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Rejuvenating

May 19, 2016 @ 21:43 By Gavin Webber 4 Comments

Even when you have all the systems in place, leading a more sustainable lifestyle is sometimes difficult to maintain.

Especially when something else starts taking up your precious time, like running a small green business, as well as a mostly full-time job, and trying to balance that with spending enough meaningful time with family and friends.

Enough was enough.

So, I decided that, with my 52nd birthday rapidly approaching, I needed to take some time off to rejuvenate and reflect upon things most important to me.  To that end, I have taken 5 days off work to do whatever I like!

Things like replanting a very neglected veggie patch.  Now that our long hot weather is finally over, I can plant a crop of winter vegetables and turn over a couple of the beds.

The leaves have dropped on most of the deciduous fruit trees, so they will also need a prune and shape.

But most importantly, there will be time to reconnect with family and friends around the clay oven, cooking pizza and having fun.

Work Play or Rest

I’ve also taken a good hard look at myself.  Confession time now dear reader.

Due to a lax attitude to my diet and exercise, I’ve put on a few too many kilos, just peaking over 102 kg (224 lbs).  It’s something that I not proud of and it’s very unhealthy at my age.  There; it’s out in the open now.

Kim and I have renewed our focus on simple and nutritious food and I have boosted my exercise hours per week.  I know it is as simple as fewer calories in and more calories burnt each day, but it does take focus.

I know it sounds easy enough, especially when I am planting lots of wholesome food in the veggie patch over my break.  We have also found that by planning to cook the evening meal together as a team, we are more likely to cook a non-processed meal, than to cheat and get takeaway food.

Why cook together, you ask?  Because we both enjoy cooking from scratch and get to spend more quality time together.  What more could you ask for!

Thankfully, the weight is starting to drop so I will keep you abreast of how we are managing to create wholesome meals each week.

Gavin at work

Also over my break, I will also be servicing my renewed passion for cheese making, of which I cannot seem to get enough of.  Not the cheese per se, but the process of making different types of cheese and then sharing it via cheeseman.tv (my cheese YouTube channel) with the worlds curd nerds.

Speaking of YouTube, I decided to dedicate my original channel just for cheese making at home.  This was a big step for me, as it meant that I had to remove all but a few very popular sustainable living videos.

So what to do?

Well, I just went ahead and created a dedicated Greening of Gavin channel that will include weekly Vlog posts as well as some of the original how-to videos and television appearances from the original channel.  You can subscribe to that channel with this link if you are interested; The Greening of Gavin YouTube Channel.  Very exciting times ahead.  Now take a breath Gav….

Kim and I are also looking for a way to start podcasting again.  It is definitely lack of time thing, because we are more often than not either packing orders or doing the bookkeeping.  It’s something we really enjoy doing together and have lots of fun in the process.  I know that many of you enjoy listening from the comments and emails we receive after each episode!

So this weekend (and a few days afterwards) I am looking forward to relaxing, renewing, and rejuvenating.  I will be master of my own domain, and take the time to work at the things I enjoy most.  I think it’s something that all of us should do on occasion, just like my new motto; Live MORE, Work LESS.

No one on their death bed

(c) Gavin Webber

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Filed Under: Gavin, Sustainable Living

Busy as a Bee in Spring

May 5, 2016 @ 22:40 By Gavin Webber 6 Comments

I know that everyone leads busy lives, and we are no exception.  One would think that because we lead a simpler lifestyle that things would be a little less hectic, but not so.  We’ve been busy as a bee in spring or to put it in Australian,  we’ve been flat out like a lizard drinking.

Since my last post we’ve got a few things achieved;

  • Taught a Beginner’s Soapmaking Workshop,
  • Harvested the last of the summer crops due to the warmer than usual April,
  • Cooked every dinnertime meal,
  • Added four new cheeses to my cheese making repertoire, and
  • Attended a Content Creator’s lab hosted by YouTube.

Of course there were the regular things we do around here like clean out the chook house, water the fruit trees, try to grow winter veg seedlings (not much luck there).

So let’s have a look at a few photos that I took over the last couple of weeks.

Content Creators Lab YouTube

Content Creators Lab YouTube at Docklands Studios

I was invited to Docklands Studios here in Melbourne by YouTube to learn how to produce engaging content for my YouTube channel cheeseman.tv.  They contacted me just before my channel reached 10,000 subscribers, so I was chuffed with the invitation and learnt a lot at the lab.  I have been creating regular cheese making content each week and I am pleased with the feedback I’ve been getting.

Speaking of cheese, I’ve made the following types in the last couple of weeks; Edam, Havarti, Mysost, and Gouda.

Edam before waxing

Edam before waxing

The Edam was a great cheese to make.  It had some quirky steps that I’d never come across before like washing the curd, so it was good fun.  Here is the Edam video and full recipe so that you can have a try as well.

Then I made a Havarti the next day, which is not quite ready to show you, as it still has some steps remaining before I wax it for maturation.  It should be ready for further aging on Sunday.

Waxed Gouda

Waxed Gouda

The next cheese was Gouda.  It was another attempt at this dutch cheese that was a dismal failure back in 2009.  I just hadn’t got the courage up to try it again, but I found a new recipe to work with, and I believe it turned out well.

The video that I took during the process is not quite ready, so please subscribe to my YouTube channel you will get a notification when it is released using the button below.

After all that cheese making, I had a lot of whey left over, so I decided to try my hand at Norwegian Whey Cheese or Mysost.  Yes, another cheese!

It’s pretty simple to make.  All you do is bring the whey to the boil then simmer for about 6 hours until whats left is thick and gooey.  Then you add a pinch of cinnamon and allow to cool and set.  Essentially it is all the leftover protein and lactose so it’s quite sweet.  Delicious on toast for breakfast.

So much cheese making fun.

On to gardening.  Autumn has been a disaster in some ways.

It’s been hotter than normal so that means that the cabbage moths are still breeding.  So much so that all my Cauliflowers and Broccoli seedlings were decimated, and given to the chooks as a snack.

I’ve needed to water so much, and we’ve also had little rain which is unusual for autumn.

However, on the other side of the coin, we’ve just picked the last of our summer crops which just kept on going.  We have the last cucumber in the fridge crisper, and a small bowl of tommy toe tomatoes still being used for snacks and salads.

We also had a couple of unexpected Australian Butter Pumpkins that grew out of compost.

IMG_1289

Here is the one that I had been keeping the snails and slugs off.  They didn’t like the cedar shingle that I sat it on, which was a surprising deterrent.

IMG_1291

The other one, which was a bit sneaky, grew in the Tahitian lime tree until it got too large and snapped a branch off and fell down.  Naughty pumpkin!

Last of the summer harvest

Last of the summer harvest

We also picked a few eggplants which we gave away because Kim and Ben don’t like them.  I know, criminal because I make a mean Moussaka.

Another thing that happened was that our solar PV system went on the blink for a few days.

State 104

Don’t Panic. It’s just a State 104!

The error on the inverter caused me to call my installer, Energy Matters, who I found out were bought out by Sun Edison.  They were helpful and were about to send out a qualified solar electrician when the system started working again.

It wasn’t the system at all, but a drift in the grid frequency by a few Hertz.  You see, all grid tied inverters check the grid frequency before starting up, expecting about 50 Hz.  Apparently this happened to so many people in our area who had PV that the distributor finally fixed it.  Not much we could do about it except wait until it worked again.

I think I might start looking at battery systems that I can add to my system to store some of the excess to keep our night-time grid usage down and help alleviate this issue should it occur again.

So there you have it.  Pretty hectic hey?

We have more workshops over the next few weeks, so the weekends are pretty full.  I don’t expect that bee to stop being busy anytime soon!

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Filed Under: Cheese, climate change, Gardening, Sustainable Living, vegetables

TGoG 132 – A House or a Home

April 13, 2016 @ 21:34 By Gavin Webber 1 Comment

Is your place a house or a home?  Kim and I have some thoughts on the subject in today’s podcast episode.

[spp-player optin=”off”]

Welcome back. Sorry for the hiatus, but we’ve been working and launched a big project  over the last 3 months, which we’ll talk about in next week’s episode.

Today we are going to be talking about why we think our house is a home and what the difference is between the two.  And answer the question on whether being happy at home has something to do with a reduced need for getting away on holidays each year.

There may be some background noise, as we are travelling in our Honda Civic Hybrid car from Ballarat to our home in Melton. We think the conversation is fun all the same.

Until next week, have a great week of sustainable living!

Chime in with your thoughts about what makes a house a home.  We would love to read your thoughts via comment.

[spp-optin]

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Filed Under: Happiness, Podcast, Suburbs, Sustainable Living, TGOG Podcast

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About Gavin Webber

About Gavin Webber

An Ordinary Australian Man Who Has A Green Epiphany Whilst Watching A Documentary, Gets a Hybrid Car, Plants A Large Organic Vegetable Garden, Goes Totally Solar, Lowers Consumption, Feeds Composts Bins and Worms, Harvests Rainwater, Raises Chickens, Makes Cheese and Soap, and Eats Locally. All In The Effort To Reduce Our Family's Carbon Footprint So We Can Start Making A Difference For Our Children & Future Generations To Come.

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