Friday, February 29, 2008

Don't throw out that tea bag!

I love discovering surprising and ingenious ways of reusing something, especially a something that I use a lot. I've just come across this web page that lists various uses for used green tea leaves. My favourite is cat litter deodorizer. Since we use a natural cat litter, Swheatschoop, that doesn't have a deodorizer or perfume and we usually end up buying baking powder just for this purpose. I drink green tea almost every day at work, so I could really amass quite of few leaves. I just need to devise a way of discreetly drying the leaves in my office. :)

What are your favourite ways to use brewed tea leaves?

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

What I would do if I wont the lottery

I can't remember when I first heard of the concept of volunteer tourism but it's something that has held my interested since I was in high school. If I had the finances to take off from paid employment for a few months (or a year) and travel Latin America (where such programs are usually held) tracking turtle migration or doing community work, I would do so in a heart beat. However, I have found it more and more difficult to find such oppotunities (although when I search, I always do so only out of curiosity), so I was very happy to stumble on this website from the blog currently hosting Carnival of the Green. The website is for Volunteer Latin America, which matches volunteers with a huge list of volunteer opportunities in Latin America: everything from medical work, to conservation, to social work and building houses. And, of course, the ubiquitis ESL teaching opportunites.

Looking through all the projects I have a really hard time deciding which one I would do if I had the chance. Would I want to track the behaviour and migration patterns of bottle-nosed dolphins and other marine animals, or work with an indigenous community that makes traditional textiles for sale? Or run a theatre group for street kids? My brother would love one of the many monkey conservation projects. And there is a leather-back turtle conservation project that only requires a 1 week commitment. I suggested to Mr. Broccoli that we incorporate that into our honeymoon, since we'll be in Latin America anyway (we've decided to spend 2 weeks in Ecuador) but he told me I was crazy. Spoil sport!

Monday, February 18, 2008

Worms!

I've just begun my third attempt at vermicomposting. I won't go into what went wrong with my previous 2 attempts, but suffice it to say third times a charm, right? I got a proper vermicomposter bin from someone on Freecycle. It's from the now defunct Toroto Municipal vermicompost program, as you can see by the label:




It's a good sized bin, larger than just Mr. Broccoli and I probably need, but it'll be good for me to use to get the hang of it and hopefully keep it going this time.


My cat is quite curious about this new contraption in the kitchen. Unfotunately, I couldn't get a shot of her looking into the bin when the top was off. She's not very considerate about posing for the camera. I did take a picture of the worms, though.


These are my little kitchen helpers. So far I've fed them twice. They got the solids from Mr. Broccoli's left over soup earlier in the week, and a yummy worm fruit salad yesterday, consisting of the banana peels from my banana bread, some mostly spoiled strawberries and a bit of corn and peas from when I still had to eat mushy foods (I couldn't actually eat the corn and peas, they were for Mr. Broccoli). I'm fascinated with the little guys. I've always liked watching worms, and Mr. Broccoli keeps having to tell me to put the lid down and leave them alone, or I'll just sit in front of the bin and watch them. I don't think that makes me weird.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Just call me Toothless Joe

Despite my fears of waking up during surgery (which happened to a friend of mine) or the aneasthetic not working (which happened to my mom once), I survived the wisdom teeth-ectomy without incident. When I sat down in the chair at the dental surgen's office they put a gas mask on my nose, which I expected to emit happy gas, but didn't. It didn't seem to emit anything and made it imposible to exhale through my nose. While I was getting used to my new breathing aparatous, the nurse strapped (?!!) my wrists to the chair and put a heart rate monitor on my index finger. I'm not quite sure the point of the wrist straps. Do they have an ongoing problem with people attempting to flee mid-surgery, a scalple dangling from their mouth? Probably not, since the straps were the gentle, velcro kind, but still. It made me wonder. It took a little trying for the dental surgen to find a vein on the back of my wrist, which is also weird, because I can see them right now just for looking. But then, I don't have an expensive dental surgery degree, so what do I know.

Once the needle was in there I started to feel it real quick. The surgen told me something about how I didn't have to worry about keeping my mouth open, but I don't recall much of it. I do remember, just as I started to drift off, that my mother had made me promise to get his assurance that he would get all the bits of the teeth (apparently her own inept dentist had left the roots in on one of her wisdom teeth and they became infected), and so I seem to have said as much in my last moments of consciousness.

Only I didn't go unconscious. I didn't feel anything or even seem to have a sense of my physical body, but I could hear the surgen and nurse talking. Sometimes they were talking about the procedure, sometimes they were talking about who was taking a day off next week. But that's all very sketchy, too. However, I do know that when the operation was over, I didn't have a feeling of being woken up, simply of being moved from the chair and helped onto a recovery bench outside the dental surgen's inner sanctum. Mr. Broccoli was asked to come in and he says that my face lit up like the sun when I saw him. Although I was woozy, at the same time my mind was perfectly clear. I listened to the nurse's instructions about post-op care with complete understanding, which was totally different from the hazy absorbtion of conversation I'd experienced during the procedure itself.

I didn't realize how I looked until the nurse was taking me downstairs to meet Mr Broccoli who had gone to bring the car around. I looked at myself in the elevator mirror and would have laughted if such action had been physically possible. But it wasn't. My whole head was completely frozen, my mouth gapping open and I wouldn't have known it if I hadn't seen it. I couldn't even grunt. The only things I could move were my eyes, but they were crossed. My left eye looked straight ahead while my right eye looked directly to the left, so that as we drove home it constantly looked like we were about to turn into oncoming traffic. But I was too stoned to be terribly bothered by this. The rest of Thursday was spent eating apple sauce and being fascinated by my face as it slowly thawed. The last part to thaw was my lower lip and jaw, like the mouth of a ventriloquist dummy, which finally regained feeling at around 8:30 that night.

At 10:30 the pain set in. Luckily this was also bedtime (it's surprising how tiring surgery is when you're not even the one performing it!) so I took a couple of Tylonol 3s and hopped into bed. Then I woke up in the middle of the night in pain and had to take a couple more. Friday was just a day of pain, lying on the couch (when I eventually forced myself out of bed because I hate staying in bed all day) staring at the TV, counting down until I could take more Tyolenol. The T3s took a long time to kick in, never lasted very long, and made me woozy, but they were all I had and I lived by the count of 3 hours (the length of time the bottle says you have to wait between doses) for 2 straight days. :) Mr. Broccoli was as helpful as he could be, but short of knocking me out with a hammer there really wasn't anything anyone could do. He did go to the store and buy me a can of every kind of cream of something soup in the place, as well as some fresh fruit and bananas to make smoothies. Smoothies are joy!

By Sunday I had sworn off the T3s and had the energy to leave the house for a brief trip to the mall. I had also attempted to eat some solid food, although everyting had to be cut into tiny pieces because I couldn't open my mouth any wider than a half inch between my teeth. I looked like a chipmunk who had met Mohammed Ali in a dark alley, with a huge swollen bruise on my left cheek. Mr. Broccoli made the occational wife abuse joke until I cautioned him that someone overhearing might take him seriously and rush my off to Ernestine's.

I still have some pain off and on, but I'm mostly healed now. All the stitches have dissolved (and sometimes been accidentally swallowed!) and my bruise is just a small triangle of greenish yellow running from the left corner of my mouth to just under my chin. I do have a hard spot left where the swelling was that feels like someone imbedded the roller ball from a computer mouse under my cheek. Today has been the most pain-free day yet and I'm hoping to get a full night's sleep tonight (I haven't had a pill-free sleep yet this week). In closing, I don't recommend the experience as a whole, and I'm glad they took all 4 because I sure wouldn't ever want to go through with this again.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Tee hee

Check this out. I found it on Treehugger.com, but the link is directly to the site they are quoting. Make sure to read through the comments; they add to the hilarity. :)

Monday, February 4, 2008

Crunch, crunch

This week, I'm eating as many crunchy foods as I can. Why would someone ever choose their meals based on crunchability above other qualities? Because I'm having all four of my wisdom teeth out this Thursday, at which point my diet will suddenly be limited to foods that can be drunk through a thick straw.

I have prepared for my upcoming crunch-less existence by buying jars of organic baby food in varieties that I expect I will actually like (like mango/pear and sweet potato) from Planet Organic when we were grocery shopping on the weekend. I also have some homemade applesauce I made and canned in the fall with my bridesmaid, K, which I have been saving specifically for this event.

I'm trying not to be worried about the procedure, but this is all very new to me. Unlike my little brother, who was in and out of the IWK as a child due to various mishaps and accidents, I have never been put under for surgery. In fact, the only time I have ever been cut into on purpose was a biopsy I had a few years ago, which, typically, left a scar 4 times larger than the mole that had been removed. I have to be completely asleep for this procedure because I have a high gage reflex (I swallowed a hard candy as a child and it remained lodged in my throat for 3 hours. I can confirm, for any interested, that this experience sucks) and only with me asleep will the doctor have any hope of reaching the back of my jaw with a scalple, let a lone to do it 4 times (yikes!). Mr. Broccoli will be there, of course, although he won't be in the room with me, but I still take strength from that. He'll also be around all day to take care of me (he's been through this before, so he has experience). If I'm not in too much pain, at least it'll be a few days off work to get some wedding planning done, or at least some knitting.