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Eco Friendly Renting?!

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

When we decided to rent I did have my concerns regarding how healthy and environmentally friendly the home we rented would be!

Our choice of properties turned out to be limited to one in Dawlish, a four bedroom family home laid out for very family friendly living but very un environmentally friendly and we soon discovered it had more than its fair share of maintainance problems.

With the more serious maintainence issue ( like the leaks and electrics) sorted, we set out to improve our new homes environmental credentials:-

  • We got our OWL electrical energy uses monitor up and working - thank goodness for our own  A+ rated white goods
  • Fitted low energy bulbs through out, we even found some energy saving bulbs for the old fashioned large spot lights
  • Created a compost heap for garden waste and made good use of it  – the garden was very wild and full of wildlife which we continued to encourage
  • We gardened organically
  • Made very good use of Teignbridge Council’s door step recycling service for a wide range of waste and recycled other things locally art the recycling centres and charity shops
  • Used the wonderful large south facing windows for solar gain, solar battery charging and solio charging
  • As soon as the weather warmed up a bit we planted courgettes, tomatoes and squash seeds from Tamar Organics to complement the herbs we had brought with us
  • We used public transport for work, lesiure and shopping – mainly the train but sometimes bus
  • And as the house ate gas and was freezing due to many large north facing windows and had no insulation in the loft, we investigated free insulation through the Cosy Devon scheme

By now though alarm bells had started ringing very loud as the rental company refused to maintain the property or were very slow sorting out safety issues, they didn’t take up the free insulation and then we discovered they had been lying to us!!!

We did really enjoy the garden and all the wildlife, Dawlish beach, seeing the water foul and their young on on Dawlish water and exploring various locations along the coastal path though, as well as getting together with our new home education friends.

So we had to find a new home to rent very quickly and again there was a total lack of choice, but eventually found one in Livermead, Torquay.

And this house is lovely, a little smaller but with wonderful views towards Torquay and Berryhead and its own environmental features and challenges.

  • A great family area which is south west facing, so gets lots of sunshine and had good thermal mass (and only a couple of very small north facing windows thank goodness!)
  • An Aga – so we are learning to cook in a new way and making lots of lifestyle changes to make the most of the stored heat and enjoying it
  • The house has mainly modern spot lights, so we’ll be looking at energy saving options for these
  • The house has its own white goods and we’re not sure about the ratings – so we’ll be watching our OWL electrical energy uses monitor carefully
  • We have three water butts which will be great for watering the garden when needed – the rain has been fairly torrential recently though!
  • We’re making good use of Torbay Council’s door step recycling, which is undergoing massive changes and improvements – with weekly collections of waste for recycling and using the local charity shops
  • We’ll be getting a compost bin (one thats easy to rotate), gardening organically and looking at ways to make the garden more wildlife friendly without changing its character.
  • And we’ve got Cockington on our doorstep – for wonderful woodland walks, great events through the Torbay Coast and Countryside Trust and so much more, as well as Occombe Organic farm just a short bus ride away
  • And again we’ll be using public transport for work, shopping and lesiure – probably more buses this time as they provide access to more local locations

So plenty to keep us busy, lots more coast line to explore and we live even closer to some of our Devon home education friends :)

Update August 2008 to March 2010!

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

I didn’t realise it was so long since I’d last blogged, how time has flown!!!

View from the beach near our house

So here’s what we’ve been up to:-

Autumn/Winter 2008 – In preparation for selling our house in West Yorkshire we redecorated our home throughout, but decided due to the economic downturn and a scare with Paul’s health, that it wasn’t the best time to sell, so we focused on enjoying family life.

Spring 2009 – As we weren’t selling our house we decided to fulfil our dream of backpacking around Switzerland in the Summer and spent lots of time organising light weight camping equipment and planning/booking everything – trains, camp sites and places we wanted to visit and so on.

Summer 2009 – Switzerland!

We travelled by train from West Yorkshire through Paris to Geneva and stayed in Rolle on Lake Geneva, Vitznau on Lake Luzern and Lauterbrunnen in the Bernese Oberland. We had Swiss rail passes and travelled around Switzerland for nearly three weeks – it was a wonderful holiday.

Autumn/Winter 2009 – We put the final touches to our home, put it up for sale and planned our move to Devon. We already knew we wanted to move to the South West because we’d visited it a lot over the last two to three years. We loved Bristol and Bath and Paul loved the South Dorset coast. When we researched some more around Exeter/Plymouth seemed to be the best place for us in so many ways – Universities and Colleges for Paul to work at, wonderful beaches, lots of local food, organic and ethical shops, green events and an active home education network.

So Paul applied for a job at a University and got it. We sold our house just before Yule, a wonderful present! And we planned a trip to Devon the second weekend of January to find a house to rent – everything fell into place perfectly!

Winter/Spring 2010 – Probably during the most stressful long weekend of my life we found a house to rent in Dawlish. Not our first location choice as we’d been put off by negative stuff on the internet and local rental companies not been positive about Dawlish. Thank goodness they were all wrong, Dawlish is lovely – a small friendly seaside town with a wonderful coastline.

So we moved into our rented home on the 1st February – we’ve been here nearly two months now!

The first week was very hard – our rental property had not been cared for to say the least and we had lots of leaks and had to get some major basic stuff sorted out and the person we had to deal with at the rental company was not supportive or polite!

Anyway all that is behind us now thank goodness, there’s still some stuff to sort out, but we’ve settled in. We love the extra space, the amazing garden, the sunshine and living ten minutes walk from the beach. We have met so many lovely friendly people, we are enjoying exploring Devon, Paul likes his new job too and we are getting together with other home educators too.

Now we’re waiting for my (Sarah’s) Mum to sell her house and join us down here, then we’ll be looking for land to build our eco house on.

And now we’re going to update and improvements our Natural Earth Living website too.

Holidays by train made easy!

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

In a recent email from Friends of the Earth I discovered Seat61
This is the most exciting website I have found in years all about travelling by train and ship.

I love travelling and holidays and this website is a wealth of information on train travel all around the world – it’s amazing at a first glance.

We’ll definitely be using it to plan a family holiday to Switzerland :)

Glastonbury!?!

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

Last night I got back from a long week end in Glastonbury – totally exhausted due to the heat and climbing up the Tor so many times!

The Tor is beautiful,

Glastonbury Tor from the town

so are the views from the Tor,

A view from Glastonbury Tor

and the wooded areas around the base and all the wild life – the bird song was nearly deafening as I watched the sun set on Saturday night.

Sunset in Glastonbury from the Tor

Glastonbury it’s self was a massive surprise and takes a lot of getting used to.
I had this (strange maybe) expectation that it would be quite sacred, a play of pilgrimage, including for us Goddess minded – well it was and it’s wasn’t.

There’s such a mish-mash of architecture, spiritual traditions and peculiar energies (some good, others not) and – in a traditional market town! and it changes from day to day depending on the persuasion of the incoming visitors and what’s on it seems.
People were friendly and there seemed to be a strong sense of community between local people too. From an estate agents window people there definitely had a sense of humour too – for example photo’s of people pulling funny faces between photo’s of the front of houses and kitchens etc!

I personally found the strong Christian vibe, with little lip serve to the ancient traditions/association in the attractions a bit difficult at first and still disappointing – maybe I missed some of them?

But by grounding myself very deeply – thank you William Bloom (see my next post for William’s Sword and Chalice course I attended over the weekend) and been very selective with the energies I allowed myself to experience/connect to, I came away having really enjoyed the place and wanting to go back soon – especially for the Tor, beautiful trees and countryside and the specialist book and Goddess type shops.

It’s a place that opens up to you on many levels, as you search deeper and really open you eyes and heart.

The journey was quite long: Steeton and Silsden to Leeds and Leeds to Bristol by train (aprrox 4.5hrs), then Bristol to Glastonbury by bus (1.25hrs), but with advance tickets the train was only £16 for a single and the bus was £5.20 for a single ticket.

I stayed at a B&B called Hillside – wonderful hosts, an amazing breakfast (fresh fruit salad to start!), great garden and views, lovely rooms and just a couple if minutes walk from the tour (approx 20min walk to Glastonbury centre although I never timed it).

The first place I visited was Chalice Well Peace Gardens and maybe it’s because I’d just arrived, but I couldn’t settle there. The gardens were lovely and quite naturally planted which I like, with lots of birds singing and flying around and the shop was quite good too. Maybe it needs another visit?

Chalice Well Garden

Chalice Well Garden

And the shops – were quite something else – the usual market town shops, Woolworths, Morrisons, some spiritual/ethnic type shops, amazing crystal shops, (the Glastonbury Experience is good), pagan/witchcraft/Goddess shops (including The Goddess and The Greenman which I love), lots of very good alternative bookshops, a couple of eco/organic shops, a nice toy shop……….unfortunately quite a lot of the stuff was overprices though (even people who live in the south of England said so too).

I went to two very nice vegetarian cafés/Restaurants – Galatea and The Rainbows End Café and they seemed quite family friendly too.
Finally I visited the Abbey
It’s seemed very strange to me that Glastonbury Abbey and it’s grounds takes up an enormous chunk of the centre of Glastonbury that can not be freely used – £5 for an adult!
I didn’t really look at the exhibition – far too Christian for me and just looked at the ruins a little – where King Arthur and his Queen Guinevere were buried – and mainly enjoyed the beautiful park, trees and small lakes as it was very hot and sunny.

Glastonbury Abbey

I also didn’t get to the Rural Life Museum (which is free) due to been too busy, but locals recommended it.

Rural Life Museum in Glastonbury

So a very interesting an enjoyable weekend!

And more photo’s coming soon on future posts.

 


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