Tuesday, 22 August 2017

How to Make your own Lavender Perfume With or without Alcohol

Courtesy - Mollysims

Procedure for preparation of your own Lavender perfume
---------------------------------------------------------------------
* 1 glass spray bottle, 4 oz

* Mostly 3.5 oz of vodka is used as a carrier oil. If you don't
prefer alcohol in your perfume, You can also use jojoba or grapeseed
oil!)

* 15 drops lavender essential oil

* 5 drops lemon essential oil

* 30 drops vanilla essential oil

Directions for use
--------------------------
* Combine all ingredients and shake before use!

* No need to say, enjoy the pleasant smell..!

A way to make natural soap

Courtesy - Yashodhara robin (fb)
Material
Multani Mitti - 2.5 kg
Swarna Geru powder - 400 gm
Bhimseni Kapoor - 70 gm
Ajwain Satva - 40 gm
Sesame Oil - 400 gm
Turmeric powder - 1 Teaspoon
Neem leaves - 1 kg
Aloe Vera - 8 big stems
Reetha - 250 gm (powder)

Other things which we can use lemon peels, orange peels, Lemon grass etc.

Procedure
Take 3 liter water and add neem leaves, orange-lemon peels/ powder,
lemon grass. Boil it to almost 1 liter liquid. Keep this extract of
Neem, Orange ready.

Take Bhimseni Kapoor and Ajwain Satv separately. Try to make fine
powder of it and then mix it together. It will form liquid. Ensure
that no lumps remain.

Take a container, add multani mitti, swarna geru powder, reetha
powder, turmeric powder and mix it with hands.
Add liquid formed by mixing Bhimseni Kappr and Ajwain Satva to it. Mix
it with the powder. Also add Sesame Oil and mix it with powder. Break
the lumps with hands and ensure that oil gets mixed thoroughly. Then
add the Neem-Lemon-Orange Extract in appropriate proportion and mix it
right consistency like we make jawar roti or bhakari.

Use your hands and creativity to give different shapes of your liking
to the soaps. Avoid cracks while transforming them into different
shapes. Dry the soaps in the shadow before you start using them.

Saturday, 12 August 2017

A small setup to save Rain water from rooftops

courtesy - seithipunal

The setup for the Rain water harvesting in one of my Friend's house
which costed 18,000 rs. It saved 15000 ltrs from 1 hour of Raining
Yesterday. (11/8/2017) evening 7 pm

It is said that the Geographical area is not suitable to build a dam
in tamilnadu and atleast I request government to bring awareness to
use this type of technologies for Rain water harvesting.

Not only bringing awareness about it, but also need to go an extra
step like install this type of technologies in Government schools,
colleges, Municipality offices, collector office, Revenue department,
Government Hospitals etc... Before telling to people the government
need to act to install this type of setups in all government premises.
This will bring volunteers to come forward and do their bit in their
premises.

Government should stop wasting funds in unnecessary projects, plans,
schemes etc.... though to invest in this type of Ecofriendly projects.
We need to keep in mind that "This earth is home for our future
generations" So we need to protect and give a space for our future
generations.

Any complaints write to-
abcdfarming@gmail.com

Tuesday, 8 August 2017

Few Ideas on Bamboo buildings and bamboo houses

Courtesy - Google Image search results and all the Bamboo house websites and Bamboo Architects Bamboo roof plan, Bamboo walls, bamboo houses, bamboo doors, etc..

Biome Environmental Solutions - Eco Friendly architects in Bangalore

courtesy - Biome

Biome Environmental Solutions is a Bangalore-based design firm focused
on ecology, architecture and water. The office's diverse team
includes designers, architects, civil and mechanical engineers and
urban planners from various parts of India and abroad. The designs
are undertaken by various member of this team in constant
collaboration with each other via group discussions & exchanges and
periodic meetings.

Historic

Created by the 2008 merger of Chitra K. Vishwanath Architects and
Rainwater Club. Both organizations have operated since 1990 and bring
their distinct talents to the new firm:

Chitra Viswhanath Architects

Has designed and implemented hundreds of real estate developments –
residences, institutions and resorts – guided by ecological
principles, integrating sound water, energy and land-use thinking into
design

Rain Water Club

Has extensive expertise in providing knowledge services in water
management and rainwater harvesting, ecological wastewater treatment
and sanitation practices
Biome's unique capability lies in thinking through the key ecological
and social issues in each project. We have extensive working
relationships with specialized knowledge experts in bio-diversity,
tourism, hydrogeology, and material science, whose contributions we
synthesize into a coherent design strategy and plan of action.

Design is a highly personal process, and we place great emphasis on
client interactions to ensure the final project incorporates the
vision of sustainability with the client's aspirations for aesthetics,
functionality, and budget. The ecologically and socially sensitive
nature of our work, along with our commitment to spreading sustainable
living practices far and wide, has led to our involvement in many
nonprofit projects to benefit the natural environment and
disadvantaged populations. We have established the Biome Environmental
Trust to facilitate our continued efforts in these activities.

What we do

Biome's service offerings range from architectural and rainwater
harvesting design to environmental planning consultancy and
comprehensive water strategising. We place great emphasis on
developing strong communication channels and particularly face-to-face
interaction with each of our clients, which enable us to tune in to
the client's needs and constraints

For more details - http://www.biome-solutions.com


Sunday, 6 August 2017

Indian startup Avant Garde invents low cost wind turbine to power up elctrical appliances.

Courtesy - Ecoideaz

Indian startup Avant Garde Innovations has developed a low-cost wind
turbine that can generate 3-5 kW hours of electricity daily

Soon after assuming office, Kerala (southern state of India) Chief
Minister Pinarayi Vijayan kicked up a storm by publicly supporting the
Athirappilly hydro electric project, which environmentalists said, if
implemented, would create ecologic imbalance in the area and destroy
the Athirappilly waterfalls, the largest natural waterfalls in the
state.

It is not that the government is oblivious to the impact that the
project could make, but it says it has no option but to leverage
existing means to check the growing power crisis in Kerala, which
partially depends on the private sector for electricity.

Things are no different in other states either. While Kerala has
attained almost 100 per cent electrical coverage, many parts of India
still remain in the dark. For a large portion of the Indian
population, electricity to this day remains a distant dream.

Enter two siblings who want to make India's energy crisis a thing of
the past. The duo has developed a new solution they say will not even
slightly impact the ecological balance.

Avant Garde Innovations, the startup founded by siblings Arun and
Anoop George from Kerala, has come up with a low-cost wind turbine
that can generate enough electricity to power an entire house for a
lifetime. The size of a ceiling fan, this wind turbine can generate 5
kWh/kW per day — with just a one-time cost of US$750.

"Our goal is to eliminate energy poverty, reduce dependence on
struggling state power grids and create energy self sufficiency for
all the needy ones through distributed, localised and affordable
renewable energy. In doing so, we believe we can collectively usher in
our world a cleaner environment, new economic prosperity and social
change," reads the company 'What We Do' statement.

"Our first offering is a highly affordable small wind turbine suitable
for residential, commercial, agricultural, village electrification and
other uses, which is aimed for a market launch during 2016."

Incorporated in 2015, Avant Garde claims to be a startup with a
'green' heart and soul.
For the startup, opportunity is massive. India is the world's sixth
largest energy consumer, accounting for 3.4 per cent of global energy
consumption. Federal governments in India, and the central government
for that matter, are unable to bear the huge infrastructural cost
required to bring electricity to remote villages.

Erecting electric posts and electric lines require huge investments
that could cost millions of dollars.

This is where Avant Garde comes into picture. "When small wind turbine
generating 1kW energy costs INR 3-7 lakh (US$4,000-10,000), our
company plans to sell it at less than NR 50,000 (about US$750). Costs
will decrease further through mass production," Arun said in an
interview to The Times of India.

The company launched its pilot project at a church in the capital city
of Thiruvananthapuram in January this year. The small wind turbine
prototype that it has developed is highly scalable for power
capacities of 300 kW or even higher, Arun told.

"Our passionate aim is to introduce innovative, affordable and
sustainable solutions that take renewable energy self sufficiency and
energy empowerment to the next level through a distributed and
decentralised approach using pioneering strategies the world has not
witnessed yet," the company says.

This revolutionary product has also won them a spot in the Top 20
Cleantech Innovations in India. The company has also made it to the
list of 10 clean energy companies from India for the "UN Sustainable
Energy For All" initiative under the one billion dollar clean energy
investment opportunity directory.

According to the Global Wind Energy Council, the country ranks 4th in
terms of global installed wind power capacity, after China, the US,
and Germany.

Maybe, if Avant Garde Innovations takes off, Kerala can keep the
Athirappilly waterfalls untouched.