(ish!)
It's funny -having read lots over the last few years about reducing your carbon footprint I have no recollection of anyone recommending using a pressure cooker - but I think they are the way forwards. Many folks see them as a thing granny used to use - but that's not a good reason for not using them - we so often disparage traditional things but our ancestors knew a thing or two we need to get to grips with!! And modern pressure cookers are much safer than the ones granny used!! So get out and get one!!

Wednesday 10 December 2008

Too little too late?

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/dec/09/poznan-copenhagen-global-warming-targets-climate-change

It seems that the science on climate change is moving fast and last years reports are already out of date - it may be that we are committed to run away climate change as we have debated and delayed too long!
I am sad - sad that my generation didn't do enough and yet we have a government who jump fast to save the banking sector and now it would seem the motor vehicle sector too but dillydallyed over climate change until it was too late. I am sad that my kids will grow up into a hugely different world and life will be harder, possibly much harder than when I grew up.
But, depressed and pessimistic as I feel I will keep on going in making my lifestyle as green as I can and in campaigning and educating - why? In 30 years time if and when my kids ask me if I did anything to help I want to say yes, I did my part, I tried!