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The felted bowls - you saw them prefelting - when just knitted, in a previous post. These have been through a hot wash and dry twice, and then dampened and shaped over containers, then left to dry for a couple of days. I have the next size up knitted ready to wash, and the next are on the needles but not with much knitted. Not sure if I'll do these again, only because I have too much other knitting to do. I do really like them, but they are just a lot of work. I will be really pleased when I have the whole set done though.



"13. What best describes your diet?
Vegan – plant based foods only
Vegetarian – primarily plant based foods, but some dairy
Omnivore – an assortment of meat, seafood, vegetables, dairy and grains
Carnivore – meat, seafood and dairy several times a week
Top of the food chain – meat, seafood or dairy at almost every meal"
Now, I played with my answers. The country average on this is 26.88 gha.
When I marked
*Vegan, my food footprint was 13.40 gha
*Vegetarian, my food footprint was 18.20
*Omnivore, my food footprint was 26.88
*Carnivore, my food footprint was 35.57
*Top of the food chain, my food footprint was 40.37
So I could see clearly the impact of the different diets.
There is also an explanation link if you want it ... "A plant-based diet is significantly less land and energy intensive than a diet with a high proportion of meat, seafood, and dairy. A recent study found that a low-fat vegetarian diet needs 0.18 hectares per person per year while a high-fat diet with lots of meat needs 0.85 hectares because animals need so much more room. And because meat production drives deforestation and requires high inputs of energy for processing and transportation, it also comes with a high carbon footprint price tag. Globally, it has been estimated that up to 18% of all greenhouse gas emissions are associated with animal product consumption."
There are other interesting food questions too.
So go and take the test yourself, and play around with your answers to see if making any changes would make much of a difference. Don't be scared off by an all or nothing mentality though. You can just cut back a bit on the things that are harmful, and do a little more of the things that are helpful. It would be good if we could all be 100% perfect, but that just isn't going to happen, especially if we're too scared to take a little step to get started.
I have another link for you. If you haven't already seen it, you must watch this online video - The Story of Stuff. If you can't find a link there to view it online, you can download it if you scroll down the page after following the "downloads" link.
Try and buy items that have less stages in their production before they get to you - like food that is nearer its natural state or toys and clothes direct from craft people/made by people who work from home. There are plenty of people selling their stuff online, or you can go to stores that sell fair trade stuff. Just think about where your products come from and what impact their production might have on people and/or the environment.
If you are visiting this blog because you actually know me in life outside the internet, I have DVDs about clothing and food production (that sounds really boring, but their actually very interesting videos) and the like that you are welcome to borrow, or talk with me about any of the other stuff.
Finally, back to my initial aim. How about having a vegetarian meal (if you're usually a meat eater, or perhaps a vegan meal if you're usually a vegetarian)? There are heaps of recipes online.
Here is a suggestion that my kids love. I often make them "balls" - these are like meatballs, but of course contain no meat. My favourite version contains nuts, but these days I make them nutfree so they can take the leftovers to school. The recipe varies depending on what I have on hand and how much trouble I feel like going to. Basically, the nut free version is Brown Rice and Lentils, with other things added.
Cook up some brown rice and brown lentils. Just do about half and half, rinsing them all first and putting them together in the pot. You can use a rice cooker for this or do them on the stove. Add whatever you like - raw or sauteed onion, garlic, leftover mashed vegetables, etc. I generally use mashed veg to hide them better from the kids, but you could grate in some carrots or zucchini or whatever you have. You can add some curry type spices if you like, but I tend to keep these quite plain so the kids will be happy with them. Mix in the food processor so that your lentils and rice get a bit pureed, but keep some texture. Add breadcrumbs (put leftover bread in the freezer ready to use for breadcrumbs before it gets mouldy) and then add something for "glue" - I use "egg replacer", but you can just use egg. Depending on the texture you may not even need the "glue". Shape into balls and roll in flour before frying. Make heaps and freeze some for a quick reheat later to save buying a packaged frozen meal or getting take away. Save some for school lunches. When you get sick of shaping and frying them, make the rest into burgers and freeze ready to take to a barbecue or use for another quick meal. I serve them with tomato sauce and some veggies on the side.
If you want a "proper" recipe, you can find one at "Dance of the Vegetable Patch".
This is a lot longer post then I intended, and if you've read this far, congratulations! Thank you. Leave a comment if you like. Don't forget to head on over to the Footprint page and also to watch The Story of Stuff.


Here she is the next day, wearing it for the first time. I'm not happy with the size around her arms - would like it smaller. 





Which brings me to my dilemma of the day. Where can she wear it? Do I have to stop making frilly clothes just because we don't really go anywhere that she can wear them? Would they look silly if she just wore them to the grocery shop (we could pretend that we were going somewhere important afterwards!)? Could I dress her in this for school pick up? Or would it look too show-off-y? I love seeing her in this outfit (although of course, I haven't seen it all assembled yet!) but I've got a feeling that she wont get many chances to wear it unless I just don't worry about whether it is appropriate and put her in it. I do think the kids should wear whatever clothes they have (frilly or not!) when they're the right size, otherwise they just grow out of them.




And finally, a sun.



This is something I haven't tried before - knitting something specifically to felt it (or is the proper term something else?). I'm a very slow knitter and I always have a few knitting projects on the go - kids' jumpers, knitted pants, etc. So I don't feel that I can spare any knitting time for "unimportant" things. But over the past couple of days I decided to give this a go. It uses big needles and I used two strands of wool. I found some Panda wool that was actually called feltable wool, so I decided to try that, although in the future I'll just dye up some of my stash of organic wool.


