ecosophia: (Default)
John Michael Greer ([personal profile] ecosophia) wrote2023-10-27 03:04 pm

Frugal Friday

weatherstrippingWelcome back to Frugal Friday!  This is a weekly forum post to encourage people to share tips on saving money, especially but not only by doing stuff yourself. A new post will be going up every Friday, and will remain active until the next one goes up. Contributions will be moderated, of course, and I have some simple rules to offer, which may change as we proceed.

Rule #1:  this is a place for polite, friendly conversations about how to save money in difficult times. It's not a place to post news, views, rants, or emotional outbursts about the reasons why the times are difficult and saving money is necessary. Nor is it a place to use a money saving tip to smuggle in news, views, etc.  I have a delete button and I'm not afraid to use it.

Rule #2:  this is not a place for you to sell goods or services, period. Here again, I have a delete button and I'm not afraid to use it.

Rule #3:  please keep it to one tip per person per week. Data dumps are tedious for me to moderate and also for readers to use. If you have lots of tips, great -- post one per week. This is an ongoing project. If you want to comment on someone else's tip, that's welcome, but again, don't use that as an excuse to post a second, unrelated tip of your own.

Rule #4:  please keep your contributions reasonably short -- say, 500 words or less. If you have something longer to say, please post it elsewhere -- a free Dreamwidth account is one option -- and simply put a link here. Teal deer comments won't be put through.

Rule #5:  please give your tip a heading that explains briefly what it's about.  Homemade Chicken Soup, Garden Containers, Cheap Attic Insulation, and Vinegar Cleans Windows are good examples of headings. That way people can find the things that are relevant for them. If you don't put a heading on your tip it will be deleted.

Rule #6: don't post anything that would amount to advocating criminal activity. Any such suggestions will not be put through.

With that said, have at it!

randomactsofkarmasc: (Default)

growing annual herbs as perennials

[personal profile] randomactsofkarmasc 2023-10-27 11:00 pm (UTC)(link)
I started several basil plants (indoors) in Spring '22 from seed. I kept them in pots and moved them outside after the threat of frost had passed. I replaced bulbs in some table lamps with LED grow bulbs (shaped like old-fashioned incandescent bulbs). Before the first freeze, I moved the basil indoors (after a serious pruning). I won't say they thrived inside, but they stayed alive. Spring '23, I moved them back outside. They grew like crazy. I have added a few more herbs (sage, marjoram, oregano, dill, and cilantro) and a few more grow lights. I'll let you know if they make it to next Spring. (I've also kept catnip alive indoors under a grow light. I actually have five plants, and I rotate them in different positions, because my cats like to self-medicate.)

Re: growing annual herbs as perennials

[personal profile] jbucks 2023-10-28 09:45 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you for this tip! I was thinking of trying something like this, so I'll give it a shot, too!

Re: growing annual herbs as perennials

(Anonymous) 2023-10-30 09:10 pm (UTC)(link)
I've had pots of basil, oregano, thyme, sage, rosemary, chives, garlic chives, and small red peppers growing on my windowsill for years. Most of them will function as perennials as long as you keep them fed and watered and trim them back as necessary.