I needed a little project this winter/spring to keep me out of trouble. Something productive, fun, and sweet. Since my friend Rixa taps her maple tree for syrup, I figured I could, too. Not her maple of course, mine! So with some info from Rixa, and spiles from tapmytrees.com (I know, isn't that the greatest url ever?) I'm on my way to making maple syrup.
Here's the 411. I drilled a hole in the tree about 3 feet from the ground. Rixa said to angle the hole down. Which makes sense and I'm glad she told me to because I'm sure I wouldn't have.
The kids and I jammed the tap in with a mallet. Rixa gave me some tubing that connects from the spout and into a gallon jug.
I bought the spiles and not the buckets because I'm way too cheap. The tubing gets the sap into the jug and hopefully keeps all critters out.
So far I've gotten a quart of sap which boiled down to about 3 tablespoons of syrup. Not impressive, yet. But those three tablespoons are the best maple syrup I've ever tried! I need to ask our neighbor if I can tap their tree in which case we will be swimming in sap. Not so much syrup, but that's ok.
Showing posts with label projects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label projects. Show all posts
February 22, 2011
November 5, 2010
DIY Friday-Water Saver
In honor of the upcoming weekend, I wanted to highlight two little projects I completed about a month ago. They are super easy and need approximately 1 tool, a wrench.
Our water bill was $100 last month which got me moving on these two projects. I'd been hearing the toilet run, but what was once a minor annoyance became money down the drain. There's a simple test to tell if your tank water is leaking into the bowl. Take of the lid and drop some food coloring in. If the bowl water becomes colored, you're leaking. (I told you this was easy!)
A trip to Home Depot had me looking for a new stopper. It was about $5, and I was on my way to pay when I noticed this. For $20, who wouldn't want a two way flusher? I believed them when they said it was easy to install. And get this, they were right! I needed the wrench to remove the old handle, but everything else just slid into place.
The second DIY project I did was to replace the shower head. Our old one was pouring out water in copious amounts. I love a long shower, so something had to be done. I found a low flow shower head at Home Depot, but then on the way out I found a super low flow at 1-1.5 gallons a minute. This shower head is for the long showerer and those who suffer green guilt. Most shower heads let 2.5 gallons out per minute and they are great water savers compared to the old shower heads. I needed a wrench to remove the old one and the new one screwed on just with my weak hands twisting it. Easy Peasy.
Both of these projects are super easy no brainer water savers. They are relatively cheap, and as a renter, I can actually take them with me to wherever we go next. I kept the old parts for both the shower and the toilet.
Now I can't wait to get the next water bill. I'm dying to see if we've cut down on our water consumption significantly. It will probably take awhile to make my money back on these improvements, but I think it's worth it.
Our water bill was $100 last month which got me moving on these two projects. I'd been hearing the toilet run, but what was once a minor annoyance became money down the drain. There's a simple test to tell if your tank water is leaking into the bowl. Take of the lid and drop some food coloring in. If the bowl water becomes colored, you're leaking. (I told you this was easy!)
A trip to Home Depot had me looking for a new stopper. It was about $5, and I was on my way to pay when I noticed this. For $20, who wouldn't want a two way flusher? I believed them when they said it was easy to install. And get this, they were right! I needed the wrench to remove the old handle, but everything else just slid into place.

Both of these projects are super easy no brainer water savers. They are relatively cheap, and as a renter, I can actually take them with me to wherever we go next. I kept the old parts for both the shower and the toilet.
Now I can't wait to get the next water bill. I'm dying to see if we've cut down on our water consumption significantly. It will probably take awhile to make my money back on these improvements, but I think it's worth it.
January 12, 2009
Recovering Dining Room Chairs
So it's not the hardest thing ever, but not the easiest either. We drove these down from the Santa Cruz flea market where I got them for $15. J was not excited but was an incredibly good sport about not complaining. Does he know how much I appreciate him letting me get my own way? They were covered in a pukey green that of course Mermaid loved and couldn't believe I wanted to cover. I had this great fabric that I got from a garage sale.
This woman decorated yachts and had all these remnants that were of no use to her. I bought yards and yards of various fabrics for about $20. I had just enough of this blue stripey stuff for two chairs. Perfect.
I also finally recovered some pillows that my kids got from a couch that someone put by the dumpster. The pillows were so comfy, but a wacky cheetah print. I used some incredibly expensive and soft fabric from this same garage sale and have been stroking these pillows every chance I get. I could only cover one, but made a new pillow with what was left and refilled it with the second pillows stuffing.
So total cost for this little makeover- less than $20.
Next project: Paint the stools and legs of the table to match.
I also finally recovered some pillows that my kids got from a couch that someone put by the dumpster. The pillows were so comfy, but a wacky cheetah print. I used some incredibly expensive and soft fabric from this same garage sale and have been stroking these pillows every chance I get. I could only cover one, but made a new pillow with what was left and refilled it with the second pillows stuffing.
So total cost for this little makeover- less than $20.
Next project: Paint the stools and legs of the table to match.
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