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Phoebe Sinclair Writes

Phoebe Sinclair Writes

Category Archives: Green Life

Farewell, Cotton T-shirts

17 Wednesday Jul 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life

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goals, gratitude, recycled

Once upon a time, I learned a fine method for departing with items once cared for, but currently out-of-use: take a picture.

Got Yarn? t-shirt

1st Boston Knit-out Festival I attended

After stockpiling a selection of T-shirts that I wore pretty much to-death, I decided to enlist some assistance and employ this method. The result? A virtual, visual library of memories spun from cotton and dye. I’m still the person I was, who purchased or received these shirts as gags or gifts or glimmers of who I was leaning towards being.

Martha Stewart no justice no quiche t-shirt

Worn during march on Washington for women’s reproductive rights

CCBN top ten reasons to work here t-shirt

Job of old

I miss the opportunity to wear them, now that (most of) these old Ts have been converted to dust cloths and hankerchiefs. I don’t miss the burden of owning more than I can appreciate wearing.

WECB Emerson radio station

Never wore this shirt because it bothered my eyes

Hemp recycle bicycle t-shirt

In my experience, hemp doesn’t get as soft as proported

Boston Knit-out & Crochet 2005 t-shirt

Designed by my gent, and then washed to death

Lost and Found with Boston Nature Center

15 Monday Jul 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Boston Moments, Green Life

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bike-commuting, city-farm, community

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On a bike ride home from Dorchester, I got lost.

One confused turn led to another, to another. Traveling down a road lined with brick homes that reminded me of the old military base I once lived near in New Jersey, I stopped in front of a welcoming yellow building. And then I was found.

View of Boston Nature Center

Boston Nature Center front

The best thing about getting lost in Boston is that it’s a fail-proof method for learning what is where and how the neighborhoods connect.

Stick lean-to in progress

The Boston Nature Center is an urban wildlife sanctuary located on the grounds of the former Boston State Hospital. It offers programming for elementary school age children as well as miles of trails and many bushes under which rabbits graze to their heart’s content.

Rabbit spots the photographer

Lots and lots of rabbits . . .

Rabbit with tail up

Rabbits just chillin

Two rabbits hide in grass

Look closely for two sets of ears!

Right nearby to the Nature Center are the Clark Cooper Community Gardens. Described as some of Boston’s oldest, this impressively large collection of community gardens probably does not welcome rabbits. In the past, friends and I once spotted some wild turkeys loitering around the edges.

Horse trinket on fence

Green roof at Clark Cooper Community Gardens

Fence post

Gardens in the sun

So what have you found when you were lost?

Hiking Madame Sherri Forest

01 Monday Jul 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life

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Tags

jamaica-plain, spring, trees

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You know how they say books open doors to new worlds? It’s true.

Walking the ruins

Two different socks - sitting on top of the ruins

My partner and I frequent our local branch of the Boston Public Library, twice having borrowed a copy of The New Hiking the Monadnock Region: 44 Nature Walks and Day-Hikes in the Heart of New England and renewed it generously. Long title, many trails at various levels of difficulty.

David through the arch

Consulting the gude to hikes
Following our guide (what? you don’t travel out-of-state with library books?), we visited the stone ruins of a mansion built in the early 1920s by an eccentric theater costume designer, several beaver lodges (sadly, none of the occupants sighted) and many chewed trees that hadn’t toppled in the desired direction, and delicate amphibians decked out in bright orange or careful, mottled brown.

Beaver lodge

Orange amphibian

Mottled leaf floats on the water

Our hike was easy-level and included many reaches into the giant-bag-o-trailmix, so I didn’t work up the level of appetite I might have. Still, I was happy to chow at Putney Diner, a spot famous for its homestyle pies.

Finally, we stopped by Brattleboro, where I introduced David to the one area of Vermont I know fairly well, having visited with my mother and on numerous occasions with friends.

Welcome sign in pocket park

Gardens on the Main Street

Brattleboro Food Co-op outdoor eating area

Spring Gardens Near J Street

17 Friday May 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life

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A stroll introduced me to the many small gardens growing up green around our apartment on J-Street.

Greens in bins

Something growing in a washtub

Deep purple lilac

Plants in pretty blue washtubs

Tomato starts in a green tub

Seeds growing in paper egg cartons

Salad greens in a royal-looking planter
Round bud glowing in the sun
You just have to love how people love to grow things that are a.) good to eat b.) beautiful.

Vibrant red tulips

Local Maple, Moosehill

05 Friday Apr 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life, Learnin'

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events, food-n-cookin, trees, winter

I was encouraged by the number of people who showed up to Saturday’s sold-out Maple Sugaring Festival at Mass Audubon’s Moose Hill in Sharon, MA. Friends, families, and a few couples like us.

Two tours pass one another

Kids check out the wooden trough

Snow on the group, sap rising, and the sugar house was steaming maple smoke.

Catching sap in metal buckets

Yoke for young folks to carry sap

Yoke and metal pail

Displaying the color of maple syrup

Due to climate change and invasive pests, folks claim these woods are endangered. Spying the maples at Natick Community Farm and Moose Hill has been bittersweet. As a kid, having never seen them, I’d envisioned sugar maples as stately and smooth. I’ve since learned they’re more tall and gnarly, holding in their veins a thin, silent treasure.

Not a sugar maple

Not a sugar maple

Stacked tree trunks

2013 Farm Share Fair

25 Monday Mar 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life

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cambridge, city-farm, food-n-cookin

Although I’ve already signed up for my household’s CSA (community supported agriculture) share this year, I couldn’t resist dropping by the fourth annual Farm Share Fair. I’d been hearing about this event, originated by theMove*, a nonprofit that organizes volunteer workdays on farms for young citydwellers in and around Boston.

Sign: who's at the farm share fair?

When my companion and I first walked in, we were impressed by the number of farms and vendors present. We enjoyed a leisurely stroll among the tables.

Checking out the goods at Follow the Honey

Checking out the goods at Follow the Honey

Visiting our friends at Life Force Juice

Visiting our friends at Life Force Juice

Fresh wheatgrass juice

Fresh wheatgrass juice

Shortly, the crowds arrived. It was inspiring to see so many people invested in and excited to support local farms and get their hands on the delicious, healthful, and beautiful veggies, fruit, eggs, meat, grains, and everything else.

Old friends consider the room

Baby with parents

Future veggie enthusiast

Red Fire farmer

After squeezing my way down a packed aisle to sign up for an egg share with John Crow Farm, my friend and I look leave of the fair to free up space for all the other enthusiasts. Lucky for us, the evening held one last treat . . .

Roxy's Gourmet Grilled Cheese food truck

How’s your handcut truffle fry? Mine’s delicious! @Roxy’s Gourmet Grilled Cheese food truck

*EDIT: I just learned that the event was presented by Mindy Harris Communications, in connection with theMove. Thanks for the correction, Mindy!

Stopping by Egleston Square Winter Farmer’s Market

06 Wednesday Mar 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Community, Green Life

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city-farm, community, food-n-cookin, winter

Many years ago, visiting friends in Manhattan, I got my first taste of a non-growing season farm market.

You know how the wind whips around New York City?

Walking on the High Line, NYC

Well, that was going on. December. I remember I was out by myself at the time, just drifting, and I chanced upon a market where some streets came together to create a place were people could be together. In this small stand of stalls, there were apples, greens, roots, and a fish vendor. I was impressed. I was jealous. Man, I wish we had this sort of thing back in Boston!

Home: the years marched the way they do and I observed the formation of a collection of winter markets via our area’s robust farm-to-table and food justice scenes. I heard rumors of this organization and that, trying to bring  indoor markets to the old, cold city.

Finally the markets revealed themselves like crocus. Enter Somerville. Enter Cambridge. Enter Dorchester. Enter Brookline.

Enter Jamaica Plain.

Egleston Market at a glance

Egleston Square, to be more precise. Despite spending many hours at a cafe just around the corner, I hadn’t been quite aware of this neighborhood-within-a-neighborhood.

Egleston Market sign

But now I know of a lively farmer’s market that sells, among other items, outrageously delicious salsa by NoLa’s Fresh Foods, a Main Streets program, and a neighborhood church served by a well-spoken and thoughtful pastor.

Urban Hydro Farmers

Music at the market

Children's activities at the market

Stillman's Meat at the market

So, New York, we’ve caught up. Now what you got?

Bare Branches at Jamaica Pond

01 Friday Mar 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Boston Moments, Green Life

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

jamaica-plain, trees, winter

Caught on camera this winter . . .

Pond in winter

Willows

Feather caught in tree

. . . though I’m not sure it’s fair to refer to these branches -so full of color, shape, and intrigue– as “bare.”

Making Soap on a Sunday

06 Wednesday Feb 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life, Learnin'

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goals

Like many people, I write down goals to keep them fresh, away from the landing-path in my head where thoughts clutter if they aren’t attended to. I’m not sure when “homemade laundry detergent” made the list, but I can certainly describe how the idea sat around, un-done, for years. It was even included (but never realized) on my 101 Goals in 1001 Days list.

Alas, soap.

All one on the mouse cheese grater

Seemed it wasn’t to be until, at the Central Branch of the Cambridge Public Library, I bumped into 365 Ways to Live Cheap: Your Everyday Guide to Saving Money by Trent Hamm, whose blog The Simple Dollar leant me much inspiration and energy to work on my finances (and blog-growin’.) Reading through the neat little book, I noticed a blurb about how easy and inexpensive it can be to whip up laundry soap.

Oh, soap.

Half one on the mouse cheese grater

I’ve been spending $12-14 a pop on some gorgeous stuff I pick up at a farm stand in Maine, or discover here and there in at natural products shops. And then there’s my old favorite – Ecover – and new favorite – Biokleen, both over $6 at my local grocer on a good day.

Cleaning dudes

So, fine. I bought some Borax, washing soda, and a bar of the well-loved All One (at three different stores, admittedly, but biking cut my carbon emissions.) And I made myself some laundry detergent. It was a lot like shaving carrots and mixing flour to make muffins. Except no muffin bumping around the inside of my washing machine did much for a week’s worth of soiled kitchen towels, and my new soap worked out fine.

Goal.

Laundry soap, not cheese

Nope. Not cheese.

Gone to Winter Market

09 Wednesday Jan 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Green Life

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

cambridge, city-farm, events, winter

This time we were prepared.

Strolling through the market

Because you can’t just walk into such an exciting winter market and expect to leave with your wallet intact. It’s important to have a plan of attack (and a budget.)

David chooses spices

And it’s important to being open to seeing people you know (and like) ’cause at the Cambridge Market the mood is sunny, and the sun is streaming through the tall windows of the Cambridge Community Center gymnasium. There is no ducking behind a tall stack of Oreos!

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Culinary Cruiser team smile for the camera

Coffee kart

Band plays at the market

Solitary metal bird

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