Your trash may be someone else’s treasure

Do you have something that is perfectly good but you no longer want or need, perhaps clothes your son grew out or a bookcase? Would you like to remove it from your home, make space but you have no desire to coordinate a garage sale or cart it off to a second hand store and it makes no sense to throw it away. You would rather recycle it.  On the other hand, do you need something, a wheelbarrow, maybe fireplace equipment; it doesn’t have to be new, just functional. Perhaps Freecycle TM is for you.  FreecycleTM is a worldwide online network where you can post notices about items you’d like to give away and find things that you need. The only requirement is that the transfer of an item from one person to another has to be FREE.

Through FreecycleTM, you can help the environment by diverting useful items from landfills while also helping members of your local community. Everybody has something they want to get rid of, so instead of dragging it out to the curb and filling up the landfills, wouldn’t it be better to connect with someone who probably wants what you have?

The Freecycle Network is made up of over 5,000 groups with over 9,000,000 members, in 85 countries around the world. It’s a grassroots and entirely nonprofit movement of people who are giving (and getting) stuff for free in their own towns. It’s all about reuse and keeping good stuff out of landfills. As a result, the network is currently keeping over 500 tons a day out of landfills! This amounts to five times the height of Mt. Everest in the past year alone when stacked in garbage trucks!

It is a wonderful tool for redistribution and I have been utilizing the network for almost ten years in towns from coast to coast. I have found it particularly helpful before and after a move. When we were preparing to move from California back to New York, I would list an item and sometimes within an hour, I would have at least 5 people requesting the item. It was so easy to purge, even on the day of the move when a large item simply would not fit into the moving Pod. On the other hand, when we moved into a new location and needed something, someone in our new community had the item we needed.

I know you must be wondering about safety. Common sense is always important. Most of the time when picking up an item, it is left by a mailbox or garage. I rarely ever meet the people that I make an exchange with, but thank you notes are often left. Some people do prefer to meet in a central location. After, almost ten years of exchange, I am happy to say no problems have ever occurred during an exchange. The worst issue is a no show, which is often frustrating.

Local volunteers moderate each local group. However, there are a couple of basic rules that govern all the FreecycleTM programs:

Keep it free, legal & appropriate for all ages

No offering YOURSELF or YOUR CHILDREN

Subject line of your posts should include:

  • Offer, note location
  • Taken
  • Wanted, note location
  • Received

By giving freely with no strings attached, members of The Freecycle Network help instill a sense of generosity of spirit as they strengthen local community ties and promote environmental sustainability and reuse. It’s a beautiful thing.

To sign up, simply go http://www.freecycle.org  and find your community by entering it into the search box above or by clicking on ‘Browse Groups’ above the search box.

And of course, membership is FREE!

What ways do you redistribute your unwanted items? Please share and I will continue to share.

Up your nose with Yarrow

The other day Mathew came to me and told me his nose was bleeding.

Here’s how our conversation went:

Me: “What happened?”

Mathew: “Well, I was picking my nose like I usually do and I pulled out a big piece and it had blood on it.”

Me: “What did you do with it?”

Mathew: “I ate it of course.”

Me: “Can I put yarrow up your nose to stop the bleeding?”

Mathew: “Sure.”

Mathew with yarrow up his nose to stop the bleeding

I picked several long yarrow leaves and crushed them between my fingers to release the alkaloids, which have styptic/ hemostatic properties; in other words, the alkaloids help stop bleeding. I gently put the long leaves up each nostril making sure part of it was still hanging out for easy removal.  Within two minutes, the bleeding had stopped.

Two minutes later – no more bloody nose

I didn’t really know Yarrow (Achillea millefolium), before this year. I bought some for my garden since we didn’t have any growing on our land. One benefit among yarrow’s many is that its roots’ secretions will activate the disease resistance of nearby plants; and it intensifies the medicinal actions of herbs; therefore, making healing plants more powerful. It seemed like a good plant for our medicinal garden.

Unfortunately, after it was planted, and started to bloom, I noticed the blossoms were a beautiful deep red, not cream colored, which I read has the strongest medicinal properties. In general, ornamental species are bred for smell or color, not usually for medicinal value. Fortunately, the variety of yarrow we have still has the hemostatic properties we need for a bloody nose.

Yarrow’s uses have been noted throughout history. It’s Latin name, Achillea millefolium, is derived from Achilles, the Greek god who used this versatile herb to stop wounds from bleeding during the Trojan wars. It was once a sacred plant in ancient China, as it was valued as the perfect union of yin and yang energies, because the hard strong stem is filled with a soft pith. Interestingly, the 50 wooden sticks in the I-Ching ritual, which are used to make key decisions, were made from yarrow stems.

Yarrow’s folk name – nosebleed – also attests to its long-standing use as a styptic to stop bleeding.  In addition, it has the ability to stop blood flow internally as well as externally. Today, yarrow is one of the best-known herbal remedies for fevers, the flu, stomachaches, sore throats, menstrual problems, as well as to improve circulation and strengthen weak veins.

Recently, I read that yarrow is a great insect repellent. So, I have tinctured some and will let you know how that works out. I look forward to getting better acquainted with yarrow. Please share your experiences, too.

PS: Mathew gave his permission to print this very personal blog.

 All information is shared for educational purposes only and is not intended to diagnose or treat any condition.