I wrote about the fabulous Lympha brand of eco-friendly, fair trade cleaning products here, however more recently while researching the post on local independent shops selling ethical products I discovered that my most local of locals actually stocks a different brand – ‘Sonett’.

Sonnett are a Germany-based brand. They don’t have their own distribution network so they work with local partners. In Spain they have an on-line partner Bio-Bio, although there is no list of retail stockists – you just have to check out what your local shop sells, and ask them about it. In the UK they work with Greenfibres, a West Country UK-based company that otherwise sells a range of fabrics and fabric-based products using organic and fair-trade textiles.

The Sonett range is really broad, with laundry detergents, household cleaning products, soaps and even dishwasher detergents. Their approach is ‘modular’ in that you buy laundry-detergent, softener and whitening agents separately – this allows you to combine doses at the amounts you need rather than the quantities put together by the manufacturer. A clever idea if you don’t mind taking the 10 seconds extra to consult the recommended dosage chart and add your ingredients accordingly!

Sonett laundry detergent on it’s own has worked for me so far on mixed, lightly soiled laundry. It is runny not gloopy, so be careful when pouring. It has a faint herby smell…rosemary or lavender or something; they also do an entire ’neutral’, scent-free range which I intend to try out on Dr DTS. I’m also planning to experiment with the whitening agents later this week, on some of my white clothes that are distinctly yellow-stained through a mixture of dirt, suncream and sweat. Gotta love those Barcelona summers!

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One of the things I knew would be tricky when avoiding supermarkets is buying cleaning products. I know I could just go to a local ‘corner shop’ and pay a bit more for the same brands I would get in the supermarket, but somehow that feels like cheating – not really in the spirit of what I’m trying to achieve – particularly the bit about trying to buy organic and fair trade where possible.

Fortunately the lovely people at the Xarxa Consum Solidari / Red Consumo Solidario came to my rescue. The Xarxa/Red is a network of organisations supporting fair trading practices and responsible consumption – they source locally where possible (the fruit juice and veggies might be from down the road, but the coffee and rum may have travelled a bit) and all products are fair trade or have a fair trade element as well as being organic where relevant. Transparency is a big deal with them, and on their site you can download a dossier on each product detailing all the cost elements including transport, packaging, the margin taken by the shop etc.

Xarxa Consum Solidari have a number of shops in Barcelona and you can find out more about them here

The Xarxa Consum Solidari shop on Pl. Sant Agusti Vell

Anyway, the point is that they stock the Lympha range of products which comprises laundry detergent, washing-up (dishes) liquid, spray cleaner for surfaces, floor cleaner and liquid hand soap.

Lympha is the result of a collaboration between an Italian Fair Trade collective (Mondo Solidale) and a Brazilian NGO Assema (site in Portuguese). Assema works with small local producers to provide an alternative to the huge industrial palm oil factory-farms which are contributing massively to deforestation, and fights for the rights of the indigenous coco palm nut pickers. You can find out more about this issue here and here

As well as the natural surfactants produced from this organic, fairly traded coco palm oil, the other ingredients in all Lympha products are fair trade and organic where possible; for example the essential oils used as antiseptics and scents are supplied by an NGO in Southern India ‘Sipa’.

On both the Lympha website and the packaging of the products there is not only a list of ingredients but a description of what each ingredient is, what it does, why it is included, how it biodegrades and how it was sourced; something I find fascinating if only because it simply never crossed my mind to ask the question before.

So far I have tested the laundry detergent and the washing-up liquid:

The washing-up liquid is very gently lemon-scented and quite runny even though it is supposedly a concentrate. Already I prefer it to the neon green, gloopy, chemically smelling stuff that comes from the supermarket and it seems to be doing the job.

The laundry detergent is *very* concentrate. Because they recommend around 80ml for an average wash – about half the amount of the previous liquid I was using – I was a bit suspicious that it wouldn’t be enough. The liquid is very mildly scented with lavender which I don’t find too offensive. Even better, when the laundry emerges from the machine it doesn’t smell of some marketing focus-group’s idea of clean laundry mixed up in a test-tube somewhere outside Dusseldorf; it smells…well….clean! I didn’t even notice a lavender smell on individual garments, although on passing the drying rack I did notice that when hung out all together the clothes did exude a very faint and not unpleasant lavendery scent.

Most importantly however: IT WORKS!!

Crucially for my lifestyle, it passed not only the red wine test, but the ‘eating Ben & Jerry’s choclate ice cream in bed’ test as well. Genius!

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I love eggs, me. What I don’t love is factory farming of any kind however, and battery hen farming is particularly vile. I visited a battery shed once – brrrrrrrr.

When I was little, growing up in the country, we were fortunate to be able to buy our eggs directly from relatives who had a small farm with a few free-range happy chickens running around in the yard. (I also got fleas from playing in the hen-house, but that’s another tale to be told another time). As an adult I’ve always tried to purchase free-range eggs but I admit to occasionally letting my standards slip when it’s a choice between battery eggs or no eggs at all.  Here in Barcelona it can be tricky – there still aren’t many free-range producers (In 2008 97% of Spanish eggs were from battery hens, vs 1.2% barn-raised and 1.8% free range. Compare this to 58.3% / 3.8% / 37.9% respectively in the UK)* and only a few of the bigger supermarkets seem to stock free-range.

It’s not just an animal welfare issue, it’s a public health issue too: battery eggs are associated with much higher incidences of salmonella and – presumably because of the appalling conditions in which most chickens are kept – Spain has the worst record on salmonella in Europe:

The 2008 National Control Programme showed that just one per cent of flocks in the UK tested positive for salmonella enteriditis and salmonella typhimurium. The figure for all serovars (variations of the salmonella virus) was 1.25 per cent. The comparative figures for Spain were 15.6 per cent and 34.9 per cent. In Poland the equivalent percentages were 10.6 and 12.5, in France 3.2 and 6.1, in Germany 2.7 and 3.5 and in the Netherlands 2.6 and 2.6.  (European Centre for Disease Prevention)

Why Spain is so far behind the rest of Europe in animal welfare AND food safety standards is a whole ‘nother discussion, so back to my search for eggs laid by happy chickens: FINALLY I found a stall in the Santa Caterina Market that sometimes has free range  – and organic – eggs from a supplier in Andalucia.

Yes – they are free-range AND organic (ecologica)!

The very nice lady at the egg stall (hueveria Gomez-Maldonado, Stall number 19 in the Santa Caterina Market, only open mornings) explained that it’s a tricky situation for retailers: to buy free-range eggs from providers is more expensive than buying battery, and because the demand is low from customers they can’t justify buying in bulk to get a discount. As they buy at a high price they subsequently have to retail them at a high price, which keeps the demand low.  There just doesn’t seem to have been the same awareness/campaigning here to persuade people to *ask* for free-range or to pay that bit extra.

Ous de Corral or Barn Eggs

The stall – go there and ask for free range!

Free range eggs – complete with photo of happy chickens! Fantastic!

This stall has been selling free-range for several years now – they said it took a while to find a reliable supplier which is why they are currently sticking with the one they have in Andalucia. Although – according to an old article in Barcelona Metropolitan – there is a free-range producer in the Vallès Oriental called El Rull Can Maspons she hadn’t heard of it and I haven’t been able to find any reference to it on-line, but she did say that they would prefer to buy from local Catalan producers if they could find a reliable good quality source.

If you know anywhere else in town that sells free-range eggs please leave a comment letting me know!

For more about battery farming and why it is a bad thing, check out this site from Wesleyan university in the US: www.wesleyan.edu/wsa/warn/eon/index.html

*IEC’s International Egg Market Annual Review

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Related post: Eggs Update!

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