Monthly Project: July 2015 – Recycling Recharge

Recycling Recharge

Recycle RechargeThis is our very first monthly sustainability project, so we wanted to start with something fairly small and easily attainable. We decided to go with recycling. Our family already recycles a little bit, but only when it’s very convenient. Up until now, we haven’t started a dedicated recycling program in our home, even though it would be very easy. Our city has partnered with Abilities Unlimited to offer a Blue Bag program. Residents may request a blue trash bag to place their recyclables in. On trash pickup day, we simply place our full blue bag out beside the trash can, and the city will pick it up and leave another empty blue bag. Abilities Unlimited helps with the sorting of recyclable materials and their distribution to the appropriate facilities. They currently accept all aluminum and steel cans; all glass containers; and all plastic containers, as long as the lid opening is smaller than the container.

Today, we spent some time after lunch preparing our recycling receptacle, and we talked to the kids about what can and what can not go into the recycling bag. They seem to be very excited about getting started. Unfortunately, this project isn’t going to yield very many quantitative results that we will be able to share. It will just be running in the background. We will try to provide occasional updates on how it goes. As always, thank you for following us in our attempts at HOMESTEADING THE CITY.

Our Purpose

We decided to create this blog for several reason. For starters, we wanted to document our progress in going from house to homestead for our own personal benefit. It will help us get our kids interested and involved in the process, as well as give us a place where we can document the memories, which are a couple of our main goals. It will also be good motivation to keep on keeping on. If we want to push out content, then we will have to be on the constant lookout for new ideas to implement, new projects to try, and new ways to get better at living sustainably. In fact, we’re actually hoping that our readers can help us out in that area. We encourage your comments regarding projects and ideas that we can try, or even ways that we might improve upon our own plans and procedures. Finally, we hope that we may inspire others to take steps, even baby steps, toward becoming more self-sufficient. You may notice that we talk about our kids a lot, but that’s who this is about. It’s not just a legacy that our generation is leaving behind; our children will also have to inherit our impact on the environment. It occurs to me that my kids’ futures will be impacted by the actions of the billions of people all around the world! If I can do anything to convince even just a few to find ways to lessen their environmental footprints, I would be remiss in not trying.

Our plan is to start small. As mentioned in a previous post, we have already taken a few convenient baby steps toward our goal of sustainability, which we will be chronicling in specific categories across the top of the page; and, as we try new things, we will be adding more categories to the list. As for the blog’s layout, all new entries will post to our Main Blog page in reverse chronological order (so, newest posts appear first). In addition, some entries will be double posted if they are applicable to one of the listed categories. This way, you can keep up with everything that is going on with our little homestead project as a whole, or, if you’re interested in seeing how a specific project has progressed, you can go directly to that page and skip over unrelated posts. Who knows, maybe you’ll be able to avoid a few mistakes after seeing our trials and errors. Whatever your reasons for reading, we appreciate you visiting our blog, and we look forward to all of the adventures that we are going to have while Homesteading The City.

Beginning The Journey

Self sufficiency. It’s a concept that my wife and I have been thinking a lot about, lately.  Why do we spend all of our time working for money, just so we can hand it over to the grocery store? Or to the water company? Or to the electric company? How much happier would we be if we spent more of that time working together as a family to provide for our own needs? We are in agreement that a more self-reliant lifestyle would be a much more fulfilling lifestyle for us.  Not only would it encourage a more tight-knit family, but it would provide our kids with valuable lessons and insights that would benefit them for a lifetime. Moreover, sustainable living would greatly reduce our family’s footprint on the environment, a behavior that my wife and I feel is important to model for our kids while they are young, so that they will understand their impact on the Earth when they grow up.

We are the Maxwell family. A husband, a wife, a son, and two daughters, with another daughter on the way. We live in a fairly large (for Arkansas) city of roughly 70,000 people in a neighborhood about five minutes from downtown. Together, we have taken a few baby steps toward a more self sufficient existence, but they have only been easy, convenient steps. We grow an (mostly) organic garden. We compost our yard and kitchen waste. We make an effort to recycle when it is convenient. We want to do more. We do have a large fenced in back yard; so, even though we are well within the city limits, our little homestead-to-be has lots of potential, and we would like to invite you on our little journey to make the most that potential, while we attempt to learn the ins and outs of Homesteading In The City.