Wednesday

A Week's Worth of New Year's Resolutions for a Lifetime of Change

By: Malerie Eeds

Since the New Year is just around the corner and just about every American’s resolution is to live a healthier lifestyle, I did some cyber searching and came across this wonderful article from www.thedailygreen.com that gives us some brilliant tips on how to make our resolutions last past January. What I love about this article is that it converts our HUGE resolutions into simple steps. We will be eating healthier, getting fit, going green, becoming DIYers and humanitarians this year, and I believe once we get our formula down it will only open the doors for more challenges and possibilities! Okay, time to conquer 2013! Ready, set, GO!

The key to making New Year's resolutions stick is to form new habits. We have seven ideas – one for each day of the week – to help you eat better, exercise more and otherwise live better in 2013.

The New Year's resolutions you keep are those that become new habits. How do you create new habits? One of the best ways is to break down your larger goals – whether that's bettering your health, as it so often is after holiday binging, bettering yourself or bettering the world at large – into bite-sized mantras and rules.
The larger goal has to be meaningful – you have to really want it – and the stepwise goals have to be specific and achievable. (I will lose weight by eating a healthier diet … by swapping my afternoon cookie habit for the habit of an afternoon carrot.)
It can be hard to tackle many goals at once, but here's one strategy: Identify one thing to focus on each day of the week, and before long the devotion to each day's goal will infuse the whole week's activities. Here are some of our favorite ideas:
Meatless Mondays
You're convinced that a vegetarian diet – or at least a diet with more vegetables than the one you eat today – is healthier for you and the planet, but despite the evidence, you can't get on board with such a big change in your diet. So just go meatless on Mondays. It's a growing nationwide trend with its own 
organization and Website. Eating vegetarian one day a week will give you the space you need to get comfortable with new vegetarian recipes, and before you know it, you'll be eating more vegetarian meals throughout the week.
Need some help? Try one of these, our picks for the best sustainable cookbooks and food books of 2010.
Trashy Tuesdays
Take a cue from New York City schools, which started Trayless Tuesdays as a way to experiment with reducing the number of polystyrene (Styrofoam) trays thrown out in its cafeterias. Focus your attention on Tuesdays on your personal waste stream – at mealtime, at home, at work, at the grocery store, at play. Just like time, waste
is money: You can learn a lot about how you're wasting money, as well as energy and natural resources, if you examine what you're throwing out each day. (Try The Green Cheapskate's trashcan autopsy if you don't believe it.)
Why not start at home, with a DIY energy audit, which will help you identify how you're wasting energy so you can spend a future Tuesday weatherizing your home.
Wacky Wednesdays
If you're like us at The Daily Green, you love the idea of DIY creativity and self-sufficiency, but you struggle to find the time to start and complete new projects. The solution? Set aside a couple hours every week to give yourself the time to create. Whether you're 
making giftsturning trash into crafts or hacking your home to boost its value and efficiency, the key ingredient of success is time.
Draw inspiration from these cool green DIY projects from Instructables.com.
Thankful Thursdays
So much of life's anxieties – especially when it comes to goal-setting – is focused on what we're not doing well, and what we're not doing right. Take the time once a week to relax and appreciate what you have. Spend time with family or friends, write a letter – or reflect on all the progress you're making on those other
 resolutions.
Fruitful Fridays
Did you know that 
three-quarters of Americans don't eat enough fruits and vegetables? At a minimum, U.S. health agencies recommend eating three servings of vegetables and two servings of fruit every day. Even if you are in the minority of Americans that achieves this goal, it can't hurt to diversify with new fruits and vegetables that have different phytonutrients. So make Fridays a day to try a new fruit or vegetable – and make it a fresh seasonal fruit or veggie whenever possible for the best flavor and nutritional profile.
Start now by trying these recipes from the winter farmers' market.
Get Outside Saturdays
Most of us start the New Year with some sort of exercise goal – whether it's hitting the floor for some pushups, or the gym for a daily workout. But for those of us who have tried and failed to make exercise a part of our routines, a big problem is fatigue – not physical fatigue, but mental. The treadmill isn't any more exciting on Saturday than it was on Friday. So start an exercise regimen, or spice up your existing routine, with a regular workout outdoors. Whether it's biking on a 
new rail trail, hiking at a forest preserve or ice skating on a local pond, adding an element of exploration to your week will deepen your connection with the outdoors while improving your health – naturally.
Check these 6 sites to find a new local hike or other outdoors activity close to your home.
Good Samaritan Sundays
Generosity takes practice, just like anything else. Make good works a habit by doing one new good deed once a week. Maybe it's volunteering (or planning a 
volunteer vacation), donating money (or even cell phonesclothes or other items) or just lending a hand to a neighbor. Whatever it is, you can make doing good a habit in 2011 by doing one good deed once a week.

Visit
http://www.thedailygreen.com for more living green articles.


Tuesday

GREEN AMERICAN


By: Jenilee Rivera
Finding Used Items Online
Get what you need for free by swapping,
borrowing, and bartering online.
With today’s economic realities,a “shift to thrift” is vital to help our country’s cash-strapped and debt-laden citizens save more and spend less, while conserving precious resources. One important element of that shift—reuse—is easier than ever, thanks to a growing number of Internet sites that are helping people across the country repurpose unwanted items and find what they need secondhand. Swapping or buying used locally is the best way to choose to reuse, because you foster connections and economic development in your community. But when you can’t find what you need in your area, the following innovative Web sites can help you buy, sell, swap, give away, and loan or borrow secondhand items.
Tried-and-True Internet Sites 
Popular online auction sites such as Ebay.com are a reliable option for purchasing used items on the Internet at bargain prices—from furniture to clothes to movies and more. Although sellers hail from every corner of the US and even a few foreign locales, eBay provides the zip codes of sellers and an in-person pick-up option, so users can choose to buy local, or close-to-local.
ShopGoodwill.com is part of the same nonprofit as your local Goodwill, and like eBay, allows users to sell and buy an array of secondhand items through online auctions. Your purchases benefit the charity’s job training and employment programs for disadvantaged and disabled people.
On Craigslist.org and half.com, users can buy and sell just about anything through direct sales, not auctions. While Half.com is a national network, Craigslist is divided into locally based mini Web sites, so all transactions are based in your area. It also allows users to post volunteer opportunities, garage sale notices, rideshare requests, and more.
Every empty seat in the hundreds of millions of cars on the road represents a missed opportunity to save money, reduce traffic and pollution, and build community through a shared ride. While the idea of carpooling isn’t new, several new Internet sites and applications make it easier than ever to publicize open spots in your car and to safely seek out promising carpool partners.

Get What You Need for Free 
Several online sites allow you to get a wide variety of used items free of charge—and give away things that you can no longer use yourself.
TheGreenUmbrella.org provides a comprehensive list of independent “free-sharing” sites across the US.
Freecycle.org is one of the most popular of these sites and is broken down by city—you join the listserv for your community at the main site, keeping all exchanges locally based. Members post unwanted items to the listserv, and responses asking for those items go directly to the e-mail box of the person making the offer, so pick-up arrangements are kept private. Members can also request specific items they need.
Freesharing.org and ReuseItNetwork.org operate in a manner similar to Freecycle, andCraigslist.org has a “Free” section for giveaways.
Throwplace.com allows individuals and businesses to list goods they wish to give away to US and international charities and nonprofits, which will pick them up or pay for shipping. Any 501(c)3 organization can register with ThrowPlace for free.
The site also includes an “Up for Grabs” section that functions much like Freecycle, where individuals and businesses can get and give away items for free, and a “Business” section where individuals and companies can get higher-quality items for a small fee that supports ThrowPlace. Any items that are not taken from other portions of the site after one month filter through to the “Up for Grabs” section.
In California, iReuse.com connects nonprofits with free and low-cost furniture, office supplies, computers, and many other items that have been donated by for-profit companies that no longer need them. Individuals can donate or recycle large unwanted items by requesting a quote to have items removed from their home through iReuse Hauling.

Swapping and Borrowing 
Got something you’d like to trade, rather than sell? Several sites offer members the opportunity to swap for the things they need—or even borrow them.
Craigslist.org has a bartering section through which community members can contact one another directly about trading items, from household goods to cleaning products to car parts.
DigNSwap.com allows members to post pictures of used clothing and accessories they no longer want, and then “dig” through photos of other items posted and make even trades with other members. You only pay for shipping.
The unique neighborrow.com functions as an online lending “library,” enabling members in the same community to borrow items such as household tools, electronic appliances, or DVDs. Members can also swap items they don’t need with other members, or give away an item in exchange for “neighborrow-bucks,” which can then be used to purchase an item that someone else has posted. The network currently consists of over 5,000 people in over 300 places.

Buy or Swap Used Books Though buying books new is the only way to financially support the authors who write them (find a local, independent bookstore at www.indiebound.org/indie-store-finder), a growing number of sites can help you adhere to your book budget while keeping old books out of landfills.
BetterworldBooks.com collects and sells used books online to fund literacy initiatives worldwide. With more than two million new and used titles in stock, Better World Books has raised $4.5 million in funding for literacy and education. Shipping is free to any location within the US, and it’s also carbon-neutral, thanks to offsets fromCarbonfund.org.
Post the books you are willing to trade on Paperbackswap.com, and when someone requests one, you mail it out to them to earn one credit in exchange for paying the shipping costs. With every credit you earn, you can request any of the 3 million-plus books available nationwide.
Bookmooch.com functions similarly to Paperbackswap.com, along with a neat feature
that allows users to give credits to charities.

Buy or Swap Entertainment Media 
Trade entertainment media—i.e. books, music, movies, and video games—with other users around the country via Swaptree.com. Members create a “Have” list of things they have to trade, and a “Want” list of things they want. Swaptree will search through the lists of other members and will match you up with willing swappers.
For example, say you have a Gaiam exercise DVD, and you want a copy of a Toni Morrison book. You put the DVD in your “Have” list and the book in your “Want” list. Then, Swaptree connects you with a person who wants your DVD and has the Toni Morrison book, and you make an even exchange. If you’re the curious type, Swaptree will also inform you about all other items for which you can trade your DVD.
Users only pay for the price of shipping, and the site makes it easy to mail your items by calculating postage and generating printable mailing labels. Swaptree can also help you trade with members in your neighborhood.
SwapaDVD.com is a great way to share DVDs of all varieties with people across the country. To join, you sign up for free and offer ten DVDs on the site—earning you one gift credit that you can exchange for one DVD offered by someone else. After that, you earn an additional credit every time you mail out a DVD to others. Its sister site,swapaCD.com, allows you to do the same with CDs.

You Name It: The Internet Has It 
From cardboard boxes to building materials, some specialized sites can help you sell or obtain particular items.
The days of having to visit every grocery store in town in the hopes that they will part with some extra boxes for your move are long gone. Usedcardboardboxes.comsalvages large quantities of reusable boxes from companies that may otherwise throw out or recycle them. It takes the boxes to regional distribution centers to ensure quality and sort by size, then resells them online across the US. Shipping is free for residential orders.
Do-It-Yourself enthusiasts can buy reused or reclaimed building materials online through PlanetReuse.com, an eBay-style auction marketplace for floors, doors, fixtures, and more.

Putting the "Eco" in Economy
Buying used or getting what you need for free can help you stick to your budget and weather today’s volatile economy—while keeping unwanted items from heading for landfills.
“The environmentally friendly aspect of it is just amazing,” says Ibe Elbouchikhi, co-founder of DigNSwap. Plus, “you create a community of people that are sharing.”


Navy, federal officials reach agreement with wind turbine developers

By Steven Alford, Caller-Times


Nearly two years of planning and negotiations recently came to fruition for a project to build as many as 100 wind turbines north of Naval Air Station Kingsville.

Officials from the Navy, Department of Defense and E. On Climate & Renewables signed an agreement to foster renewable energy in South Texas and to offer a better understanding of its effect on military radar.

The turbines are slated for a site near Petronila, about halfway between Naval Air Stations Corpus Christi and Kingsville.

E. On Climate & Renewables has agreed to give the Department of Defense $750,000 toward research on wind turbine effects on base radar.

The site has been named the Patriot Wind Farm in honor of area military members, company officials said.

In April, a similar agreement was reached with developers for a wind farm with nearly 80 turbines near Riviera. It came a year after base officials initially touted the turbines' potential for radar interference.

Surrounding school district officials also voiced concerns in September about added noise and potential to lower property values, though a 2009 federal study found no direct impact.
Company officials said the project could bring as much as $150 million in investments and jobs to the area, with as many as 200 construction and 10 full-time positions expected.

They are some of the first agreements of their kind since developers began eyeing the Coastal Bend, long known for its gusts.

Tuesday's agreement outlines plans to study more the effects the turbines will have on base radar, and for pilots making dozens of approaches to the base each day.

Construction is expected to break ground next year, company officials said.