Dry Beans For Nutrition and Resilience

Use what you have, and make it a joyous adventure. You probably have what you need.

The Calendar Pages

Using The Calendar Pages

Designing sustainability and resiliency is a holistic approach to life. Part of this involves conscious consideration in how we create, modify, and manage our living spaces and work spaces. The goal for both sustainability and resiliency is to work towards spaces that are self regulating. It is also important that we produce the food that we need to survive close to where we live, ideally in your own yard or space.

The calendar pages are designed to give you one piece of the information to help with that. On the top right hand side of each month, you will find the length of daylight and the angle of the sun at the beginning of the month. I have done this for roughly central Iowa in the US, but this will hold roughly true for anywhere on the north 42nd parallel. North and south of this line will require some adjustment. This is critical information for designing both garden spaces and structures to make them environmentally efficient.

When you are designing most structures, your highest efficiency for both heating and cooling in temperate climates will be to place on the south side (in the northern hemisphere) to collect winter sun and then to have those windows shaded during hot weather.

This also helps you in the garden. By knowing where your sun is going to be, you can extend the season for both heat loving crops and cool loving crops. By predicting where the sun will be, you can build cold frames to collect that sun for the warm crops. By knowing where the shade is, you can extend the cool season crops into the summer by taking advantage of the shade.

Here are your calendars for the week.

Monthly Page.pdf4.87 MB • PDF File
May Weekly Planner Page.pdf800.87 KB • PDF File
May 25 Daily Planner Page.pdf1.11 MB • PDF File

Journal Prompts for the week

May 25 Daily Journal Prompts.pdf183.24 KB • PDF File

The Plant Profile

While I am not an expert on every plant that I will profile, I am trying to provide a complete profile for each plant. For the plants that I know, I will supplement the research information with my experience as a mid-western US gardener and as someone who has gardened in pots in an RV. For those plants that I don’t personally know, this is information that I need as well. My primary focus for 2025 is on useful plants that can be raised in almost any circumstances, from an RV or apartment to a small yard garden, to a permaculture garden.

Each profile includes as much information that I can find and is organized in a reference template that will be the same for each plant.

This is what you can expect to find in each PDF profile:

Identification

Plant growth and the conditions that the plant prefers

How the plant matures and develops

How to use the plant

The medicine and magic of the plant.

And when I know, suitable varieties for small spaces.

Any nutritional, medicinal, and magical properties that I include are intended for your informational purposes only. Always check with a reputable medical provider or herbalist before using an herb medicinally.

The version of the profile that I include in the PDF files here are a manuscript version. I welcome and encourage your input as I edit them for final publication.

Dry Bean Plant Profile.pdf888.68 KB • PDF File

5 Minute Hack

I wanted a mini salad garden this year but I didn’t have a container that i wanted to use. I did have an old pair of jeans that had a hole in the crotch. I tied off the bottoms of the legs and filled them with hay. Then I loosely tie the top of the legs and put a “belt” through the loops. I put just a little hay in the seat of the pants. I filled the top of the pants with potting soil and planted some herbs in the top. I cut holes in the legs and stuffed some potting soil in each hole and planted my salad vegetables and herbs in the holes. Now I have a salad garden sitting in a chair amusing ( or irritating) the neighbors.

I put it together a week ago and it is looking great. The jeans and the hay soak up the moisture without getting soggy in the copious amounts of rain that we are getting, but it will need frequent watering in dry weather.