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  • Greenhouse: Bottled Water Is Evil (?)

      Remember back in the 1980s when suddenly, it seemed, everybody was lugging around a bottle of water ala Meg Ryan in When Harry Met Sally? Now, you can’t have a meeting, party or soccer game without those little individual bottles of water resting on ice or in the fridge.

    But those inviting little bottles of hydration are super bad for the environment, not to mention being economically nsustianable as well. That water (which is usually just tap water, by the by) has to get pumped from somewhere. It's been a big issue here in Michigan, which doesn't have much, but we do have water galore.

    There are issues with water depletion (right now, you can't pump large amounts of water out of the Great Lakes, but put that same amount of water

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  • Crafty: Fun with To-Go Containers

    If your kitchen is like mine, there is an avalanche of plastic to-go containers every time you open certain cabinets, this is the craft for you. If you are a far more organized or don't do takeout, well, it's still a pretty cool project.

     

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  • Greenhouse: Don't Make These Recycling Mistakes

      Must be nice to live somewhere with curbside recycling. We don’t have it in my city, so we have to load up the family truckster and actually take the stuff to a center. I think if you have someone actually come to your actual house and haul away stuff and all you have to do it put it in a bin? You'd better be recycling. I mean come on, it cannot possibly be any harder than tossing stuff in the trash.  
    But according to this post on Green Daily, even the most well meaning recyclers make mistakes.

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  • Have You Been "Greenwashed"?

    Given that so many people are interested in reducing their carbon footprints, it's not surprising that travelers today want to make greener choices when they plan their vacations.  A recent Travelocity study found that nearly 75% of travelers said they would pay more for more environmentally-friendly options.

    Don't think the travel industry hasn't figured this out.  In fact, there's a word for the kind of manipulation done by companies to convince customers they're concerned about the environment when the commitment is entirely superficial:  greenwashing.

     

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  • Crafty: Old Games, New Bag

    In my house, games have a brief but glorious life. New ones are so beloved that the children will carry pieces or cards or tokens forever or, more likely, until they lose it. Some future archeologist will have a field day with our heating vents, which is where I suspect the bulk of lost things go.

     

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  • 7 Ways to Celebrate Earth Day With the Children

    Yep, Earth Day is next Tuesday the 22nd. Earth Day has been around for decades; it's funny to think of how many went by with hardly anyone noticing. Now, however, Earth Day is a pretty big deal, if for no better reason than to teach your kids about good sustainable practices and the importance of the global climate. Let's face it, our generation is trying to do better, but we are not going to do a 180. We've had cars, lived in suburbs and enjoyed apples flown in from Paraguay during the dead of winter for too long to give it all up. Yes, you bring a reusable shopping bag to the grocery store, good for you. Our kids are going to have to make far greater sacrifices, especially if the way we treat the earth now doesn't change.  

    The only way this earth will be saved from ruin is if future generations are ingrained with a respectful attitude and good habits toward the environment from the get go. So with that in mind, here are seven simple, fun and eco-smart activities you and your kid can do this earth day…

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  • Greenhouse: Recycling-Bin Crafts

    Crafts are fun, for some of us super awesome parents. Then there's people like me, who are either spending a small fortune on new stuff or finding ourselves stuck with five blue markers and all the pink ones dried beyond salvaging, crusty glue and goopy paint.

    But the green mantra of "reduce, reuse, recycle" is especially apt for kids crafts. Raiding the recycling bin can yield project starters like yogurt cups, paper towel rolls and egg cartons that can be turned into all kinds of things (my level of creativity is mostly "Look! A flower pot! A telescope! A home for, um, egg people!" but YMMV).

    Luckily, there are some really creative parents out there...

     

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  • Crafty: New Uses For Old Things, II

    My only crafty crayon recycling idea involves heaping all of the nubbins into a pot, melting them down, and molding the wax into a new uber-crayon. Almost needless to say, it would be foolish for me to try this idea at home. You can be your own judge of your patience and skill.

     

     

     

     

     

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  • Strollerderby Playdate: Crunchy kids and eco-fams

    There's a lot of talk about carbon footprints and bicycling on the internets these days, friends, and if you're not busy changing your lightbulbs and cranking up the hybrid car (that's how they work, right?), well...then you should at least be reading blog posts about people who are loving up the Earth from inside their homes (that's your cue to turn down the AC, lovies). This week, these bloggers make me feel like natural living:There's a lot of talk about carbon footprints and bicycling on the internets these days, friends, and if you're not busy changing your lightbulbs and cranking up the hybrid car (that's how they work, right?), well...then you should at least be reading blog posts about people who are loving up the Earth from inside their homes (that's your cue to turn down the AC, lovies). This week, these bloggers make me feel like natural living:

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  • GreenHouse: Is Pee-Cycling the (Yellow) Wave of the Future?

    I'll just come out with it straight away: This is a post about recycling urine - or rather the phosphorus, nitrogen and potassium in urine - for agricultural purposes.  Too hell with the fancy, schmancy composter - let's hear it for pee-cycling!  (O, how I wish I'd coined that phrase...)

    Phosphorus is an extremely important agricultural fertilizer, and like many of our other natural resources, its stores are depleting.  But urine is one of the richest sources of concentrated phosphorus in the world, and we humans are each making 100 gallons of it per year.  So you can take yourself right outside and pee all over your tomatoes and lettuce, if you are the D.I.Y.-type, or you can order one of these handy urine-separating toilets for your home, which funnel this liquid gold into a holding tank, which, when full, is picked up by "urine reclamation" specialists.  After standing for 6 months - to kill bugs or bacteria that may have been picked up on the way out of the body -  the tanks are emptied all over some lucky farmer's crops. I'm not sure how advisable a D.I.Y.-version of the holding tank would be, but I wouldn't be surprised if there were some hardcore green livers out there who devised their own systems.  A low-impact and resourceful, if only a little funky-smelling, way to make that garden grow!  Not surprisingly, those oh-so-progressive Swedes are all over this one. 

    While restocking the world's oil supply is hopeless, and getting the federal government to recognize and help reverse the process of global warming seems far fetched, replenishing the world's phosphorus supply is as easy as taking a leak.  You gotta love that.  How long do you think it'll be 'til we can score urine-separating toilets from Ikea?


  • Earth Day: 50 Tips For You And Your Family

    Becoming a parent has turned me from a lip-service-paying dilettante into an actual tree-hugging freak, my heavy disposable razor blade habit notwithstanding. I used to care about the planet, now I actually try to find ways to show that I do. Things like DivineCaroline's list of 50 Green Tips are useful, because no matter how many things on the list that you're already doing, there are bound to be a few that you're not, but could be. Like, I might be the last eco-mama to get on board with Tip 7, Buy compact fluorescent light bulbs, which is criminal given that I live within walking distance from an Ikea. 

    Several of the things on the list actually make a parents' life easier: cutting back on junk mail (Tip 16) and getting bills sent and paid electronically (Tip 26) not only saves trees, but it eliminated one of the major sources of clutter in our house, leaving more clear spaces for Polly Pocket shoes to collect. Using eco-friendly cleaning products (Tip 42) or better yet, making your own from vinegar and other household staples (Tip 21) both saves money and relieves the fear of having your child take a swig of Scrubbing Bubbles. Tip 22 might be controversial though: if you have a baby, consider using cloth diapers. There's a school of thought that the chemicals, power, and water necessary to sanitize cloth diapers brings its own set of problems, and I have a feeling that this is ultimately something for which you'll have to follow your gut (too bad that diaper recycling thing seems like such a bust). 

    Tip 27 is Teach kids about the environment, but so many of the tips are fantastic ways to teach by doing. My four-year-old is on Reusable Grocery Bag patrol, charged with helping remind me to bring them into the store from the trunk and with helping me remember to return them to the trunk when we get home. She takes this job seriously to the extent that one day she had a complete meltdown when she realized we'd forgotten the bags at home. And my three-year-old is already a champion sorter of paper, plastic and bottles. Both kids are itching to move to a neighborhood where we can safely bike to more places. We talk in age-appropriate ways about not wasting resources and about reusing what we can, and we'll keep building on that as our family gets older.

    What environmentalists practices has your family adopted? Anything on the list sound like something worth picking up?


    (photo credit: University of Oregon)


  • New Harry Potter Book Will Kill Fewer Trees

    At 784 pages and millions of preordered copies around the world, the seventh and final installment of the Harry Potter saga stands to destroy a lot of forests. But don't feel guilty about buying it: The first US edition of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows will be printed on recycled paper. This marks the single largest purchase of sustainably produced paper used in a single book printing--not so surprising, given that the first US print run will be twelve million books.

    My kids are nowhere near old enough even to listen to these stories, so I have no excuse for how excited I am about this book. Maybe now I can chalk it up to my fierce devotion to environmental causes.  

    Of course, you can preorder the book at Amazon. You know, for your kids. And for the planet.

    (via Naturemoms Blog)


  • The Compact - Anti-Consumerism For the Post-Millennium Era

    A new wave of anti-consumerism is overtaking the land, and proponents call it The Compact.  It began innocently enough, with a group of 10 middle-class San Francisco-area friends deciding a year ago to spend one year buying nothing new.  No HDTVs, no digital cameras, no Tickle Me Elmos.  Everything other than food, essential toiletries like toothpaste and shampoo, underwear and a few other things had to be purchased used or bartered or found.

     

    Participants discovered old and new ways to obtain things they needed.  Sites like Craigslist and Freecycle as well as the old thrift-store standby became their new shopping malls, and participants, after an initial period of retail withdrawal , found they had more money and a new appreciation for the “stuff” they had.

     

    Like this idea?  Think you can give up your Barnes & Noble and Baby Gap for a year?  It’s not too late to join the wave for 2007.  There’s a Yahoo Group devoted to it as well as many local groups around the country.  Me?  I'm always looking for new ways to stick it to Wal-Mart, and this one seems quite satisfying.  Dare me?  I will if you will.  (Wait.  Does that laptop I've been coveting count?  Or...)



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