I just helped my neighbor replace his front lawn with low-growing roman chamomile and lavender. I’m hoping to rig up a little solar powered water feature using secondhand parts soon.
I have getting ready to replace the holes in the solitary bee house I set up at my parents’ place:
I've been cutting 6" sticks from storm damaged tree limbs, and drilling the various-size holes (I've got a set of 8" metric drill bits that get the full-length they need (some folk just use cardboard tubes or reeds, but this works fine for me. It's important to replace the sticks every year after they emerge so we don’t propagate diseases or parasites in the solitary bees.
Once I find a couple 6"x1" oak boards (maybe when someone throws out a bed?) I’ll be able to cut the arching back pieces for a wood and cast iron park bench I'm trying to fix up. I need to take a wire wheel to the rusty metal parts, then paint it and fabricate the wooden parts of the back (I already have the slats for the seat but they do need to be sanded, stained, urethaned, and attached). Then I can put it out near our local bike path.
Need to put a new tire and tube on my front bike wheel.
One of my hobbies is fixing up ewaste laptops and giving them to an organization in my city that rehomes refugees. I actually do ewaste in general, mostly through our local Buy Nothing groups, (everything from HDMI adapters to space heaters) but the modern-ish laptops go to the charity. I was able to get three laptops ready to go recently, and I'll be looking for more to work on for folks in my community next.
The Lenovo and MacBook Air came from a friend at the recycling center - he's allowed to set computers aside for donation if he catches the people dropping them off and gets permission, otherwise they get sent away for secure destruction. He also gets me laptop chargers sometimes too, which saves a ton of money. The one in the middle I found in corporate ewaste (I got permission to dig through on occasion). Everything's been tested and wiped and updated as far as it'll go. This set was easy, they were all intact, so I didn't have to get any replacement parts.
I’m also working on a set of photobashes, styled like postcards from a solarpunk future, that I'm hoping will help push the visual aspect of solarpunk art more towards the rest of the movement. I want people to see solarpunk art and think, "why aren't we doing that?" or “could that work?” I think it should depict a more lived-in, human future and demonstrate possibilities, technologies, and alternative ways of doing things. I'm also trying to cover seasons, locations, and topics like industry that I haven't seen in other solarpunk art to sway people's first impressions from thinking it's an empty aesthetic. I try to advocate for values like reuse I think fit the movement but are underrepresented in the visual artwork.