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Tangledbankblog.wordpress.com

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Tangled Bank Foraging and Fibre Crafts – Learning about and trying to live lightly on this beautiful planet. The natural world, inclusive bushcraft, evidence-based environmentalism and sustainable living.

Learning about and trying to live lightly on this beautiful planet. The natural world, inclusive bushcraft, evidence-based environmentalism and sustainable living.

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Comment on How Greta Thunberg’s Atlantic crossing is accidentally tackling period stigma by A beginners’ bikepacking adventure – Tangled Bank Foraging...

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[…] done a fair bit of long distance hiking, so have a fair bit of experience with packing light and managing menstruation on the trail, experience which you would think would translate well to bikepacking. But somehow I’d […]

22.10.2024 12:26Comment on How Greta Thunberg’s Atlantic crossing is accidentally tackling period stigma by A beginners’ bikepacking adventure – Tangled Bank Foraging...
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Comment on Lightweight plant-based eating outdoors by A beginners’ bikepacking adventure – Tangled Bank Foraging and Fibre Crafts

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[…] I’ve also done a fair bit of long distance hiking, so have a fair bit of experience with packing light and managing menstruation on the trail, experience which you would think would translate well to […]

22.10.2024 12:26Comment on Lightweight plant-based eating outdoors by A beginners’ bikepacking adventure – Tangled Bank Foraging and Fibre Crafts
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Comment on Lying down for a better world by A beginners’ bikepacking adventure – Tangled Bank Foraging and Fibre Crafts

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[…] been a regular cycle commuter in both London and Exeter so am pretty confident on a bike. I’ve also done a fair bit of long distance hiking, so have a […]

22.10.2024 12:26Comment on Lying down for a better world by A beginners’ bikepacking adventure – Tangled Bank Foraging and Fibre Crafts
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A beginners’ bikepacking adventure

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I’ve been a regular cycle commuter in both London and Exeter so am pretty confident on a bike. I’ve also done a fair bit of long distance hiking, so have a fair bit of experience with packing light and managing menstruation on the trail, experience which you would think would translate well to bikepacking. But … Continue reading A beginners’ bikepacking adventure

22.10.2024 12:26A beginners’ bikepacking adventure
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Mixing with the best? – the confusing connection between Fever Tree and the US Republican Convention

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I am a fully paid up member of the tofu-eating wokerati and probably drink more gin and tonic than is entirely reasonable, so was disappointed to see the following shared on Mastodon: I downloaded the image in question for more detail of the logos: I don’t believe it’s much use boycotting a company if you … Continue reading Mixing with the best? – the confusing connection between Fever Tree and the US Republican Convention

19.7.2024 13:28Mixing with the best? – the confusing connection between Fever Tree and the US Republican Convention
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“It’s Not That Radical” – organising for an environmentally just future with Mikaela Loach

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Last night my partner and I went to see Mikaela Loach, climate justice organiser and author of “It’s Not That Radical” in conversation with Kalkidan Legesse at Bookbag, Exeter’s independent bookshop. Forgive me for summarising, I would really urge people to read her own words in her book and on her posts, but much of … Continue reading “It’s Not That Radical” – organising for an environmentally just future with Mikaela Loach

16.7.2024 14:47“It’s Not That Radical” – organising for an environmentally just future with Mikaela Loach
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Comment on Public vs private luxury: why are we so willing to accept that we can’t have nice things? by John Wade

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You connect so many of the things I've been reading about over the last few weeks and in such a readable way. I finished Less is More by Jason Hickel, while it Italy. The British media love to mock Italy, but it has so much bigger, broader commons than we do. Scooter and bike hire schemes seem to thrive. The bus and train networks. Car free city centres at weekends. Free open air film screenings. Large, well staffed libraries. Britain is fast becoming the US with ever more extreme inequality, depleted public services, and an isolated, divided, unhealthy population fed consumerism and selfishness by the organs of the powerful.

15.7.2023 12:54Comment on Public vs private luxury: why are we so willing to accept that we can’t have nice things? by John Wade
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Comment on Grasping at straws by Public vs private luxury: why are we so willing to accept that we can’t have nice things? – Tangled Bank Foraging

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[…] under the strain’”. No one needs a plastic straw to avoid smudging their lipstick, but people with some disabilities need them to drink safely. When most of us are struggling financially, Amazon is cheaper than the local shop in the town […]

14.7.2023 16:39Comment on Grasping at straws by Public vs private luxury: why are we so willing to accept that we can’t have nice things? – Tangled Bank Foraging
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Public vs private luxury: why are we so willing to accept that we can’t have nice things?

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I woke up this morning to the depressing news that CoBikes, Exeter’s bike and electric car hire scheme, had gone into administration and would be ceasing operations. Sadly I can’t say I’m entirely surprised. CoBikes were an absolute lifesaver for me during the pandemic when, thanks a hasty decision to prioritise bringing my plants home … Continue reading Public vs private luxury: why are we so willing to accept that we can’t have nice things?

14.7.2023 16:38Public vs private luxury: why are we so willing to accept that we can’t have nice things?
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Comment on Camping in our common treasury by zooname

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The Salt Path. I've already ordered it!

16.1.2023 14:56Comment on Camping in our common treasury by zooname
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Comment on Camping in our common treasury by Jules Bristow

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In reply to <a href="https://tangledbankblog.wordpress.com/2023/01/13/camping-in-our-common-treasury/comment-page-1/#comment-225">zooname</a>. 😂 Which book? I got "Who owns England" from the Library I'm afraid, but if you mean "The Book of Trespass" I can lend it to you if you want. Anna has my contact details if you want to send your address over

16.1.2023 14:11Comment on Camping in our common treasury by Jules Bristow
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Comment on Camping in our common treasury by zooname

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* post... not pot. Ahem.

16.1.2023 13:47Comment on Camping in our common treasury by zooname
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Comment on Camping in our common treasury by zooname

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Excellent pot Jules! And I think I'll read that book you mentioned early in the blog - sounds right up my street. I used to "wild camp" quite a bit, but since meeting Anna and settling down a bit, I'm afraid I've gone soft and not done it for years and years. Never mind eh? Doug

16.1.2023 13:47Comment on Camping in our common treasury by zooname
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Camping in our common treasury

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You poor take courage You rich take care This earth was made a common treasury For everyone to share Billy Bragg – The World Turned Upside Down It may surprise you to learn this about me, but I frequently do something illegal and thoroughly enjoy doing it. I do it as much as I can, … Continue reading Camping in our common treasury

13.1.2023 16:22Camping in our common treasury
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The future is federated: my first week (back) on Mastodon

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Mastodon is a federated social network - unlike Twitter or Facebook say, which is run by one company, it's easiest to think of Mastodon as a tool like email. There are a number of different servers or "instances" where your data (your account details, the contents of your posts, the timestamps of your activity, the cute picture you took of your cat fighting your slippers) are stored, there are a number of different apps or clients you can use to access these data the same way you could access the same email account through Apple mail on your iPhone or Outlook on your work PC or Gmail on an Android phone, and Mastodon is the set of instructions that allows them all to talk to one another.

24.11.2022 17:31The future is federated: my first week (back) on Mastodon
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Comment on Economy gastronomy? Hay boxes, Wonderbags and insulation cookery by Spare the squash: tips for a sustainable spooky season – Tangled Bank

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[…] the average household. And then eat your excavations! My go-to recipe (which works very well in the Haybox) is squash soup: fry a large white onion and garlic to taste up with some tikka curry paste, add a […]

14.10.2022 18:52Comment on Economy gastronomy? Hay boxes, Wonderbags and insulation cookery by Spare the squash: tips for a sustainable spooky season – Tangled Bank
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Spare the squash: tips for a sustainable spooky season

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Who wants to hear a scary Halloween story? According to Hubbub 39.9 million pumpkins are bought in UK at Halloween, and 22.2 million of these, worth £32.6 million, end up thrown away uneaten. Apparently an astonishing 41% of the population don’t even know that they’re edible, although that’s at least a slight improvement on 2014’s … Continue reading Spare the squash: tips for a sustainable spooky season

14.10.2022 18:52Spare the squash: tips for a sustainable spooky season
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Economy gastronomy? Hay boxes, Wonderbags and insulation cookery

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Several years I met a rather wonderful hippie elder, who told me that she used to make yoghurt in bed in the seventies; if you heated the milk in the morning and put it under the duvet it would stay warm and fermenting all day and by evening you would not only have homemade yoghurt … Continue reading Economy gastronomy? Hay boxes, Wonderbags and insulation cookery

28.9.2022 13:55Economy gastronomy? Hay boxes, Wonderbags and insulation cookery
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Shrinking your festival footprint

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This past weekend saw the first Glastonbury festival post pandemic. Now that the stages are silent, the cows have returned, the revellers are home and the more organised among them may even have made their way through the horror that is post-festival laundry. And as always, after the party comes the cleanup. Glastonbury employs a … Continue reading Shrinking your festival footprint

3.7.2022 13:56Shrinking your festival footprint
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Lightweight plant-based eating outdoors

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My bushcraft, hiking and other outdoor activities have always been motivated by a love of the natural world and a desire to spend more time learning to understand and appreciate it. To me the other side of this equation is a responsibility to try to minimise the damage I cause to the living world I … Continue reading Lightweight plant-based eating outdoors

23.6.2022 17:00Lightweight plant-based eating outdoors
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