Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Plastics by the number

Here's an article on the plastics debate. At the end there's a simple way to remember which plastics to avoid because of possible toxins:
the symposium handed out a reminder card listing “safer plastics” as those marked (usually at the bottom of a container) 1, 2, 4 or 5. It suggests that the “plastics to avoid” are those numbered 3, 6 and 7 (unless they are also marked “BPA-free”).

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Very lovely twins story

Someone posted this Newsweek story on our local twins forum the other day. It's the tale of fraternal twin girls from China who were adopted by different families in the US and at the age of 4 found each other. It's such a beautiful story about the connection twins share.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Unique, reasonable, sustainable gift idea...


...and it supports an amazing artist. Here's the new San Francisco Bay Area produce calendar by our friend who does letterpress out of her garage.

Not only does it tell you about what to buy in season and what to plant in any given month, it's a perpetual calendar so you never have to throw it away! Use it for planting notes or a birthday calendar.

I think it's gorgeous to boot!

Great for Bay Area residents or even homesick Northern Californians who'd appreciate the happy seasonal memories.

And for more holiday craft presents check out Renegade's Holiday Fair San Francisco. It's at Fort Mason, December 19+20:


Saturday, October 31, 2009

Cozy breakfast for the cold weather

The changing seasons have reminded me how our favorite morning comfort food tastes even better in the cool weather. Thes are great because they freeze well and can be used in place of store bought freezer waffles. Enjoy!

Oatmeal-Buttermilk-Blueberry Waffles

Makes 16 little square waffles

2 cups quick oatmeal
2 cups lowfat buttermilk

Combine oatmeal and buttermilk in a bowl and let stand to soften, about 10 minutes – less if in a real hurry. Softer it is, the tastier it is. Even overnight is fine.

Add in and stir:
3 eggs
2 tablespoons sugar
4 tablespoons canola oil
dash of vanilla

Add and mix well:
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt or less

Once that’s combined add:
½ cup white flour or white whole wheat flour
1 cup frozen organic wild blueberries

Spray a light coat of oil or Pam on a preheated waffle iron. Put a heaping cup of batter on the iron and bake as directed. You end up with 4 big waffles, 16 little squares.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Halloween time

I was just pointed to a blog post that dealt with frugal/repurposed Halloween costumes (thanks for the tip @rachellechong).

We're pretty much going down that road ourselves this Halloween. The girls announced a few weeks ago that they wanted to be a soccer team ... they saw some big girls playing soccer and Big girls hold Big sway around our house these days. Of course they want to be a PINK soccer team so we're just rounding up some pink shorts and tops and I'll baste on some big felt numbers. They'll carry some soccer balls we have around and I may well invest in some cheap knee socks and head bands.

My husband decided he wanted to dress up as the coach and it was a very easy call for me to be referee. Figuring out my costume will probably be the biggest challenge!

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Reduce your carbon contest

Dorky, snide remarks about "carbon-free" sugar aside, I'm all for greening the kitchen. Here's a great opportunity to offer up nuggets of wisdom about eco-friendly cooking. And to earn prizes in the process (Kindle anyone?)!

It's thanks to the folks at the Brighter Planet Blog. Happy Blog Action Day 2009!

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

I'm all for going green...

...but carbon free sugar?!? I don't think this new packaging was the brainchild of chemists:

(Chemistry refresher... sugar's basic formula is CH2O)

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Big plug for etsy's alchemy!

I can't be the only one with a growing pile of craft projects I'll get to ... when? And yet I keep feeding it, assuming that the day will come (and in some cases that I'll be magically imbued with new found art skills) to complete the projects. One of these was improving the horrible, drab blackout curtain in my kids' room:

It's a vital, necessary thing, but such a downer to look at. So I imagined sewing on some decals, or cutting out some fabric scraps to liven things up. This was not happening so I decided to try out Alchemy, the new custom order site by Etsy. Etsy is just what it sounds like. OK, so etsy doesn't really sound like anything but what it is is a fabulous online craft source. Alchemy is a place where you can post your craft project and people bid on doing it.

I posted a picture of the curtain and a description of the mural I wanted and within 24 hours I had 3 bids. I picked my favorite Etsy provider based on the links they sent, mailed off the curtain and 2 weeks later got:


The girls adore it... and it had all the elements they'd asked for... a sun, flowers, a tree and a bird. And the price was completely reasonable!

Two sewing thimbles up for Alchemy!

Monday, September 7, 2009

On the budget front: Gilt Groupe invitation link

Gilt Groupe is an online sample sale for very high end clothes. The best part is they have a children's category, which often has really nice stuff. It's a great place to find unique but -- thanks to the site's discounts -- within reach special occassion kids gifts. The sale this week, for instance, featured Tea Collection and Saurette.

It's invitation only. Here's a working invitation link:
http://www.giltgroupe.com/invite/handknit

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

In an emergency, think about text and twitter

My husband and I were talking about emergency preparedness this weekend. One of the subjects we covered was how to be in touch. We both were in lower Manhattan on Sept. 11, 2001 and it was just Blackberries working that day... people passed them around to those who didn't have them so everyone could get an email out.

We don't have Blackberries now but we settled on text messages since they're a similar technology. On the old-school front, we also reminded each other of the one, non-cordless phone in the house that'll work even if electricity goes out.

Today there was a great article in the SF Chronicle taking the text idea one step further. You can program a message, like "we're okay" into your phone and also put in the numbers where you want it sent (something they didn't say: remember always include numbers of friends/family OUTSIDE the state since those are more likely to reach their target and can be a point of contact for everyone here). Then you can just quickly hit send in case you ever need to.

Monday, August 31, 2009

Cheap, easy way to display/frame kids' art projects

The girls are starting to really draw and paint. I know one of the important rules for parents looking to encourage their kids is to display their art on occasion. Unfortunately in our apartment our refrigerator is hidden out of view, so that old standby won't work.

So I set out to find a substitute with minimal nails and tape on the walls. Here's what I came up with. The key ingredients were black poster board from the drug store and three bulldog clips at an art supply store. Then out of our tool/sewing kit I got some thread, picture hanging hooks and a little felt pad. I hooked the picture hanging hooks UPSIDE DOWN on our moldings. Then I tied thread to the part of the hook where the nail would ordinarily go. I tied a bulldog clip to the other end of the thread. I repeated this four times and was ready to hang two pictures in our formerly drab hall.

I used a third bulldog clip to keep the pictures weighted down. The only problem was when you'd walk down the hall, the clips would move a little and make a little metallic banging sound. So I used the felt pads (the little kind you put on the bottom of chairs to protect wood floors) to put on the back of the bottom clip. That stopped the sound and actually damped the movement.

The best part is, I can easily swap out the paintings for their next big work of art.

The "ingredients" are pictured below:

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Did the digital television switch make your reception worse?

It did for us... But fortunately it was a pretty quick fix. It turns out that some of the stations actually changed channels as part of the switch. So you have to deploy the "rescan" feature in the digital converter box menu. That was all we needed.

Apparently in some cases that doesn't do the trick and there is this more complex "double re-scanning" trick to try in that case.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Making foaming hand soap refills for toddlers

I'm a big fan of using foamy soap for teaching my girls to wash on their own. Because the product is basically diluted soap, it wastes less if they go overboard and also it washes off more easily. With H1N1 season coming I imagine we'll be doing lots of handwashing.

On that note, I've been researching the best way to make a refill. Just adding regular liquid soap to the pump clogs the mechanism. One website I found said to dilute liquid soap with boiling water (I could see how this would dissolve the soap without creating bubbles as happens with shaking). Others suggested a variety of ratios of liquid soap to water. One place suggested 1 oz. Dr. Bronner's to 5 oz. water -- Dr. Bronner's is already so liquidy it's easy to work with.

I ended up going 1 tablespoon standard liquid soap to 3/4 cup water. I combined them in the soap dispenser and shook them up. So far so good. That's a 10:1 water-soap ratio which I read was best for not clogging the soap bottle.

Besides being a cheaper way to go than buying the pre-made foaming soap refills, making your own foaming soap can ensure eliminating an ingredient commonly used to make the soap foamier: SLS. (Sodium Lauryl Sulfate). While I am not super hard core about trying to avoid SLS, it's not something you really want to have in EXTRA doses. There are some pre-made foamy soap refills that don't have it like this Kiss My Face version.

Part of me was also excited about making my own foaming soap because I thought I could make an unscented version. I know scent free is supposed to be best for sensitive skin. But when it comes to my toddlers who are adamant about independence when hand washing I like something with a strong fragrance so I can tell easily if they've washed or not. I ended up used the last of this lemongrass soap I had on hand.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

DIY Summer Camp

This is less on the green side and more on the cost cutting side... A friend just forward this AP article about DIY Summer Camps that parents are putting together in these tough economic times.

Monday, August 3, 2009

Potty training twins - together or separately?

A blog post in today's New York Times about Potty Training and the Economy pushed me to write out my thoughts on potty training twins separately.

Before potty training, pretty much every twin parent I talked to had taught their twins to use the toilet at the same time. But in our case it turned out differently (my daughters are fraternal in case that matters). I tried once with both of them around 22 months. After 3 days I threw in the towel figuratively -- that was after throwing loads of literal towels onto pee. None of us seemed happy with this experience.

I tried again around 25 months. One of my daughters then was simply ready before the other. She had used the potty to go poop for many months and seemed really interested. My other daughter was interested too, but seemed really undone by peeing all over herself and the floor or ground. She'd be upset and repeatedly asked for a diaper. So Ms. A transitioned to underwear (albeit with accidents over the course of a month) and Ms. B stayed in diapers. They both seemed happy with the outcome.

Fast forward to this month, Ms. B has been asking to wear undies, so the past 3 days she's gone diaper free. It's been A LOT easier to work with a 2.7 year old on using the potty. She has a lot more control... within 3 days she was accident free.

So contrary to what I learned, it may sometimes work out that twins learn this skill at different times. Because as much as it's been easier with Ms. B at 2.7 years, it was definitely the right thing to do with Ms. A months ago. She was clearly proud of mastering the potty skill and she's also become a lot more temperamental as the 2's go on - so I could see the two of us having control issues if we were trying now. It's not ideal to have to carry around both diapers and potty accessories, but the upside is that you can focus on each individually and the added plus for me was it was a lot less overwhelming...

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Great idea for an eco friendly bridal shower (even baby shower?)

I recently checked with an organization I did a story about a few years ago. It's called Village Harvest and it does backyard gleaning. They organize volunteers to pick ripe fruit from backyard trees. And then they donate the fruit to food banks. The group also picks in old orchards that dot the San Francisco Bay Area and donates those crops as well.

The founder told me that next weekend they're doing a bridal shower... someone contacted them saying that they wanted to have a bridal shower that involved giving back. Picking fruit to donate to food banks fit the bill. So a group of women are going to come to an old pear orchard and have a picnic/picking party. They decided on a "pear" orchard for the shower (get the pun?). Photo credit for above:
Thought I'd pass on what seemed like a nice green shower idea. Now for a visual pun. This photo is titled:

Pear: Shaped


Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Great baby finger food: Black Bean pancakes

I got an email the other day from a friend who was looking for iron-rich baby foods. My suggestion was dried apricots (cooked and mushed). She wrote back a few days later with this recipe for black bean pancakes. Thought I'd pass it on:
I put some cooked potatoes, canned black beans, and onion in the cuisinart, then added some whole beans as well for fun texture. Mixed in egg and rice cereal to stick it all together (and for that extra iron). Fried in a little olive oil. Too bland for my taste, but E likes them and I can spice them up when he gets a little older.

Monday, June 29, 2009

For laughs: Craigslist parody

Because I spend a lot of time on Craigslist, Freecycle and the like trading in kid gear, this new Weird Al Yankovich parody tickled me a bit. Wanted to pass it on.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Toddler friendly fruit muffins (dairy free version too)!

With summer in full swing, the farmer's markets are packed with fruit (and people... mob scene today at our). Trying to do organic on the cheap means I gravitate to the boxes of really ripe fruit that many of the farmers sell for a fraction of the usual price. But that means you either have to 1) eat the fruit right away, 2) cut it up and freeze it for later or 3) bake with it. I usually opt for 1 or 3 since our freezer is this magical place where I put things and promptly forget about them (were that the icebox worked for my problems too, but alas.)

So here's one generic fruit muffin recipe that is great to make with toddlers and can take almost any fruit you throw at it (and I think that these muffins freeze better than the fruit by itself). Also, you can make it dairy free by substituting orange juice for the milk (I usually do half and half). Thank you to my friend Megan for the lead!

EASY FRUIT MUFFINS
makes 12

2 cups flour (I use half white whole wheat/half white)
1-1/2 teaspoons salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
3/4 cup sugar
3/4 cup milk
1/2 cup oil
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 tsp. grated lemon zest (optional)
1-1/2 cup fruit

Preheat oven to 375 F.

Mix dry ingredients together: flour, salt, baking powder, sugar. In a small bowl, mix fruit with 1/4 cup of the dry mixture. Add wet ingredients to the mixing bowl. Stir in fruit. Do not overmix.

Split dough among 12 regular size muffin cups. Dust with sugar if desired. Bake for 20 (+?) minutes.

MMmmmmm, peach muffins, apricot muffins, mixed berry muffins... happy summer! Of course these work just as well in the fall with apples, pears, cranberries, just give it a try.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Virtual Mother's Day Card

So we're making little paintings to send the Grandmas for Mother's Day, but for the card I wanted to try something new. I've been into the applet "Wordle" for analyzing the word patterns in my work stories lately. I thought for Mother's Day cards, I'd try to get my girls to free associate about each grandma and their great-grandma and then turn those associations into a Wordle "Word Cloud."

What I did was type the words and phrases we talked about for each Grandma into a word document and then we pasted them into the Wordle text box. We're sending them via email (to make them into jpeg files you have to take screen shots).

I'd imagine this could work well for other purposes with pre-writing, but fairly verbal young kids. It was great fun and I plan to do it again.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Sesame Street spoofs

It is really rare to find kids entertainment that rocks both my daughters' world and mine. Still, as annoying as some of the music and educational shorts are, I try to watch everything with them. So when I stumbled onto a bunch of Sesame Street spoofs of TV programs, I was over the moon. Below is one of our favorite Sesame Street spoofs, 30 Rocks, though it would probably only be funny to an adult if you've seen the original show (30 Rock).




Other ones that do well with my kids include this take off on Law & Order (it's called the Missing M). And then there's A's Anatomy, and Dancing with Triangles (which has all sorts of super subtle humor).

There's also Desperate Houseplants, but in my opinion, it's just kinda rich in double entendres and not much else.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Another reuse for old clothes


We've been doing a lot of painting lately. I took a bunch of my dads worn and stained dress shirts off his hands. In reverse, they make great smocks! They'll work as full body bibs too... Just need to cut the sleeves off rather drastically.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Coupons for healthy and organic foods and products

It all started because I've become addicted to Tofurky Italian Sausages. I thought I'd look and see if there were any online coupons for these glorified tofu dogs. My search landed me at this page: the magazine Eating Well's coupon page.

It's actually a well set up site... you select the coupons you want and type in your email. The coupons land in your in box and you print them out.

So I was suddenly on the prowl. And found these totally useful coupon sites next:
I did notice some online grousing that some stores don't accept online coupons because they're printed from a computer. And I guess they look like could be copies? But so far I've had good luck with them. Hope you do too...

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Where to donate used stuffed animals...

They're very cute but, really, how many stuffed animals does one family need? And somehow, like rabbits, they seem to multiply like crazy. Kind of baffling for inanimate objects.

In the San Francisco Area there's a great organization that accepts stuffed animals (and some other items, including blankets and books) that are in like new condition. They package them as care package for kids in homeless shelters. It's called Project Night Night.

Thanks, Rachelle, for the tip!

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Tips for Baking with Toddlers

[This is Part 2 of entertaining rained-in toddlers on the cheap. Part 1 is here.]

It took about 6 months to figure out the best way and the best kinds of things to make in the kitchen with the girls.

My first rule now is I always make stuff that goes in the oven because they want to see the cooking part and I can't handle the two of them in front of a working stove.

I get out all the ingredients and measuring implements first before "inviting" them to come bake.

I spread out a tablecloth on the kitchen floor and we either mix things up on the floor or else on a low table.

I substitute oil for butter in most things because creaming the butter inevitably involves a mixer or lots of elbow grease and I prefer to just keep the batter really malleable so they have a shot at mixing it.

Speaking of mixing, they both get a tablespoon to stir with. Meanwhile I stir things up with a big spatula. Whenever I tried having them take turns with the real mixing implement they would fight over it and send batter splatting everywhere.

One of the best things to make from a practical budget standpoint -- also a hit because it's like playdough -- is REAL DOUGH. If you have a food processor it's really easy - just follow the manual's basic bread recipe. Using the dough for rolls and pizza are the simplest ways I've found to deal with it. Making actual bread takes multiple risings, so it's harder to keep track of.

This apple cake recipe (below) is a pretty good one for them. Partly because it's made in one bowl with straightforward ingredients. Partly because it involves using this: an apple peeler corer, their favorite kitchen implement. If you have gadgets that do neat things (manual egg beaters, egg slicers) those might be other surefire hits.
NORWEGIAN APPLE CAKE
2 cups sugar
1/2 cup vegetable oil
2 eggs
2 teaspoons vanilla

4 cups 1/2-inch cubes of apples (tart apples work well so I use Granny Smith. 4 apples usually equals a little over 4 cups)

2 teaspoons baking soda
2 teaspoons cinnamon
1 teaspoon salt
2 cups flour

Preheat the oven to 335 F.

Spray a bundt pan well with no stick spray. Combine the sugar and oil. Then add the eggs and vanilla. Once those are combined add the apples.

Now add the baking soda, cinnamon and salt. Stir just until combined. Finally add the flour.

Spoon into the bundt pan. Bake for about an hour, until toothpick inserted comes out mostly dry.

Let cool in pan 10 minutes, then use spatual to release the cake from the sides of the pan and flip onto plate to cool completely.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Getting 3 kids in car seats in a small car

I'm not trying to jump the gun, but I imagine sometime soon we'll want to take our girls' friends along for a playdate to the zoo, or even carpool with kids coming home from preschool. But with 2 kids already in car seats in a compact car, there isn't much room for a third.

I recently learned about this product that may make it possible to get three 3 or 4 year olds safely and comfortably in the back of our civic. It's called the Ride Safer vest. I'm hoping that in combination with the narrow Radian seats we'll be able to easily transport our daughters' friends. My blog about the Radians is here.

So now I've set up an RSS feed looking for one of the Ride Safer vests on Craigslist. Once I get my hands on one I will post more info.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Where to donate or recycle stained clothes

I've got three kinds of laundry detergent next to the washing machine and four different stain removers. Bleach stick, Ecover stain remover, Oxy Clean stain spray, even the old hair spray stand-by (for ink). But sometimes stains get set in and while I don't mind my kiddos wearing them, once they outgrow them, I often feel bad passing them on.

A woman on my twin parent listserve just posed the question of what to do with stained clothes. It seems to be an urban legend that Goodwill has ways of recycling them. Thought I'd post the useful link she received as a response:
http://parents.berkeley.edu/recommend/charity/clothes_poorcond.html

Rainy day activity: volunteer with kids

A recent Wall Street Journal piece compared different volunteer websites where you can potentially find one day opportunities doing things like stuffing envelopes. Probably not going to work with straight up toddlers, but could be nice with an older child.

And here's an article about volunteering specifically with kids.

I mentally bookmarked some of the ideas for volunteerism with children that I heard about on Obama's national day of service. Collecting food for food banks and also becoming a regular visitor to a nursing home (where a child's energy is welcome) were some of the most appealing to me.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Find out about discounts at Sadiedey's play cafe

For all Bay Area folks: I just discovered the owner of Sadiedey's (formerly Tumble and Tea) is on twitter. She posts everything from updates (like the fact she's scouting for property for a possible second location) to heads ups about discount offers on her twitter feed (@SadieDey). Just follow her and you'll find out if there's a deal of the day.

Another good resource on twitter for toddler/preschool parents is Savvy Source. While the website is predominantly preschool advice and reviews, their tweets (@savvysource) run the gamut.

If you know other great toddler resources on twitter, please post them below.

And while you're following people, I'm here (@rdornhelm).

Monday, February 9, 2009

How to Go Green in Hard Times

The Wall Street Journal has a special section today on the subject. Their suggestions are generally higher cost than the stuff I cover here, but then the pay-offs are probably bigger too. Their ideas also only seem relevant if you're a homeowner. My audio-curious side is wondering about the affiliated podcast but haven't had a chance to check it out.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Rain, rain please stay...

...Though only for the earth's sake. Being rained in with two toddlers is marginal at best. And admissions to indoor activities adds up.

So in case it's useful to anyone else here's what I've been falling back on:

1. Having a stash of thrift store books to pull out. I make periodic trips to Thrift Town to scout for clothes and always try to pick up one or two books. It's been invaluable to have a bag of them to reach into. The girls happily sit through numerous readings of their new books.

2. Smelling spices. One day I discovered the girls love going through and smelling the spices in the spice rack. We can spend 15-20 minutes that way. Not a ton of time, but it's something!

3. Very Random Arts and Crafts. This is not well thought out stuff. More like cutting out the pictures in today's advertisements and then using a glue stick to put them on scraps of saved wrapping paper. Today we actually made Valentine's. And I think we'll send them, so the project was not for naught. Another suggestion I got from a friend was making fingerpaints from shaving cream mixed with food color. It looks really cool when dried too.

4. Streaming video. A. & I are addicted (HBO posted the entire first episode of Flight of the Conchords before it aired and I've been catching United States of Tara at Showtime when I cook).
But it's also great for the girls. What you want is there when you're most desperate. We tend to head over to the official Sesame Street site. You can view their videos by character. (The girls LOVE Bert and Ernie. I wonder if it's because, like the girlios, Bert and Ernie are a pair. Then maybe it's because Bert has a twin (Bart).) This counting sheep sketch with Ernie is popular, also this one where Bert ice skates.
Still, for some reason, our Sesame Street classic faves we can only find on You Tube. Like this one:



5. And then there's baking. That's been a huge winner for us, though it's taken some trial and error not to end up with flour everywhere or fights over batter laden spatulas (meaning batter everywhere, even worse). Part 2, Baking, will come with tomorrow's showers...

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Another cheer for gmail (I conceded the privacy issue long ago)

There's a very useful new tool that was just released for gmail users. If it had been available when my girls were still at the "what do you do with two napping kids in the back seat?" stage I would have been really psyched. Basically it lets you use your gmail account offline. So you can fire up your laptop anywhere, regardless of wifi and go for it. Also would be great for airplane use (though I can't foresee a flight where I'll be kicking back doing email anytime soon).

It's called Google Gears and you can find it here. It works with other web apps too.

I didn't think that site was helpful in figuring out how to actually make it work. So I just followed these instructions.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Check if you're eligible for a Verizon Wireless discount...

There's certainly no harm! I happened to go in to a Verizon store today to find out about upgrading my phone. Turned out that because my husband works for the state, we've been eligible for a 15% discount on our personal bill and reduced prices on new phones. Just no one told us that before. You can check if your employer is one of the discount partners by entering your work email here.

It definitely adds up! Especially if the governor is really going to furlough all those employees.

All the other carriers have something similar. For instance AT&T has a deal with labor unions that give labor members an automatic 10% discount.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Happy Chinese New Year!

Today is the first day of the Year of the Ox. Two thoughts related to the holiday:

1. We took the girls to the Lunar New Year festival in Oakland's Chinatown yesterday and they had a great time taking in the sights. The Lion Dance was the biggest hit, since they could see the kids underneath who were manipulating the costume.

For me, it was a reminder of how great it is to take kids to lots of cultural festivals. They're colorful events, and usually feature lots of music and dancing. On the budget side of things they're often free.

But there's more to it. Raising kids with a green conscience isn't just about what you buy or behaviors like reusing and recycling. It's also making them aware of how wide our world is and how many people we share it with. The slice they see everyday is a wonderful part, but it's just a part!

Often there is a calendar of festivals posted for major cities. For instance, this is the one for Oakland in 2009, though it looks like some festivals I'd expect to see there aren't up yet.

2. We just got the girls a new book that they love (see left). It's called "The Pet Dragon: A story about adventure, friendship and Chinese characters." The book mixes a nice story of friendship with a subtle lesson about Chinese characters that is appropriate starting at any age. And probably until any age (unless you're already fluent in Chinese and this is just silly and elementary).

The story and illustrations are by Christoph Niemann whose work I really like. In fact, one of my favorite blog posts of all time is the art-blog he did about coffee for the New York Times. If you haven't seen it, it's worth a look. And if you're passionate about your coffee, it's a must see.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Home ECOnomics: No more little yogurt containers

These containers are not a perfect eco material but they are the most economical solution I've found for carrying baby and toddler snacks around with absolutely no leaking.

And they do confer some green cred. I haven't bought yogurt in disposable cups since I invested in these Rubbermaid containers a year and a half ago. That saves plastic and money.





On the subject of food and carbon footprints, the New York Times ran this great story yesterday about the environmental impact of a glass of orange juice.

Maybe my favorite part was the title: How Green Is My Orange?

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Elizabeth Alexander's Inaugural Poem

First, a pic from last night of the signs that usually mark Bush Street in San Francisco. (via http://www.flickr.com/photos/violetblue/)

P1040520

I watched the inauguration with my 2 year olds this morning. The girls came and went from the room but interestingly they were transfixed when Elizabeth Alexander read the poem she'd written for the occasion. I don't know if it was because Alexander was speaking slowly and clearly so they could understand the words more clearly. Or if there was something hypnotic about her delivery. Whatever it was, I admire their taste in poetry. Here it is again...

Inaugural Poem

The following is a transcript of the inaugural poem recited by Elizabeth Alexander, as provided by CQ transcriptions.

Praise song for the day.

Each day we go about our business, walking past each other, catching each others' eyes or not, about to speak or speaking. All about us is noise. All about us is noise and bramble, thorn and din, each one of our ancestors on our tongues. Someone is stitching up a hem, darning a hole in a uniform, patching a tire, repairing the things in need of repair.

Someone is trying to make music somewhere with a pair of wooden spoons on an oil drum with cello, boom box, harmonica, voice.

A woman and her son wait for the bus.

A farmer considers the changing sky; A teacher says, "Take out your pencils. Begin."

We encounter each other in words, words spiny or smooth, whispered or declaimed; words to consider, reconsider.

We cross dirt roads and highways that mark the will of someone and then others who said, "I need to see what's on the other side; I know there's something better down the road."

We need to find a place where we are safe; We walk into that which we cannot yet see.

Say it plain, that many have died for this day. Sing the names of the dead who brought us here, who laid the train tracks, raised the bridges, picked the cotton and the lettuce, built brick by brick the glittering edifices they would then keep clean and work inside of.

Praise song for struggle; praise song for the day. Praise song for every hand-lettered sign; The figuring it out at kitchen tables.

Some live by "Love thy neighbor as thy self."

Others by first do no harm, or take no more than you need.

What if the mightiest word is love, love beyond marital, filial, national. Love that casts a widening pool of light. Love with no need to preempt grievance.

In today's sharp sparkle, this winter air, anything can be made, any sentence begun.

On the brink, on the brim, on the cusp -- praise song for walking forward in that light.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Big family, small cars!

I'm a big proponent of how you can get plenty people into small cars. I've blogged about the Radian car seats that are the best when you have to cram a number of child restraints into a small backseat. And this is a new device that looks really promising for getting a child safely in the middle seat, when the outer ones are already taken by car seats (for carpooling and such).

I came across this satirical video as I was learning about vloging... my sister-in-law suggested checking out this guy's work and by chance his vlog today seemed amusing and relevant here. So here you are...

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

A low cost, low pressure way to keep track of those milestones


With twins the standard baby book records are pretty overwhelming to think about. I would be lucky if I took care of all their needs in the moment, let alone take note of their accomplishments for posterity. As a shower gift we did receive two small wall calendars that came with stickers that you could use to mark firsts. That was a great solution for the first 12 months. I'll actually be able to tell the girls when they first walked if they ever need it for a school project or something.

But, at least from my perspective, it's in the following years when they're talking and first interacting with the social world that those truly "cute" moments occur. Those funny moments that you think you'll never forget but can't even recall a week later.

I happened to stumble on a good solution last year and plan to do it again. At this time of year when all the calendars in the stores are 75-80% off, buy a really compact, cheap daily planner. Keep it by your bedside. That way at the end of the day if there was some funny sentence or situation you can just jot it down in the appropriate day (see above). I've found it a really satisfying way to keep track of those things, without the pressure of a big baby journal or such. And in families with multiples and siblings it's a general "family" record of the year.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Home ECOnomics: Wrapping Paper


I got this tip from a friend and it served me well for the holidays. Time to pass it on. Save the paper your kids doodle on and use it to wrap presents. People find the paper more touching and personal than commercial wrap, and you get to reuse all those artisitc musings. I could never bring myself to simply recycle them anyway.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Seventh Generation dishwashing detergent: good green cred, bad smell

In my opinion, going green, shouldn't send you into the red, or make you blue. But that's kinda how I felt after trying Seventh Generation dish washing detergent. At some point after we started using it, there would sporadically be a really bad smell when we opened the dishwasher in the morning. Sometimes washing the load again would make it go away, sometimes it wouldn't.

After about three-quarters of the box we figured out that the culprit was eggs. If we had scrambled eggs or even baked a cake with eggs one day and then put the bowl that had contained raw eggs in the dishwasher with Seventh Generation detergent, the whole load came out smelling bad the next morning. Our best guess is somehow the soap didn't work to break down the egg and instead the egg got heated up and spread around everywhere and dried smelling really bad.

Hopefully this is some weird idiosyncrasy with our dishwasher, but I thought I'd post it in case someone else is trying to get to the bottom of intermittently bad smelling wash loads.

We went back to Cascade for the meantime since it never had that problem. But next up for us is trying Trader Joe's detergent as we try to get greener in our cleaning supplies. High hopes here, it was rated really highly by Consumer Reports.

The whole thing reminded me of one of A's favorite "man on the street" interviews in The Onion. The question was something like "What efforts are you making to be better to the environment?" And one of the "respondents" said, "My wife keeps buying these green cleaning products, but I think green means you have to use twice as much to do the same thing." I think that was unfortunately true with some of the early products and some people - like A - are jaded.

But slowly I've been convincing him otherwise. My latest favorite find is Biokleen dishwash liquid.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Sure enough, making them at home...

...saves money when it comes to wholegrain waffles. The way it shook out, I am paying about $5.89 for the ingredients to make 16 toaster sized waffles. Altogether the final product weighs 24 oz.

At Safeway this week, I could have bought the Eggo Nutrigrain toaster waffles, but they're $3.99 for 10 oz. So that would be over $9.00 for 24 ounces of that product.

$5.89 homemade versus $9.00 storebought.

I was actually surprised by this outcome. I was assuming that from a money standpoint it might be a wash. Money aside I feel strongly about continuing to MAKE the girls their waffles because they're just so much healthier when done from scratch. For one, my version includes stuff like organic blueberries. And exclude additives such as gums and the like.

I'm still skeptical that making my own food will always ring up cheaper, just because the raw materials seem so high these days.

Next up... analysis of Mac'N'Cheese: Homemade v. Store Special. And after that I think I'm going to do a financial breakdown of a bread recipe.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Happy New Year!

I'm back from a holiday break that included
5 relatives from out of town
4 generations to coordinate
3 rained out day trips
2 cars between us all
and only 1 big disagreement with hubby as a result.
Of course there were countless cute conversation with the now 2 year old twins ("How old are you now?" "Two much old!" "Two years old?" "Two much old!")

Best was when B bowled everyone over by looking at the biography her grandpa got as a holiday gift and correctly identifying the cover photo as "Andrew Jackson." I explained the girls knew his picture because I'll often entertain them with the contents of my wallet when all else fails. "Who else's picture is on money?" I asked. B thought a bit and then said "George Washing-machine"

Speaking of money, since this is a blog about raising multiples on a budget and with a mind to the environment, a recurring theme this month will be whether it actually saves any money to make your own healthy foodstuffs. I go to a lot of trouble to make things like the girls' mac'n'cheese from scratch. At a time when money is tight for almost everyone, I'm curious how much I actually save by doing this.

At least my assumption is that I save money, I've set out to find out if I really do and by how much. Because the last time I walked past those Annie's organic bunnies and cheese they looked awfully cheep compared to the cheese, butter, pasta and milk I was putting in my cart.

First up tomorrow, will be a price comparison of homemade oatmeal blueberry waffles, to the Nutrigrain toaster variety.
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