What to do with all those little leftover chunks of beeswax?
Reading a bunch of Christmas jokes on the net last night, I found these. MANY with this theme.
I thought is it really that bad, is there that many unwanted gifts? But when I think about it I guess I've gotten a few, and probably given out a few too. So even more motivation for me to try to give gifts that will not fall into the 'not really wanted/useful' category. I'm always a bit befuddled trying to come up with actually GOOD gifts to give that will hit a 'bullseye.'
Food is a good one, if you know what kind of treats they like. A nice bird feeder another one if they like to watch the birdies. I like to do homemade as much as I can. My parents have fires outside all the time, and it seemed the leftover beeswax could be a stocking stuffer gift for that, if we do them up a bit. DD and I got busy transforming the leftover beeswax into something, hopefully, useful which is not simply a candle. Homemade, fragrant firestarters.
We dehydrated a clementine last night (plenty of those around), shaved some of the sticks we whittled this summer which were quite dry, emptied a still very fragrant lavender sachet DD sewed in 2019, got some cloves from the cupboard, dismantled a very large pine cone souvenir from a nature walk years ago, some needles shed from our balsam Christmas tree, a red dogwood branch from the front perennial garden and some other dried natural material from outside. We tore a paper egg carton into sections for the base of each firestarter.
DD added a little greenery, some twine and a homemade gift tag. Simple, but this is one present I'm not worried will wind up in a landfill, since I know they can put these to use. Tomorrow we do greenery balls.
And a homemade card to go with. Santa Mouse doing his own DIY Chritmas gift.