recycle

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The first weeks in September brought us a flurry of friends and activity.  Fresh blood on the scene is always welcome  – extra hands, fresh ideas – and an excuse to have a break and some fun…

We had been eagerly awaiting the arrival of Ray, our electrician friend ( sometimes also called Frank  – don’t ask!) who was going to help Steve purchase and install all the right kit to make our power supply safe.

Ray/ Frank

Ray did a brilliant job in a short space of time – he only had 2 days with us and was on a mission to achieve as much as he could.  Bless him, I think he was quite frustrated by Steve’s very Montenegrin approach: chill out, drink another cup of coffee, smoke another cigarette…  With just a few loose ends for Steve to finish, by the time Ray left there was a proper distribution box, everything was fused and safe, there was single cable in place that could be plugged into the genny to operate all the lights and sockets in the shower block and we had power in the workshop for the first time too!

He's electric!

The added bonus was Ray’s friend Shona.  We had never met Shona before & certainly weren’t expecting her to sing for her supper but she mucked in with everything and we warmed to her immediately.

Shona

We wanted to start our wine bottle window.  We’d been collecting bottles and finally had enough to complete one window but the tedious bit was taking all the labels off, cleaning and drying them.  Thankfully Shona was happy to help.  Here she is de-labelling bottles in the garden:

Shona & many green bottles

Once in the garden, we couldn’t get her out of it!  She was so happy pottering around doing all the little things I just didn’t have time for: staking the tomato plants which were laden with fruit and toppling over and also getting a bashing from the wind becuase they weren’t properly supported; dead-heading all the marigolds to keep them flowering; digging over the beds and weeding; transplanting herbs…

Shona in the garden

Jess & Dunc turned up to stay for a week around the same time.  Dunc did his usual trick of saying he was coming to help – “N0, honestly, I’m going  to work this time” blah, blah – and then taking a wee afternoon kip the first day, skiving off on a lads day out and getting us drunk & making us stay up late every night so that we wasted most of the day waking up and drinking coffee!  No, to be fair he did do stuff: he helped Nik dig out, sieve and barrow gravel and soil for the last 2 baths in the greywater system; he helped Jess & Nik move 2 tents down from the top land; he helped shift a load of railways sleepers into a pile and he did a brilliant job of encouraging us, giving us ideas and telling us what to do!  Look, there’s even a picture of Dunc working:

Duncan working

Us girls cracked on with the wine bottle window.  We figured out how to cap the bottles to prevent them filling with dust/ water – we reused the little metal cases left over from burning tea lights, held in place with a little splodge of silicon and when we ran out of those we used metal tops from the beer bottles and 1 litre wine bottles.  Here’s Jess & Shona with a production line going:

Capping the bottles

I laid some tile adhesive on the ledge to provide a smoother base for the first line of bottles to sink into.  It took us a while to learn where to apply the silicon to effectively stick the bottles to each other and keep them straight and level but once we got into the swing of it we got a couple of rows placed quite quickly:

Placing the first bottle in the wine bottle window

Siliconing bottles

Levelling the bottles

All that working made us hungry… we cobbled together some great meals.  Here’s a great picture Jess took of one of our lunches.  There’s grated beetroot & carrot (from our garden), dressed with a little balsamic vinegar & oil; tomato & basil salad (from our garden); rocket salad with fresh chives, coriander & parsley (from our garden – there’s a theme here!) and Shona’s divine cucumber & dill salad (special ingredient is the dressing of organic cider vinegar & sugar) – now immortalised in our Guest Book.

Full-monte meal

It wasn’t all work though… Ray & Shona took us out for a meal on their last night to say thank you for working them every day; making them camp again after 25 years; risking life & limb on ladders wielding drills on a windy night; and putting up with Duncan!  We literally couldn’t remember the last time we had got scrubbed up and gone out for a meal and we had a fabulous evening: melt in your mouth steak & a bottle of wine; a leisurely stroll in the balmy evening air; lemon & chocolate ice cream and great coffee people-watching on the promenade.  It was lovely – we were sad to see them leave…

I have been looking at ways to reuse plastic bags for ages.  They use so many of them in Montenegro, it’s ridiculous.  I’ve also been looking for a way to make a bead curtain out of recycled materials to cover the entrance from the kitchen area into the main shower block – as an additional fly deterrant and to obscure the view directly into the compost loos!  One evening as Jess, Steve and I were discussing these things and coming up with ideas, Jess started to plait strips of plastic bags.  We realised that plaited and weighed down with washers, these plastic bag strips could form a colourful curtain to serve our purposes!  Watch this space for news on whether it actually works!!!

Crafty creatures...

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Yep – it’s true!  We spend a lot of time picking over other people’s leftovers these days!  All in a good cause, as part of our mission to reclaim, reuse and recycle as much as possible (to add to our eco-credentials and let’s face it, to save pennies).  Here’s a typical shot of the van after a day out & about…

Back of the Van!

The 4 tin baths were haggled for from a scrap metal dealer above Kavac (thank you Slobodan for your Srpski & negotiation skills!); the crates and palms were spotted by some bins and salvaged.  The irony of having 4 baths and not one to soak in ourselves is not lost on us (only showers in Topla!) but these baths will form part of our grey water system.

There has been much heated discussion in the B-J household about recycling.  The old man (well, he is nearly 50!) didn’t want me putting out appeals for unwanted stuff because he complained that we would end up with a load of rubbish and nowhere to put it.  As usual, I ignored him (!) and sent an email to local friends and contacts detailing the things that we could make use.  The response has been amazing.  So far we have acquired:

  • a wooden table and chairs
  • cutlery for the campsite
  • crates
  • a whole load of one-off sample tiles of all shapes and sizes (but all GORGEOUS!) from Dave Goulding – some of which are big enough to provide the whole base for one of our showers
  • a bathroom cabinet and shelf unit for the shower block
  • an old wooden cupboard which will be great either as a cupboard for our outdoor kitchen or as a place to store our books and games on the campsite
  • a gate for the stream steps

Best of all we have a stack load of floor and wall tiles from Fiona & Dave Sawney left over from thier development.  That’s a big chunk of the materials for tiling the shower block taken care of!  Here they all are stacked up in our downstairs freezer room (check out the glass bricks, which will make ideal windows for the compost loos!):

Piles of Tiles!

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Fenced off

So, what have we been doing whilst Miso and the boys slog away?  Trying to finish the privacy barrier!  This is the fence that goes on, and on, and on…  But we are nearly there, as you can see.

The privacy barrier, nearly complete

After checking with some of the neighbours we have carried the fence along the bridge that the stream flows under.  Strictly speaking this isn’t our land, but no-one seems to mind and it’s a much better solution for us in terms of privacy screening than having to fence all along the stream boundary.  It has the added benefits of making the area safer for the local kids as there is quite a drop into the stream from that side, and importantly, of discouraging rubbish from being dumped into the stream.

Palm Fence

The picture above shows our progress with the palms.  It is a tedious, time consuming job and our hearts sunk when we counted up how many more palms we will need to screen both sides of all the fence… 600 more palm leaves and 1200 cable ties required!

The recycled gate - a perfect fit!

We now also have a gate across the stream-side steps down to the campsite!  It was salvaged from a disused apartment store in Herceg Novi and is the perfect fit.

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