Category Archives: Multimedia

Content Creation: RVC – DIY – Bath Soak

Himalayan Oatmeal Bath Soak

05/08/2020

Oatmeal baths have a strong and well-known reputation for their restorative qualities. They can balance and moisturize skin, calm inflammation, relieve itchiness and restore pH. Oatmeal soaks can even soothe common irritations such as sunburn, eczema, bug bites and rashes. 

This type of soak can relieve aches and pains, improve sleep and circulation, relieve water retention and calm inflammation of the skin and body. It works its magic by restoring pH levels, drawing out impurities and delivering much-needed minerals to the body.  

Ingredients

1/2 cup Organic Oatmeal

1/2 cup Himalayan Salt

1/2 cup dried herbs  

Optional: Your choice of skin-friendly essential oils and only about 10 drops diluted in a carrier oil.

Add ¼ – ½ cup of your bath soak into the bath to use. 

Measure out ingredients

Put all in a bowl and mix.

Pour into a blender

Blend until it’s fine and smooth

Store in a mason jar until ready to use.

Adapted from: https://jenniraincloud.com/himalayan-oatmeal-bath-soak/ Please note that this project’s health benefits have not been evaluated by the FDA and it is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease.

Content Creation: RVC – DIY – Bubbles

Looking for ways to have fun with your kids this coming weekend? Take some time to relax and enjoy the outdoors with DIY bubbles! You can make your own bubbles using everyday household items, and with surprisingly little effort. In addition to the solution below, we have provided two ways to make a bubble wand with common craft supplies. Make a fun, creative one using pipe cleaners and pony beads or a simple one with jewelry wire—either way works

You’ll Need

1 part liquid hand soap

1 part water

⅓ cornstarch

1 teaspoon baking powder

Step 1: Find a bowl, jar or container you can use to store your solution. A mason jar works great for this since you can easily seal away any leftover solution for another occasion.

Step 2: After gathering your ingredients, start by adding one cup of water.

Step 3: Pour an equal portion (one cup) of liquid hand soap into the water.

Step 4: Measure out ⅓ cup of cornstarch and combine it with the water and soap. This will help add strength and durability to your bubbles—making them more stable so they don’t burst as easily!

Step 5: Next, add one teaspoon of baking powder to your solution. The baking powder acts as a reactant, much like it does in regular baking. Combining the dry acid and base into a solution will cause a reaction producing carbon dioxide bubbles. Single-acting baking powder produces all of its bubbles when it gets wet. 

Step 6: Stir gently to avoid forming bubbles in your solution, until the ingredients are dissolved. The end result may look different for everyone depending on the type of soap you use, but this does not affect the quality of the bubbles themselves!

Making the Bubble Wand!

Making a bubble wand is super simple and easy to do, take some jewelry wire, two pipe cleaners and 6 smaller pony beads and 3 larger ones in the colors of your choice.


Step 1: Unspool some jewelry wire and cut it to your desired length. Then fold that length in have by making a loop.

Step 2: Take two pipe cleaners in the colors of your choice and attach them to the base of the loop, then wrap one around the base to securely fashion it. Repeat this with the second pipe cleaner for the other side. By this point, you should have two pipe cleaners on either side of the wire base. 

Step 3: Start feeding your beads onto the wire base and begin with the smaller pony bead. The beads should alternate between small – large – small with a twist of the pipe cleaners at the end. Repeat this until the wire base is completely covered.

We hope this DIY will bring you closer to your loved ones this summer and inspires you to make similar projects! For more activities and backyard family fun, click here.

Content Creation: RVC – Bee Awareness

THE IMPORTANCE OF POLLINATORS

by Claudia Broman from Stronger Together

A simple lunchtime meal could look drastically different without bees. We can thank these pollinators for about one out of every three bites of food we eat, including many of our favorite fruits like blueberries, peaches, blackberries, grapefruit, raspberries, oranges, pears and plums.

As pollinators, bees flitting around apple orchards and cranberry bogs move pollen from the male parts of trees and plants to the female parts. This shift of pollen allows the flowers to produce fruit. Many crops, like almonds, avocados, cucumbers and even onions, wouldn’t produce much, if anything, without the help of bees. In the U.S. alone, bee pollinators annually contribute to about $20 billion of products people use every day. Recent scientific studies show that bee pollination is directly connected to human health.

People need to consume a variety of nutrients to stay healthy. Globally, the crops that provide these nutrients vary widely from place to place, with developing regions of the world being more dependent on particular fruits and vegetables than others. 

Were these crops to fail on account of a decline in pollinators, it could result in a global malnutrition problem.

Unfortunately, researchers have seen declines in the success of wild and commercial bee colonies over the past 50 years. This drop in bee numbers in the U.S. is attributed in part to an increase in private and commercial pesticide use. Other conditions contributing to the struggling numbers are habitat loss due to development, monoculture agriculture (growing just one crop, like corn, year after year), animal grazing and the introduction of non-native insect species. Cumulatively these conditions have crop farmers concerned about whether there will be enough honeybees to pollinate their fields, and beekeepers concerned about collapsing honeybee colonies.

Despite the challenges honeybees are facing, there is hope. Scientists confirm that the diverse ecosystems found on organic farms provide friendly places for bees to nest and roam. Organic farmers often grow more than one type of crop which provides bees with a varied and nutritious diet, and they don’t use the types of synthetic pesticides that have been connected with bee population declines. Organic farms are helping the bees that eaters rely upon for meals every day, whether a person chooses to eat organic food or not.

Reposted with permission from www.strongertogether.coop

POLLINATORS ARE THE FUTURE OF FOOD

If pollinators disappeared from the planet, even beef and dairy products would be scarce, because pollinators are vital to crops that feed cattle and other grazing animals. From apples and almonds to strawberries and tomatoes, many of our most beloved foods depend on pollinators. There’s a link below that will show you the number of flowers and foods that will be scarce without bees. 

MEET THE BEE’S FRIENDS

Other types of pollinators work alongside bees, helping to maintain the diversity of plant life and playing crucial roles in our ecosystem. Meet some of the honey bee’s fascinating friends – bumblebee, monarch butterfly, hawk moth, firefly and hummingbird. Honey bees pollinate more than 100 types of crops in the US – but they can’t do it alone. 

A FEW WORDS ABOUT ALMONDS

Farming monoculture, in which land is devoted solely to one crop (e.g., almonds), makes it hard for pollinators to find year-round food and means that almonds and other crops are increasingly dependent on commercial bees that are trucked from one crop to another. Almonds are dependent on honey bees and other pollinators to bear fruit.

HOW YOU CAN HELP

Beekeeping

Reach out to Ben Warren in Customer Service at the co-op who has a history of beekeeping! He has agreed to provide his work email and a bit about his background as a resource for our cooperative community to learn more about beekeeping and how you can start your own bee journey. If you have any questions please reach out to Ben here: bwarren@rivervalley.coop

I have been beekeeping for less than a year. Unlike most businesses, and perhaps a select group of homeowners with the same hobby or profession, I did not have the space to keep my bees on my property. I spent weeks scouting a home to set up my hive and eventually found a quiet spot in the woods.
Now the woods are not the ideal placement for a hive: the sun takes longer to wake up the bees and there is a greater chance of animals trying to weasel into the honeycomb. BUT so far I have not had any issues with my hive and it’s a very beautiful space among the trees.

For the first few weeks, I had one box for brood, a special frame to hold simple syrup while the flowers were still blooming, and a foundation to keep the hive elevated off the ground. As the summer progressed I added another hive body (for hive growth), removed the special frame and then added a honey super: the box you collect honey from. I acquired ratchet straps to lock the boxes together just in case something tries to snag a taste of honey (I’m lookin’ at you, Ursula). 
I didn’t harvest any honey this year, I probably could have but a hive needs around 70 pounds of honey to support themselves over the winter. Collecting honey will be a special treat next year, but I just want them to be happy and healthy.

Buying Local

Buying local honey products not only increases demand for our local honey companies which help these businesses as there is no middleman at the co-op but supporting local hives keeps them sustained and in turn helps out the bee population.

Make Your Own Bee Hotel

Mason Bees in particular appreciate dry housing within their habitats to help them survive harsh climates. There are really nice bee hotels made of wood and other materials, however you can use the DIY article below to make your own out of bamboo and an aluminum can. If you don’t have bamboo, you can easily use rolled up pieces of paper glued together to get the same effect!

Share Information

But be careful of false information, it’s always helpful to spread information to your friends, family and co-workers, however make sure it’s accurate! We have provided social media graphics and a cheat-sheet consolidating this post into one document. 

SUPPLIER PARTNERS FOR POLLINATORS

Red Barn Honey Company

43 Fort Hill Terrace

Northampton, MA 01060

North Hadley Sugar Shack

181 River Drive

Hadley, MA 01035

Resources

1) DIY Mason Bee Hotel: https://www.naturalbeachliving.com/mason-bee-habitat/ 

2) Pollination Information: https://thehoneybeeconservancy.org/pollinators/

3) List of Pollinated Food: https://www.pollinator.org/list-of-pollinated-food



Social Media Graphics

 

Download the Cheat-Sheet Below