DIY Cleaning Solutions

earth t

Go easy on the planet and your wallet: buy some spray bottles and make your own cleaning sprays at home. Recommended solution strengths are on the massive jars, available at warehouse store X. Use fewer products for more things. We use a white vinegar solution for windows; eco-friendly dish soap solution in the kitchen (counters), Murphy’s Oil Soap (cabinets & walls) and Mr. Clean or Spic & Span for the floors.

Remember to mark your bottles, we know from experience that all diluted cleaners look alike (but smell is a good clue)!

Green Tips & Tricks

These are little tiny steps we’ve taken around our house that have really helped make our life easier and greener. If you have tips that have worked well for you, we’d love to hear them!

the Balcony

The first in a series I’m going to call, “If it were me, but it isn’t”.  Yesterday I visited a friend’s home for the first time, and you know how that goes—on the drive home one inevitably thinks, “Well, if it were me…”  In this case, my landscape brain got switched on by the trip to Los Angeles. 

In this case, I had a six hour drive home, and my brain can cover a lot of ground in 6 hours!  It’s a great location, he’s got nice furnishings, his place is sparse but well appointed, he’s obviously not one who chucks perfectly good, working appliances because retailers tell him he needs the new model…   But, if it were me, I’d hang gauze curtains on that balcony and sleep out there all summer!

When I woke up this morning, I realized, that while before I’d always thought, “Gosh, I wish I could render landscapes, in watercolor, the way Alan Titchmarsh does” (on the old Ground Force series), now I can.  I exploded out of bed. 

First to render the balcony as it is:

Wayne_balcony_before_450px

A touch of color (cobalt blue, squared, tapered planter); a perennial beauty and some verticality (Fortnight Lily (Dietes vegeta); some Purple Fountain Grass (Pennisetum setaceum ‘Rubrum’) to soften things, catch the breeze and tie in the lovely burgundy sofa; a squared terra cotta 3-level fountain for those sounds you can’t ever live without once you’ve had a fountain, and some repetition for a harmonious, no care container meadow effect.

Wayne_balcony_mockup_450px

Shazzam! A cheap, easy, movable planting that requires minimal maintenance at most, and as little water.  Well, now you know what I’d do, if it were me—but it’s not.

The balcony is rendered from memory, and the sofa perspective is off, but you get the idea.  You’ll have to imagine the curtains, pulled back during the day.  Heck, it’s my first Titchmarsh episode.  I don’t know about Mr. Titchmarsh, but I’d be having a lot less fun without Photoshop!

the Balcony

The first in a series I’m going to call, “If it were me, but it isn’t”. Yesterday I visited a friend’s home for the first time, and you know how that goes—on the drive home one inevitably thinks, “Well, if it were me…” In this case, my landscape brain got switched on by the trip to Los Angeles.

In this case, I had a six hour drive home, and my brain can cover a lot of ground in 6 hours! It’s a great location, he’s got nice furnishings, his place is sparse but well appointed, he’s obviously not one who chucks perfectly good, working appliances because retailers tell him he needs the new model… But, if it were me, I’d hang gauze curtains on that balcony and sleep out there all summer!

When I woke up this morning, I realized, that while before I’d always thought, “Gosh, I wish I could render landscapes, in watercolor, the way Alan Titchmarsh does” (on the old Ground Force series), now I can. I exploded out of bed.

wayne-balcony-before-450px

First to render the balcony as it is:

A touch of color (cobalt blue, squared, tapered planter); a perennial beauty and some verticality (Fortnight Lily (Dietes vegeta); some Purple Fountain Grass (Pennisetum setaceum ‘Rubrum’) to soften things, catch the breeze and tie in the lovely burgundy sofa; a squared terra cotta 3-level fountain for those sounds you can’t ever live without once you’ve had a fountain, and some repetition for a harmonious, no care container meadow effect.

wayne-balcony-mockup-450px

Shazzam! A cheap, easy, movable planting that requires minimal maintenance at most, and as little water. Well, now you know what I’d do, if it were me—but it’s not.

The balcony is rendered from memory, and the sofa perspective is off, but you get the idea. You’ll have to imagine the curtains, pulled back during the day. Heck, it’s my first Titchmarsh episode. I don’t know about Mr. Titchmarsh, but I’d be having a lot less fun without Photoshop!

Giving Up the Day Job for Organic Farming: The Dolce Vita Diaries

dolce vita photo

Cathy Rogers and Jason Gibb had successful careers in television production in Los Angeles, with homes both in the U.S. and their native England. Finding themselves restless, they wanted some physical work that would challenge them and produce something of which they could be proud. After some searching around, they decided that moving to Italy and making organic olive oil would be a grand idea. Oh yes, they added a brand new baby into the mix as well.