Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Interesting Trash Facts

From American Rivers:

Percentages and Types of Litter Found Outdoors:

  • Fast food waste (33%)
  • Paper (29%)
  • Aluminum (28%)
  • Glass (6%)
  • Plastic (2%)
  • Other (2%)

How Long Litter Lasts In The Wild:

  • Orange peel (2-5 weeks)
  • Paper bag (1 month)
  • Cigarette butt (up to 5 years)
  • Leather shoe (45 years)
  • Plastic bottle (430 years)
  • Aluminum can (200-500 years)
  • Disposable diaper (550 years)
  • Glass bottle (Approx. 1 million years)
  • Styrofoam container (1 million years)

Saturday, April 19, 2008

It's National Hanging Out Day


Every year, on April 19th, Project Laundry List joins together with hundreds of organizations from around the country to educate communities about energy consumption. National Hanging Out Day was created to demonstrate how it is possible to save money and energy by using a clothesline.

  • Electric dryers use five to ten percent of residential electricity in the United States
  • There are 88 million dryers in America, and if everyone converted to lines 1/2 the year it could reduce residential output of CO2 by 3.3%
  • Clothes last longer when air dried
  • Indoor racks can humidify your home in dry winter weather
  • Clothes dryer fires account for about 15,600 structure fires, 15 deaths, and 400 injuries annually

Give it a try and watch your electric bill shrink!

We'll never go back. Our dryer is just taking up space now.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Wow, send out a link

And get some responses. : )

Just added to my reading list are:
Living Like Ed: A Guide to The Eco-Friendly Life by Ed Begley, Jr.

Here's what Amazon.com says about it:
Review
“Filled with sound advice and first-hand experience from someone who has been walking the walk for more than 38 years, Living Like Ed provides a wide array of practical options for anyone who wants to make his life a little-or a lot-greener. Ed Begley is more than a beloved Hollywood figure; he¹s an all-American hero, and Living Like Ed is a comprehensive yet accessible guide to becoming more environmentally savvy that light greens and bright greens alike will find themselves dog-earing for years to come.”
—Treehugger.com

Product Description
FROM THE PIONEER OF ECO-CONSCIOUS LIVING

A committed environmentalist for more than thirty years, Ed Begley, Jr., has always tried to “live simply so others may simply live.” Now, as more and more of us are looking for ways to reduce our impact on the planet and live a better, greener life, Ed shares his experiences on what works, what doesn't–and what will save you money!

These are tips for environmentally friendly living that anyone–whether you own or rent, live in a private home or a condo–can try to make a positive change for the environment. From quick fixes to bigger commitments and long-term strategies, Ed will help you make changes in every part of your life.

And if you think living green has to mean compromising on aesthetics or comfort, fear not; Ed's wife, Rachelle, insists on style–with a conscience. In Living Like Ed, his environmentalism and her design savvy combine to create a guide to going green that keeps the chic in eco-chic.

From recycling more materials than you ever thought possible to composting without raising a stink to buying an electric car, Living Like Ed is packed with ideas–from obvious to ingenious–that will help you live green, live responsibly, live well. Like Ed.
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So yeah, that already made it to my shopping cart. I'll run it by Oen when he gets home! : ) I also found this DVD:
Living with Ed: Season 1

So that has made it to the top of my netflix queue.

Here's what netflix has to say about it:
Step into the eco-conscious home of actor and environmentalist Ed Begley Jr. as he walks the walk of the green lifestyle in the first season of his reality show. Ed bakes tofu brownies in his solar oven, makes toast with bicycle power and takes a spin with Jay Leno in a 1909 Baker electric car. All the while, Rachelle, Begley's impossibly patient wife of 13 years, humors her husband while trying to adjust to his sometimes obsessive behavior.

So I'm excited about both of those things. Thanks Carey, for the book recommendation! : )

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For moms out there or anyone who is planning a pregnancy in the future, this book and website were recommended to me. Apparently it's a hot pick on Amazon.

Growing Up Green: Baby and Child Care by Deidre Imus

Product Description
"The essential, parent-friendly guide to raising a healthy child in our increasingly toxic environment.The second volume in the New York Times bestselling Green This! series, Growing Up Green: Baby and Child Care is a complete guide to raising healthy kids. Environmental activist and children's advocate Deirdre Imus addresses specific issues faced by children in every age group -- from infants to adolescents and beyond. With a focus on preventing rather than treating childhood illnesses, Deirdre concentrates on educating and empowering parents with information such as: * How to make sure your child is vaccinated safely * Which plastic bottles and toys are least toxic * How to lobby for safer school environments and support children's environmental health studies * Advice from leading "green" pediatricians and nationally recognized doctors such as Mehmet C. Oz, M.D. Chock-full of research and advice, Growing Up Green makes it easy for you to introduce your child to the "living green" way of life. "

And if you are interested in learning more about the author, Deidre Imus' webpage is here.

The first book in the series is called Green This! Volume 1: Greening Your Cleaning. Both look really awesome.

Thanks for the recommendation Linz! : )

Anyway just wanted to post with some new ideas due to the feedback I've gotten, I hope this is helpful to you! : )

I also want to say. . . I want solar panels so bad!!!

Victory Gardens and CSAs

It's finally been beautiful out here for most of the week. We've been out in the yard quite a bit prepping for our garden. The dogs have been enjoying it immensely. We also joined the local CSA (community supported agriculture). You can look here to see if there's one near you. CSA's are generally small community run farms where you can buy in and for a relatively cheap amount of money get fresh local produce during the seasons it is available. The average cost for us per pound of organic produce is $1.50 -$1.75 which is much cheaper than buying organic produce at the grocery store. And best of all the farm is local, in our case less than 5 miles from our home, just a few minutes past Sarah's house. Not all CSAs are organic, and our food is not certified organic, but produced using organic, sustainable methods with no chemicals, etc... Frequently CSAs also have a work-share program where you can work off part or all of your share, which is great for people who may have some time, but not much money. Anyway, all in all we are really excited about it. We are making our own garden also, but don't expect to be incredibly successful, since it will be our first attempt. If we are super successful we have plenty of friends/family we can share all our extra produce with. We are going to be doing square foot gardening.

In other news I'm thinking of going vegetarian, or at least mostly. The reason behind it is that I don't feel like I should be eating meat if I can't bring myself to kill it myself. Thinking about adding chickens makes me question it a lot more. I like the eggs idea, but I don't think I could snap a chicken neck or behead one either, sooo... yeah. It's easy for most people to not think about what the animals go through before they become your lunch or dinner, but it's not something I can get past. I've been buying free range, antibiotic free meat for a long time, but I don't think even that's sufficient anymore. It's obviously a personal choice, and I don't think I'm giving up fish, and I'm not quite sure I'm ready to give up chicken either, but we'll see. I think I'm done with beef and pork though.

In other dietary news, I've been wheat, soy and dairy free for a couple weeks now, and have been feeling a lot better. I didn't realize I had a soy problem. It was the last thing I cut out of my diet, and it made a big difference. We've been eating almost entirely fresh foods. It's so wonderful. Oen and I have both been spending a lot more time in the kitchen cooking. I like it a lot. I don't think I'll ever be able to go back to eating a lot of processed foods, even organic processed foods.

I wanted to talk about victory gardens a little bit. After and during WWI and WWII, the government encouraged people to plant victory gardens. With the way things are headed now, with the food crisis, rising fuel costs, etc... the more growing each person can do on their own the better. It's not that hard and can be done almost anywhere. People in apartments can grow in containers on patios, people in NYC grow on rooftops, etc... It's something really cool and rewarding to do. So if you are so inspired jump on board. : ) Did you know that most food travels 1500 miles before it gets to your dinner table? Isn't that just insane? Think about how much you're paying for just the transport alone? Ick. Much better to have local produce and even more satisfying if you've grown it with your own hands. The path to freedom is growing your own food.


So I guess that's about if for now. If anyone is so inclined, this is the movie I've been recommending to everyone this month: Manufactured Landscapes. What a cool movie. I want to thank Jenntopia so much for recommending it, Oen and I loved it and have been spreading the word to everyone.

Again, I'm sorry for being so depressing, I just look around and see everyone ignoring global warming, and I know its difficult to change, but the fact of it is, if we don't change fast there will not be a hospitable planet left for our children. We need to re-frame global warming, and view it not as a sacrifice, but as a great opportunity. We have all the answers we need, we just need to act, and we need to do it now.

I leave you with some cool US gov't victory garden posters.

Hunger compilation - and ACTION

Hunger compilation - and ACTION

PLEASE REPOST!!!
(from Little Blog in the Woods)

I'm heartened by the general response to my anger. But it's not like there are millions of us. Yet. There need to be millions. If you don't already know why I'm FURIOUS, read this. (It's short.)

Today I'm going to treat you to a compilation of internet news articles on the current effects of hunger and associated poverty. It will be painful to read- but it will give you ammunition.

From CNN: Food aid to Darfur has been cut. "Ahead of the rainy season, which lasts from May into September, WFP trucks should be delivering 1,800 metric tons (1,984 short tons) of food to warehouses in Darfur, WFP said. However, deliveries have dropped to fewer than 900 metric tons (992 short tons) per day, it said.

Since January, 60 WFP-contracted trucks have been hijacked in Darfur, the agency said. More than half -- 39 -- are still missing, and 26 drivers are unaccounted for. One driver was killed in Darfur last month, WFP said."
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From the Washington Post: US financial debacle hits Mexico: "the downturn in the U.S. economy has cascaded into Mexico, causing a sudden, precipitous drop in the flow of money sent home by Mexican immigrants"

"Economists here believe the decline in remittances is already pushing thousands into extreme poverty and could lead to a significant increase in migration as desperate Mexicans, deprived of support from abroad, flee to an ever more difficult U.S. job market."

"Hernández, 80, doesn't take his diabetes medicine anymore. It costs too much, and he'd rather buy food than pills. Ever since his son, Alfonso, lost his home in the United States to foreclosure a few months ago and stopped sending money for medicine and farm supplies, life has been "a disaster, a total disaster," Hernández said."

"The sons of at least three of Hernández's elderly neighbors have also lost their homes, their jobs or both, he said. The river of money from the United States that sustained this village is now drier than the desert that surrounds it."
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From The New York Times: Hunger Brings Anger: Just read this whole article; it's not that long. "Saint Louis Meriska’s children ate two spoonfuls of rice apiece as their only meal recently and then went without any food the following day. His eyes downcast, his own stomach empty, the unemployed father said forlornly, “They look at me and say, ‘Papa, I’m hungry,’ and I have to look away. It’s humiliating and it makes you angry.”

That anger is palpable across the globe. The food crisis is not only being felt among the poor but is also eroding the gains of the working and middle classes, sowing volatile levels of discontent and putting new pressures on fragile governments."

"Last month in Senegal, one of Africa’s oldest and most stable democracies, police in riot gear beat and used tear gas against people protesting high food prices and later raided a television station that broadcast images of the event. Many Senegalese have expressed anger at President Abdoulaye Wade for spending lavishly on roads and five-star hotels for an Islamic summit meeting last month while many people are unable to afford rice or fish."

"Down Cairo’s Hafziyah Street, peddlers selling food from behind wood carts bark out their prices. But few customers can afford their fish or chicken, which bake in the hot sun. Food prices have doubled in two months."

"In Haiti, where three-quarters of the population earns less than $2 a day and one in five children is chronically malnourished, the one business booming amid all the gloom is the selling of patties made of mud, oil and sugar, typically consumed only by the most destitute.

“It’s salty and it has butter and you don’t know you’re eating dirt,” said Olwich Louis Jeune, 24, who has taken to eating them more often in recent months. “It makes your stomach quiet down.”

"In the sprawling slum of Haiti’s Cité Soleil, Placide Simone, 29, offered one of her five offspring to a stranger. “Take one,” she said, cradling a listless baby and motioning toward four rail-thin toddlers, none of whom had eaten that day. “You pick. Just feed them.” "

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A critically important bit of that NYT article is here: " the spike in commodity prices — the biggest since the Nixon administration — has pitted the globe’s poorer south against the relatively wealthy north, adding to demands for reform of rich nations’ farm and environmental policies. But experts say there are few quick fixes to a crisis tied to so many factors, from strong demand for food from emerging economies like China’s to rising oil prices to the diversion of food resources to make biofuels.

There are no scripts on how to handle the crisis, either. In Asia, governments are putting in place measures to limit hoarding of rice after some shoppers panicked at price increases and bought up everything they could."

Notice? THERE IS NO MENTION OF FOOD SPECULATION AS A CAUSE- OR STOPPING IT AS A REMEDY.

We need to get speculation into the public eye and mind- and get it talked about. That's step one.

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Also from the New York Times- Business Section...: World Rice Shortage/Australian Drought:
"The Deniliquin mill, the largest rice mill in the Southern Hemisphere, once processed enough grain to meet the needs of 20 million people around the world. But six long years of drought have taken a toll, reducing Australia’s rice crop by 98 percent and leading to the mothballing of the mill last December."

"The collapse of Australia’s rice production is one of several factors contributing to a doubling of rice prices in the last three months — increases that have led the world’s largest exporters to restrict exports severely, spurred panicked hoarding in Hong Kong and the Philippines, and set off violent protests in countries including Cameroon, Egypt, Ethiopia, Haiti, Indonesia, Italy, Ivory Coast, Mauritania, the Philippines, Thailand, Uzbekistan and Yemen."

"Drought has already spurred significant changes in Australia’s agricultural heartland. Some farmers are abandoning rice, which requires large amounts of water, to plant less water-intensive crops like wheat or, especially here in southeastern Australia, wine grapes. Other rice farmers have sold fields or water rights, usually to grape growers."

"Scientists expect the problem to worsen. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, set up by the United Nations, predicted last year that even slight warming would lower agricultural output in the tropics and subtropics."

"Australia’s total rice capacity has declined by about a third because many farmers have permanently sold water rights, mostly for grape production. And production last year was far lower because of a severe shortage of water; rice farmers received one-eighth of the water they are usually promised by the government."
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Also from The New York Times- Business section: Organic Food Too Pricey?: "people who have to buy organic grain, from bakers and pasta makers to chicken and dairy farmers, say they are struggling to maintain profit margins, even though shoppers are paying more. The price of organic animal feed is so high that some dairy farmers have abandoned organic farming methods"

"Perry Abbenante, global grocery coordinator for Whole Foods Market, said sales were strong and customer counts were up. He said it might be too soon to know how consumers would react to higher organic prices, particularly in dairy. “Man, $6.99 for a gallon of milk is pushing it,” he said. “We have to be very careful about not pricing organics out of the market.” "

"prices for conventional corn, soybeans and wheat are at or near records, so there is less incentive for farmers to switch to organic crops; making the switch requires a three-year transition and piles of paperwork."

"Bob Eberly, president of Eberly Poultry in Stevens, Pa. The cost of raising poultry has increased 16 percent in the last six months, but he said his prices had increased only 7 percent."
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Ok. Gonna quit with the terrifying quotes here, before (hopefully before!!) I drive any readers into horrified catatonia. That's NOT the idea.

One point about the business aspects of organic- eventually, the rising costs of fuel SHOULD make the competitive aspects of organic/non-organic tip in favor of ORGANIC. Commercial fertilizer is made mostly from natural gas. Then shipped - it's heavy, and takes a lot of diesel to move. And spread. Most organic farmers use only on-farm inputs; manure or green manure. That's going to turn out to be a HUGE benefit, very soon. Likewise- pesticides- can only get much more expensive.

This is already happening- acres planted to corn in the US will be DOWN 8% from last year. Multiple causes- one of them being- the very high cost of fertilizer, which corn uses like a drunk on his last binge goes through Sterno.

My own guess about the organic industry is- it's going to be painful for a while- but reality will eventually kick in, and the day may well come when organic food is CHEAPER than "conventional". Assuming the arctic methane doesn't get us first. :-)

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So. For the first time, I'm going to ask the readers of this blog to DO something. For us all.

Many of the causes of the world food crisis are beyond our immediate reach; we can't fix global warming this morning.

But one cause is NOT beyond reach. It's HUGE- and virtually UNRECOGNIZED.

It's Food "Investment" - otherwise known as- SPECULATION.

Blog reader DC sent in a comment with this link; International Herald Tribune. Even some insiders know it.

The politically engaged population of the US - and the WORLD - does not know it's there; and do not know that potentially- it could be OUTLAWED. Next week.

It could. Life-critical resources have always been protected from speculation (theoretically!) - it's an absolute obscenity to sell water to people dying of thirst- the whole species feels that way.

That's the anger we need to stir; and this post has been written as an introduction to the situation.

The starving countries SHOULD start the push- if we can alert the Philippines that half of the price of rice goes into the pockets of slimy weasel food profiteers- they can start screaming to the world- the UN, the World Court, the World Trade Association - that this MUST STOP.

The Philippines - Malaysia - Thailand - could actually pass legislation internally banning food speculation. And then start boycotting international companies that facilitiate it.

Of course it won't be easy to write the laws. Of course the profiteers will scream bloody murder. But yes, it can be done.

They will pass laws long before the US will. Europe will pass laws, long before the US will. But eventually the moral pressure will be huge.

In fact, at the moment, the ultra-rich in this country are just smugly grinning about how cool they are- outsmarting the markets. Most of them have, pardon my Serbian, "shit eating grins" glued on. (I think he's saying "yeah, sit on THIS, peon!" But at least his wearing his flag pin!)

But they ARE human. If they continually wake up in the morning and have to read stories about how the rest of the world truly considers them to be lower than pond-scum- they will get depressed. As people. And start yielding. Even pond-scum would LIKE to think they're "good people"- at most of them; some of the time.

So: PLEASE DO THIS:

Do you have a blog? Link to this post. Write about it. Spread it to other blogs. Tell them to read the previous several posts here, too.

In 15 minutes: Email this post to 10 of your contacts who may think as you do. Ask them to pass it on.

Email this post to your legislators; if you know some, personally, send it personally, and ask to talk to them about launching legislation.

Do you have friends in hungry countries? Email them this post- ask them to pass it on. Get them to put it in the hands of their government.

Get this post to your pastor, rabbi, or imam- ask them to turn it into a sermon- and get your congregation RILED.

Do you have contacts in universities? Get this post to activist groups on campuses- get them to work on... DEMONSTRATIONS. There should be THOUSANDS marching down Wall Street, with banners saying-

"MURDERERS!!"

- and photos of the starving. What the hell- have friends in Haiti? Ask them to FedEx you a few corpses. They're cheap and don't weigh much. Prop them up on the Stock Exchange steps.

Are you a member of a conservation group? Get them this post.

Pass it on. Talk about it. GET ANGRY- just in case you're not. Send your comments here about what you've done- and ideas of your own. Let's get it moving.

Just take 15 minutes, please.

Think this kind of action can't work? Take a look here- substantive change, happening right now, LONG before the laws change.

more to come.