Here at mynatour, we don´t normally condone using needles, but when it comes to yarn, KNITTING ROCKS! A whole new generation of fabric lovers are discovering the green beauty of this age old craft. Knitting clubs, forums and stitch n´drink happenings are breaking out all over the place. After all - it´s flippin´ cold right now and you know that the most energy efficient way of keeping warm is to put on those chunky socks, slick ski hat and a comfortable winter sweater. No really, don´t laugh. If you´re new to knitting it might seem like a strange mysterious granny cult, but once you´ve caught the bug you can be proud because you´ve reduced your global impact by consuming less energy than relying on store bought clothing. OK - there are some criminal Christmas sweaters out there, but you can be different.
It´s the last Saturday before Christmas, so we bet you´ll be having quite a social weekend ahead. Get he party started up nicely with some warming mulled wine. There´s no better way to use up those half empty bottles of wine on the sideboard and raid your cupboards for forgotten ingredients. You can customise your mulled wine by adding ouches like apple cider, honey, cinnamon sticks, lemon zest, cloves or ginger. The resulting aromas will fill your house with festive happiness and you are keeping things green by using items that might just have been thrown out. If you´re driving and don´t want to drink, why not take a look the recipe for Negus (the non-alcoholic version invented by the Victorians) All of us at mynatour raise our glasses to you - cheers!
We all know that a bit of Christmas fun is good for your inner Elf! Picture the scene - your very best friends have come around and you´re all together again. Don´t be complacent and just stare into pace. Get your game on! It´s not cheesy. It´s bold, social and a great laugh. Form an impromptu drum club. Raid the kitchen for pots n´ pans, graters, spoons and whisks and create your own original rhythms and basslines. Burn calories and generate natural warmth as well as some
Wrapping the prezzies....it´s one of the last things we get around to before the big 25th. Damn it, we challenge you to use your imaginations and stop buying those endless rolls of BAD, BAD printed paper. Go mad in your house. Run around naked and see what you can find (use a pine branch or two if you´re shy about getting back to nature!) Open those kitchen drawers and dusty closets to uncover a feast of alternatives. Wrap it up by re-using colourful fabrics or remixing old calendars with wallpaper samples and well thumbed road trip maps! Go crazy and customise brown paper with your own cartoon art. It´s more fun, its free and your friends can say you really did something unique for them this Christmas. Get wild!
Feeling that office party hang-over?..Wishing you were slumped at home in bed watching children´s TV and forgetting about last night´s abandon? But, argh no, you have to work and on your way you decide to buy a gigantic plastic bottle of water to comfort you through the desolate hours ahead. Well, as convenient as it may seem buying bottled water, there can be bad side effects. Some of that bottled water you drank was probably just municipal tap water in a bottle. To get factual, in 2007, Americans drank 8.8 billion gallons of bottled water! To manufacture this mammoth total of plastic bottles produced over 2.7 million tons of CO2 - that's equal to six months of emissions from a coal power plant.
All those presents, new toys and new gadgets! Where are the batteries? Ow! Your sister just stood on them after too much mulled wine. Joking aside, we all know how many batteries we can get through at Christmas. Even though they are small, these things pack a powerful punch and can really hurt our planet. Some batteries contain toxic chemicals like mercury, lead, cadmium and nickel which can contaminate the environment when improperly disposed of (when batteries are incinerated, the by product is ash which can go into our air and atmosphere). Also, if the metal rusts, it can release harmful metals into our drinking water. So,instead of gobbling up packet after packet of these bunny-huggers, make the change to rechargable ones instead.
All over the world, families and friends are getting together right now to decorate their homes in time for the holidays. So are you going to do what you do every year and pick up your cheap plastic decorations from large Scandinavian out of town stores or are you going to try something new and different? Yes, take your inspiration from naked nature itself and decorate your home with items like holly, seasonal berries, ivy and evergreen branches. Put on your creative hat and conjure up fantastic decorations that everyone will love with things that will biodegrade like popcorn, dough, cinnamon sticks and gingerbread. Once the festive season is over, you can simply put everything in the composter.
Are you getting Christmas cards at the office yet or did your granny just send you one, nice and early to make sure it got to you? (bless her). The UK can´t get enough of Christmas cards. A staggering 1.7 billion such cards are sent in Britain each year! That´s the equivalent of a giant forest of 200,000 trees. And the tragedy of it all is that millions of these cards end up in the trash once the January sales arrive - admit it - you´ve thrown them out too! Well, once the big feasting and indulgent drinking is over, make sure that your Christmas cards go to a better resting place than a bin. Reincarnate them by taking them to a Woodland Trust recycling point.