Skip to main content

Mom’s Timeless Tricks - Ecofriendly

I participated in a Mompreneur Twitter chat this evening that inspired me to 'recycle' this article I wrote for a website a few years back - truly timeless tricks ...
 
 
Mom’s Timeless Tricks

In honor of my Mom, I’m sharing a wealth of inexpensive organizing and recycling tricks that my Mom used while raising four children in south-central Scarborough.  In the 60’s, our parents were ahead of the times with “reduce, reuse and recycle”.    

We were a middle class family of six.  Dad worked long hours as a Coppersmith and my Mom used her imagination to raise four children on a tight budget.  Here are some of Mom’s inventive ideas, and new ones we’ve added along the way:

‘Waxed Paper’ from your empty cereal or cracker box.  This paper tends to be thicker and stronger than the waxed paper you buy in the store and is able to overcome some of the shortcomings of traditional waxed paper.  It does a great job separating hamburger patties in the freezer and gets rid of the annoying problem of tearing off and leaving paper bits behind on the frozen meat.
 
Reusing milk bags.  If you buy bagged milk, you know about these sturdy little bags.  Long before zip-lock bags, these were used, along with twist ties, to store items such as frozen foods, puzzle pieces, small storage items and fridge left-overs.
 
Giving old clothing new life.  This includes making minor modifications to your own clothing, as the styles change with each season.  For example, taking ladies long-sleeved jackets with puffed sleeves, last year’s trend, and turning them into short sleeved jackets to match this year’s fashion.  An easy, low cost alteration.   Larger, used clothes may also be made into new clothes for children or kids doll clothes.
 
Stale bread and cracker crumbs make great bread crumbs for cooking.  Let your stale bread dry out or toast it, put in a blender with your broken crackers and crumbs and make excellent bread crumbs out of food that would have been wasted.  
 
Using empty toilet paper rolls to house rolled up cords for small appliances such as hairdryers, curling irons and straighteners.  Save yourself from cursing your tangled beauty appliances as you are rushing to get ready for your day. 
Making duvet covers out of top sheets.  If you use a duvet and can’t be bothered with a top sheet that only gets tangled around your feet, make extra duvet covers from your unused top sheets.  If they match your bedding already you have a nice new cover to use each week as the other gets washed with the dirty sheets.  Your bed will be easier to make – which is a big plus for me.

Not all organizing solutions cost money.  The best solutions can be reusing items that have already served their original purpose.  Do your part to restore the environment and save money is a bonus. 

When I was growing up, I always thought we were rich.  Thanks Mom!!
 
~ Sheri Gammon Dewling ~

 

Comments

  1. Sheri, Thanks for sharing these ideas! It sometimes just takes someone else pointing out some great solutions for us to open our eyes to all the possibilities around us! I'm alway seeking ways to up-cycle & reuses products. I love the breadcrumbs idea!

    One of my fav's is playing old t-shirts and turning it into a produce bag/grocery bag by cutting handles or I've been experimenting with making them into a scarf...

    Cheers, Sara

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sara - Tshirt idea for produce bag is inspired ... would prolong life of produce by absorbing moisture while saving use of papertowel ..... Will have to break out the sewing machine this weekend! Thank you!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

It Only Takes One

My son's daycare had five amazing, 8-foot sunflowers growing in their garden this summer.  My own sunflowers didn't do very well so we asked if we could have some of the seeds from daycare to plant in our garden next summer.  Shawna began to harvest the seeds from the faces of the sunflowers.  She took some home with her and a creature destroyed most of them - only a few remaining in their shells.  She returned to daycare to learn that the heads of the remaining sunflowers had been stolen right off their stalks in the yard of the daycare.  The ladies were upset and disappointed that they might not be able to carry on the tradition of their sunflowers. Cornell Sunflower - see the attempt at taping the stem ... When my husband got home from work today he told me their story and asked,"hey - do you have any more of those books with the 'Cornell Sunflower' story?"  A story I wrote was published by 'Chicken Soup' and the similarities to th...

Elvis the Cat

Elvis the cat went missing last Thursday night.   For 14 years Elvis the Cat lived with me indoors. He was afraid of the outside.   Due to kidney disease, he has been living on borrowed time but was still vibrant, fat and happy.   Lately, he seemed desperate to get outside.   I had been warned he might run away to die.      I searched for two days and nights, was sad, and began to look back …. We met at a farm in 1999.   He was undernourished, with mites and fleas.   I was embarking on a new, independent life.   We knew instantly that we belonged to each other.   I nursed him back to life – physically, and he nourished my spirit.   I didn’t hear him meow for the first few years of his life.   I always thought it was because I saw to his every need before he knew he had it.   At night, he would sleep curled in my arms.   If he heard a noise, he would perch on the end of my bed between me and a potenti...

Cornell Community Soup

“Cornell Community Soup” is more than just a metaphor for the melting pot of cultures, religions, beliefs and politics we embody.  The Village of Cornell is nestled in the eastern boarder of Markham, Ontario, surrounded by sister villages that continue the tradition of service and support throughout the community.  I have lived on my block in Cornell for 16 years.  Bigger houses with lower prices from the north continue to tempt, yet the warm hug of this community always keeps us home.  In anticipation of another exciting Blue Jay’s post season game, a pot of turkey soup is simmering on our stove.  Turkey from the Markham Butcher , and carrots and garlic from Reesor Farm .  Both local small business run by families who suffered losses this month.  The Markham Butcher and his wife lost their precious baby son earlier this month.  An unfathomable tragedy.  Reesor Farm was   targeted by trespassers and looters  on Thanksgiving Mon...