Monday

Living Green with a Baby - Choosing the Most Eco-friendly Products for Your Little One


By: Rene Hernandez
     Healthy, eco-friendly baby products are the best way to ensure that you will give your baby a healthy environment in which to grow their first few years. Fortunately, green baby products have become explosively popular recently. Rightfully so, there are many chemicals that babies do not necessarily need to be exposed to.
     For example, the crib mattress generally contains many chemicals, but there are organic options always available. The same goes with bedding: there are always organic materials (such as wool or cotton) that can replace plastic and chemically infused sheets. Stuffed toys are available in organic cotton, as are clothing. Diapers can be found in recyclable and chlorine-free form, as cloth. However, perhaps a bit more cumbersome, they will save on your home's trash output, and be softer on contact with your baby. Essentially, most wool or cotton materials are enough to keep unnecessary chemicals away from a baby's soft and vulnerable skin.
     As far as the products for feeding your baby goes, many bottles are made with bisphenol A, also known as BPA, a chemical that will seep into the liquid contained inside. As a result, many manufacturers have begun to produce BPA-free bottles. They are also available in shatterproof materials, as many parents are concerned about feeding babies through bottles that may shatter. The same problem exists for breast milk storage containers: be sure to use PVC- and BPA-free containers to store milk, either glass or plastic.
     Lotions for babies also come in an organic variety. Before purchasing your baby's lotion, check the ingredients for chemicals. A plant-based lotion can replace any product whose first ingredient is a chemical. The same goes for shampoo and body soap, be sure there are primarily organic materials, and that the product has not been tested on animals prior to sales. Luckily, organic soaps and shampoos for babies have recently become very popular products, and are thus readily available at low prices.
     Unfortunately, replacing chemical and potentially toxic materials with green baby products tends to be a much more expensive choice. Many parents will have to choose which green products with which to surround their baby. However, a reduction in the chemicals in your baby's environment, as a whole, will guarantee a healthier baby, and help you maintain an overall greener, more eco-friendly lifestyle.

Wednesday

The 7 Habits of Successful Gardeners

By Malerie Eeds
Gardening for the first time? You can't go wrong with these time-tested techniques. 
It’s Spring Time! Beautiful weather and beautiful plants and flowers… 

  1. Make Compost
  2. Use Compost
  3. Plant Crops in Wide Beds
  4. Mulch
  5. Feed the Soil, Not the Plants
  6. Share Something
  7. Be There
Photo: The compost bins at Stonecrop Gardens in Cold Spring, N.Y.
Short version: Mother Nature never throws anything away.
Longer version: Composting is the rare silk purse from sow's ear, something for nothing, win-win. You start out with kitchen, yard and garden debris and wind up with two benefits: 1) a great soil amendment, and 2) many green points for avoiding the landfill.
It's easy to fall into thinking that compost's last name is bin, and that careful layering and turning are part of the deal. But piling shredded leaves in a corner counts too. So does "trench composting," handy for those with little garden space, and so does bringing your kitchen scraps to a place (try the nearest community garden) that will compost them if you can't. I have a friend in Manhattan, for instance, who brings her coffee grounds, orange peels and such to the Lower East Side Ecology Center at Union Square Greenmarket.
2. Use Compost
Spread it around plants to ward off disease; put a bit in your potting mix to add slow-release micronutrients; top-dress beds with it to improve soil structure no matter what kind of soil you have; use it to help restore life to soil that's exhausted from years of chemical abuse. Sprinkle it on the lawn spring and fall to encourage the shallow grass roots... It's almost impossible to use too much.
3. Plant Crops in Wide Beds

Crops are anything planted for harvesting: vegetables, cutting flowers, shrubs on hold to be transplanted... keeping these grouped as tightly as possible in beds that are not trod upon cuts down on weeding, conserves water, allows the compost to be concentrated where it will do the most good and improves soil structure year upon year as the layers of organic matter pile up. These beds are frequently raised or at least corralled neatly by boards or — I saw it once and am still impressed all these years later — by long slabs of granite. Aesthetics aside, the primary virtue of this tidiness is easier path maintenance. From the soil and plant point of view it's the special treatment that matters.
4. Mulch
Mulch clothes the soil in a protective barrier that moderates temperature, conserves water, helps keep soil-borne diseases from splashing up and helps keep soil itself from splashing up — on your lettuce, for instance. Almost any organic mulch that will rot down into the soil is almost always preferable to landscape fabric with some kind of icing, but choosing the right mulch for each job is worth the extra effort.
Straw for instance is inexpensive, but it's untidy compared to wood chips and it breaks down a lot faster. That suits straw to the vegetable patch while the chips win under shrubs. (The specialized mulches for warming soil and/or reflecting back just the right light upon your vegetables are seldom biodegradable. My experiments with them are ongoing so all I can say at this point is: Remember that they work only when light falls on them; the more your garden resembles a jungle — no names, please — the less effective they will be.)
5. Feed the Soil, Not the Plants
Short version: Junk food, including organic junk food, has plenty of calories and may include added vitamins. But it's not great long-term nourishment, for many reasons we've learned and others we can so far only observe. Our bodies know the difference between eating a carrot and taking a capsule of vitamin A. Same deal with the soil.
Longer version: Plant health depends on healthy roots; healthy roots depend on healthy soil for air, water and nutrients delivered in forms plants can use. Soil rich in organic matter — compost! — is generally rich in nutrients and in the teeming life (fungi, bacteria, worms, etc.) that makes those nutrients available to the plants.
Ornamental plants in good soil seldom need added fertilizer, and crop plants that do need extra food need less of it when it's released slowly by friendly soil from things like rock powders, kelp and green manures. For an example of how this works with nitrogen, one of the most important nutrients, here's a Rodale Institute Research Report.
6. Share Something
If you've got a garden, you're rich.
Got seeds? The Seed Savers Exchange isn't just about vegetables; there's an affiliated Flower and Herb exchange, too. Got flowers? Hospitals won't take them anymore (allergies), but group homes, soup kitchens and — why not? — your neighborhood hardware store might be delighted with a bit of brightening up. Got produce? There's a national umbrella campaign for vegetable gardeners who want to plant a row for the hungry, and many food banks, farmers' markets and community gardens have set up organized donations. But there's no law that says you can't just give your extra beans to anyone who genuinely wants them. Hunger isn't always physical.
The garden itself is worth sharing too. Garden tours are popular fundraisers so if you're up for the attendant stress, it's likely there's a cause that's looking for locations. In my experience with these things there's always a lot more preparation than I've allowed for... but also a lot more given back in new friends, new ideas and gazillions of pats.
Find dozens of delicious summer recipes at TheDailyGreen.com.
7. Be There
Whether Lao-Tse actually said it or not, it's true: The best fertilizer is the shadow of the gardener.
Photo Credits: Leslie Land, Leslie Land

Thursday

Earth Day Initiatives Becoming Commonplace

By: Terry Shannon


Stadiums throughout Major League Baseball are adopting green programs

(From mlb.com)

(Photo:  Fans of Pittsburgh Pirates don green hats in support of the team’s green initiatives.)
Starting with Opening Day, the Major League Baseball calendar features many special days: Jackie Robinson Day, Mother's Day, Memorial Day, Father's Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Roberto Clemente Day and Veterans Day.
Earth Day truly belongs on that list now.
There was a time during the past decade when the important worldwide date was something you recognized with scattered examples of clubs' environmental stewardship, looking for a common bond. Sunday is Earth Day 2012, and around the national pastime it arrives with an instituted resolve that brings daily club news of harnessing wind, installing solar arrays, carbon offsets, hydropower, recycling and composting, paperless ticketing, conservation awareness, sustainable food practices and much more.
The initiatives are a fact of life in front offices, along with player scouting and game production. It has been the gradual infusion of change that all started in 2006, when MLB became the first sports league to partner with the Natural Resources Defense Council and subsequently formed the "Commissioner's Initiative on Sustainable Stadium Operations and Team Practices" -- now known simply as the MLB Greening Program<> .
"Baseball is a social institution with social responsibilities, and caring for the environment is inextricably linked to all aspects of the game," Commissioner Bud Selig said. "Sound environmental practices make sense in every way and protect out natural resources for future generations of baseball fans."
"Earth Day should give all of us reason to reflect on our own efforts to act responsibly and sustainably," said Pirates chairman Bob Nutting. "We all have a responsibility to do as much as we can to protect our environment."
If you work in baseball today, you work in environmental practice. It touches virtually everything you do. Green practices save clubs money in addition to saving the planet. Examples are everywhere you look, few of them more prominent than the innovative, corkscrew-shaped wind turbine that stands sentinel atop Progressive Field. It was installed at the start of this season, making the Indians the first club to harness wind power.
Dr. Majid Rashidi, a professor of Mechanical Engineering at Cleveland State University's Fenn College, is the creator of the "helical wind turbine" design, which amplifies airflow around a central cylinder to power four small turbine fans. Funded through grants from the Department of Energy and the state of Ohio, it is more conducive for urban areas and confined spaces than a traditional long-blade wind turbine, and rated at 25,000 kilowatts per year.
"Dr. Rashidi's new technology is playing a significant role in the advancement wind energy," CSU president Ronald Berkman said. "We are proud to showcase this exciting new design in our hometown, along with the Cleveland Indians, and use this venue to move the technology closer to commercialization."
"With this project we hope to not only benefit the environment by increasing our use of renewable energy, but also help an impressive new technology generate local jobs by taking advantage of Cleveland's great manufacturing workforce and factories," said Brad Mohr, Indians assistant director of ballpark operations.

Monday

Re-using and recycling egg cartons


By: Paige Merritt
First published July 2011, last updated March 2013
A common household waste item is the egg carton – it’s waste that in many cases doesn’t need to be taking space in landfill.
According to data from the American egg board; in 2011, 247.8 eggs per person were consumed in the USA (egg in shell and in products).
It’s a lot of eggs and while not all are transported in the egg cartons we see in the supermarket; it would still work out to be many millions of cartons each year being discarded.
What are egg cartons made of?
An egg carton may be made from plastics such as Styrofoam or fromrecycled paper and molded pulp. One way to make your egg consumption a little more environmentally friendly is to ensure you buy eggs in paper based packaging as styrofoam is difficult to recycle.
Recycling egg cartons
If the eggs you buy are in plastic packaging that isn’t styrofoam; look for a triangle with a number inside it stamped on the packaging. This is a plastic resin code and depending on the number, it may be possible to place this packaging in your recycling bin.
Even though the paper based version of the packaging is biodegradable, when thrown in with your general household rubbish it will likely wind up in landfill where the decomposition process takes a lot longer and take up valuable space.
Additionally, as the waste in landfill is buried, decomposition occurs in an anaerobic environment, which is one without oxygen. Microbes that thrive in anaerobic conditions give off potent greenhouse gases such as methane as they digest material. Methane has a Global Warming Potential (GWP) 62 times the carbon dioxide.

Raising Green Kids

By: Misty Capley


     Teaching your kids to be greener is a lot easier than you’d think. Cleaning up the planet is a lot more fun than cleaning up your room. Green families now have more access to support and resources than ever before. Start simple and explain to your children why your family is making small changes. Children might not understand all the nuances of the global warming debate, but even a toddler knows that he doesn’t want to drink yucky water.
One of our green family favorite books is Todd Parr’s “The Earth Book,” which has simple images and green kid friendly language that makes caring for the Earth fun. Check it out from your library to be especially green. After reading a green book, suggest to your children that they choose one greener activity to add to the chores list. Rinsing the recycling while helping with dinner, turning off the water while brushing teeth, or bringing bags to the market are easy responsibilities for young children.

     Start by choosing a green activity that is easy to incorporate into your normal daily routine. Since your green family has to shower every day anyway, try water saving as an easy achievable goal. Shorter showers will save some water and save some precious time in the morning rush. A kitchen timer with a loud ring is all you need to implement this greener family initiative.

     We attend a weekly play group and have used that as an opportunity to spread a green message and practice a green lifestyle. We pack our snacks in washable containers rather than disposable bags. We also choose snacks that are fresh local foods or organically grown. We bring recycled and homemade toys to share. During clean-up, we sort our recyclables. This way, green living is normalized. It’s just part of our regular day.
When starting a new green initiative, find a way encourage your children’s input. For example, if you want to start celebrating Meatless Monday as part of a greener lifestyle, ask them to choose their favorite veggies for dinner. Look at pictures in a cook book or on a recipe website together. Older children may even want to help in the kitchen.

For more ways to grow greener kids, take the Quiz at Going Green Today. Better yet, take the quiz with your children!

Tuesday

Eco-Friendly Baby Products


By: Rene Hernandez

Healthy, eco-friendly baby products are the best way to ensure that you will give your baby a healthy environment in which to grow their first few years. Fortunately, green baby products have become explosively popular recently. Rightfully so, there are many chemicals that babies do not necessarily need to be exposed to.
For example, the crib mattress generally contains many chemicals, but there are organic options always available. The same goes with bedding: there are always organic materials (such as wool or cotton) that can replace plastic and chemically infused sheets. Stuffed toys are available in organic cotton, as are clothing. Diapers can be found in recyclable and chlorine-free form, as cloth. However, perhaps a bit more cumbersome, they will save on your home's trash output, and be softer on contact with your baby. Essentially, most wool or cotton materials are enough to keep unnecessary chemicals away from a baby's soft and vulnerable skin.
As far as the products for feeding your baby goes, many bottles are made with bisphenol A, also known as BPA, a chemical that will seep into the liquid contained inside. As a result, many manufacturers have begun to produce BPA-free bottles. They are also available in shatterproof materials, as many parents are concerned about feeding babies through bottles that may shatter. The same problem exists for breast milk storage containers: be sure to use PVC- and BPA-free containers to store milk, either glass or plastic.
Lotions for babies also come in an organic variety. Before purchasing your baby's lotion, check the ingredients for chemicals. A plant-based lotion can replace any product whose first ingredient is a chemical. The same goes for shampoo and body soap, be sure there are primarily organic materials, and that the product has not been tested on animals prior to sales. Luckily, organic soaps and shampoos for babies have recently become very popular products, and are thus readily available at low prices.
Unfortunately, replacing chemical and potentially toxic materials with green baby products tends to be a much more expensive choice. Many parents will have to choose which green products with which to surround their baby. However, a reduction in the chemicals in your baby's environment, as a whole, will guarantee a healthier baby, and help you maintain an overall greener, more eco-friendly lifestyle.

Friday

Why Go Green?

By: Malerie Eeds
Time and time again I see trash cans full of recyclable material, the time wasn’t taken to simply separate the garbage. Lots of people do not consider the environment or what their actions do to our earth, but I believe it is simply because they don’t know. They haven’t been educated on why recycling and going green is important, they don’t understand the severity, and they will continue with their wasteful habits until they are enlightened somehow. So, that is why I decided to share the following information I found on www.green.org, to enlighten you in hopes that you will go on to enlighten others. Together we can help sustain the earth for future generations. 
“To decide to go green isn’t just about the present state of the planet, it’s also about the ever-unfolding future. It’s about the limited resources of the planet. In 1800 there were 1 billion people populating earth, which doubled by 1922. That 2 billion tripled to 6 billion by 2000, and conservative estimates are that there will be 9 billion people inhabiting our little planet by 2050.
Considering how many people are homeless and starving at present, what will that future be like if ways to go green and sustaining the planet and its population are not put into place before that future arrives?
Some of the smallest things people do on a daily basis have the greatest negative impact, and can easily be changed into small daily “go green” habits with a positive impact on life on earth.
Household electronics, batteries and harsh cleaners add dangerous chemicals to our environment and seep into the groundwater, which is the source of water that sustains human life. This harmful chemistry contaminates the soil where all our food grows. Much of this poisonous chemistry cannot be removed from the drinking water, cannot be removed from the soil, cannot be removed from the crops, and cannot be removed from the systems of the animals that eat the crops. Meanwhile, responsibly recycling these harmful components and using products that are green and kind to the environment, can easily be done. Simply go green!”
Sometimes it’s helpful to see examples of the effects of recycling and being conservative with resources. Here are a few:
• One recycled glass bottle saves enough energy to light a 100 watt bulb for 4 hours
• One recycled aluminum can saves enough energy to run a television for 6 hours
• Recycling 100 pounds of paper saves 350 gallons of water, 19 gallons of oil PLUS saves enough energy to run the electricity in an entire house for nine days!

Monday

Food that Nourishes People and the Planet


By: Jenilee Rivera
Local, organic, and Fair Trade products can keep your food dollars away from destructive agri-businesses. 
Food
Bobby and Diann Johnson grow pecans on a small farm in southeastern Georgia. Rajah Banerjee improves his community by tending organic tea gardens in northeastern India. Ofelia Flores harvests wine grapes on a vineyard in California where workers have organized for a voice on the job. And formerly unemployed Margaret Sillemon has been grateful to find training and steady work packaging beans and spices into gourmet soup mixes in Denver.
These people—and many others—want to support their families by growing, harvesting, or preparing sustainable food for America’s dinner tables. To do so, they need support from committed customers who shop for food with people in mind.
Most American households will spend more than $2,000 per person this year on food, according to the US Department of Agriculture (USDA). In these tough times, it’s more important than ever to keep your money away from conventional agri-businesses and support farmers and workers here and around the world. Here’s how to use the power of your food dollars for eating well and doing good.

Buy Local and Organic 
Here in the US, large corporations have consolidated production, squeezing out smaller-scale farms. According to the USDA, the nation lost more than 13,000 farms between 2006 and 2007, and the average size of the remaining farms continues to rise. The large factory farms that replace small-scale family farms may not support their local communities financially or culturally, may not provide living-wage jobs, and are more likely to use toxic chemicals and create vast monocultures. In this environment, small-scale farmers often have difficulty connecting with markets for their harvest. Buying local helps support farmers in our communities and curbs global warming emissions by reducing food miles.
Organic agriculture also avoids toxic pesticides and herbicides, reduces chemical runoff into the water supply, increases biodiversity, avoids genetically modified crops (GMOs), and protects community health.
When possible, look for produce that is both local and organic. Find local and organic produce by joining a community supported agriculture (CSA) program, or by shopping at a nearby farmers’ market. The nonprofit Local Harvest can help you find both.

Buy Fair Trade 
For the food items that are grown and harvested in other parts of the world, Fair Trade offers a strategy for sustaining the livelihoods and communities of small-scale farmers. Fair Trade ensures that farmers and farm workers receive living wages and labor under fair and healthy conditions, with no child labor allowed.
When American consumers purchase Fair Trade Certified™ food products, including tea, coffee, cocoa, chocolate, honey, vanilla, rice, and fresh fruit, they help to raise living standards for farmers by guaranteeing fair prices for the harvest. This Fair Trade premium covers the costs of living and sustainable production, with enough left over for farmers to invest in development projects. Ask your local grocery stores and restaurants to carry Fair Trade items.
Support Family Farms 
Family-scale farming can thrive in the US when farmers join together to connect with committed
customers. Two members of Green America’s business network are helping US farmers do just that.
Organic Valley has knit together a cooperative network of over 1,300 family farms across the US and Canada, enabling farmers to sell their organic food to major markets. The company keeps their markets regional, reducing food miles. The model has succeeded in sustaining these smallscale farms: Organic Valley’s revenue from sales of its dairy products topped $432 million in 2007.
Equal Exchange, a worker-owned cooperative that began bringing overseas Fair Trade products to market more than two decades ago, launched its “Domestic Fair Trade” program last year. The company actively searches out US family farmers or farmer cooperatives and purchases their products, rather than items from large agri-corps. It sells these items at retail through its catalog and Web site, and wholesale through grocery stores and food coops across the US. It offers pecans from a cooperative of African-American farmers in Georgia, cranberries from an organic bog in Wisconsin, and organic almonds from cooperative farms in central California. Customers can “track their snacks” on the Equal Exchange Web site to learn about the family or cooperative that each product supports.
“We should all be thinking about how farmers and farm workers are treated here in the US,” says Joe Riemann of Equal Exchange. “This is part of the larger question of striving for a more equitable and cooperative economy.”

Protect America's Farm Workers 
The consolidation of farms hasn’t only squeezed small-scale farmers; it has also given rise to a population of 400,000 migrant farm workers moving between 80,000 farms, according to the United Farm Workers (UFW), a union of US farm workers. The UFW, founded by organizer César Chávez, has worked for more than two decades to help farm workers organize to effect change. But unfortunately, laws concerning wages, working conditions, and health and safety for farm workers are not enforced consistently, writes Arturo S. Rodriguez, the current president of UFW. Too often, US farm workers continue to be cheated of wages, female workers experience sexual harassment, pesticides on non-organic farms make workers sick, and many aren’t given consistent access to clean drinking water.
The union label on food helps ensure that farm workers are given a voice on the job to advocate for fair wages and healthy working conditions. UFW maintains a list of mushrooms, roses, grapes, strawberries, apples, and citrus harvested by unionized farm workers at www.ufw.org (click on “Union Label”). A list of packaged foods manufactured by members of the United Food and Commercial Workers’ Union (UFCW) is online here.
In addition, the Agricultural Justice Project has been working to develop standards for what social justice means in the context of sustainable, organic agriculture in the US. The Project undertook a pilot program in the Midwest, through which produce from four family farms was sold in co-op grocery stores under a “Local Fair Trade” label, meaning that the source farms had undergone independent monitoring to ensure they adhere to Project standards. Farmers; farm workers; and indigenous, retail, and consumer groups have worked to develop the standards, which address: workers’ rights to freedom of association and collective bargaining, fair wages and benefits for workers, clear conflict resolution policies for farmers and farm workers, the rights of indigenous peoples, and workplace health and safety.
A Hand Up for the Unemployed 
Low-income people are going to be suffering the most in a depressed economy marked by high unemployment it’s more important than ever to support people’s livelihoods when you purchase food.
Look for enterprises in your community that produce food products as vehicles for training and employing people who may otherwise struggle to make a living. For example, the Greyston Bakery in Yonkers, NY, sees its primary business as supporting individuals in becoming self-sufficient: “We don’t hire people to bake brownies,” says CEO Julius Walls. “We bake brownies in order to hire people.”
When customers purchase Greyston’s “Do-Goodie” brownies in stores and online, they help to ensure that Greyston can continue to provide training and good jobs even during tough times.
Likewise, Food from the ’Hood is a student-run business that helps train high school students from Crenshaw High School in a low-income neighborhood of Los Angeles. Purchasing Food from the ’Hood’s “Straight Out ’the Garden” line of salad dressings, which are available online and in supermarkets throughout southern California, helps to educate students about gardening and entrepreneurship, and to fund college scholarships for graduates of the program.
In Denver, the Women’s Bean Project employs low-income women in the work of baking mixes, bean soups, and marinades for online sales, while also providing on-site mentoring, computer literacy classes, individual job coaching, and life skills classes. The Project has employed more than 500 women over two decades.
Likewise, next time you are looking for a caterer for a meeting or gathering, look to see if there is an employment program caterer at work in your community. These programs serve a critical need in many communities, providing much-needed jobs and job training, especially when times are tough.
Find our list of more than a dozen employment program caterers putting people to work in US
cities here.

Support Livelihoods With Every Bite We all have tremendous opportunities every time we buy food to make sure our dollars support dignified work for those near and far who grow, harvest, prepare, and serve food.
“Our products make great meals, but what they’re really about is helping women move towards self-sufficiency,” says Tamra Ryan, executive director of the Women’s Bean Project. “When anyone buys one of our products, they can know that it’s literally changing somebody’s life.”
                                                                                                               —Joelle Novey

What and What NOT to Recycle in Corpus Christi


By: Terry Shannon
For so many of us, recycling has become a way of life; we're all glad to do our share.  Besides, how much easier can it be to simply place the items in a large blue container and take it to the curb twice a month?  But the reality is a lot of us tend toward throwing everything into recycling, not thinking twice.

The City of Corpus Christi has done an excellent job at posting information on what can and what can't be recycled.  There are some nuances, though.  For example, did you know bottle caps are recyclable, but they have to be completely removed from the bottle?  Or how about this one - pizza boxes aren't recyclable at all.  One more - no glass!  So, consider this a refresher course, something to keep handy in the event you're wondering whether to recycle it, or trash it.

First, what we can recycle:

Paper
  • Junk mail, catalogs, and envelopes (no need to shred them)
  • Shredded personal documents
  • Boxes like cereal, pasta, frozen dinners and drink cartons
  • Shoe boxes
  • Cardboard (flattened)
  • Newspaper and magazines
  • Phone books
  • Copy and computer paper -- white and colors
  • Protective paper wrapping on shoes, purses, etc.

Plastic
  • Water/soda bottles
  • Detergent, soap, and shampoo bottles
  • Milk jugs
  • Butter, sour cream, and yogurt tubs
  • Syrup, peanut butter, and squeezable jelly bottles
  • Plastic bags (Tip: Tie a knot in the bag before disposal to keep it from blowing.)
  • Packing bags for electronics
Bottle caps are accepted for recycling, but must be removed from the bottle or container before placed in the recycling cart.

Metal
  • Aluminum, tin and steel
  • Food cans for things like vegetables and soup
  • Metal drink cans - sodas, energy drinks, etc.
  • Other beverage cans
  • Empty aerosol spray cans
  • Aluminum foil and trays

Now, what you can't recycle:
Please do not put the following items in your blue recycling bin:
  • Glass
  • Food waste or liquids
  • Containers with food residuals (like pizza boxes)
  • Wet paper products
  • Yardwaste (grass trimmings, branches)
  • Styrofoam
  • Waxed paper or waxed cardboard
  • Motor oil containers or household hazardous waste items
Happy recycling!

Friday

How to go Green, Why to go Green


You've probably noticed that green is everywhere these days--in the news, politics, fashion, and even technology. You can hardly escape it on the Internet, and now with the Planet Green TV network, you can even enjoy eco-friendly entertainment 24 hours a day. That's all great as far as we're concerned, but with a million messages and ideas coming at us from all sides, it can be easy to get caught up in the quotidian stuff--switching to organic foods, turning down the thermostat, recycling, say -- without thinking about the big picture of how your actions stack up. Worse, you could even be suffering from a little green "fatigue" -- that is, tuning out the green messages due to their ubiquity.
While it's easy to get overwhelmed, it's also simple to begin making a positive impact. Since it's helpful to understand the big picture when it comes to setting to smaller goals, we've adjusted our focus for this guide--a departure from out typical "how to go green" content, which typically tackles very specific topics such as kitchenscars, or pets -- to take a broader look at the reasons behind why we should go green.
As globalization makes the world become smaller, it becomes increasingly easy to see how the lives of people (and plants and animals and ecosystems) everywhere are closely synced up with one another. So toys made in China can affect the quality of life in Europe, pesticides used in Argentina can affect the health of people in the U.S., and greenhouse gas emissions from Australia can affect a diminishing rainforest in Brazil.
The truth is that everything single thing we do every day has an impact on the planet -- good or bad. The good news is that as an individual you have the power to control most of your choices and, therefore, the impact you create: from where you live to what you buy, eat, and use to light your home to where and how you vacation, to how you shop or vote, you can have global impact. For example, did you know that 25 percent of Western pharmaceuticals are derived from flora that come from the Amazon rainforest? And that less that one percent of these tropical trees and plants have been tested by scientists? These numbers suggest that we all have a large (and growing) personal stake in the health and vitality of places far and near. In addition to protecting biodiversity (and inspiring medicine), rainforests are also excellent carbon sinks. Bottom line: It benefits everyone on the planet to help keep our wild spaces alive and growing.
But embracing a greener lifestyle isn't just about helping to preserve equatorial rain forests, it can also mean improving your health, padding your bank account, and, ultimately, improving your overall quality of life. All that and you can save furry animals, too? Why wouldn't anyone want to green? Keep reading for all the important, big-picture details.

Why Go Green? Top Ten Tips

  1. Real food is fuel for the body -- and the planet.By following the green eaters' mantra -- eat seasonal, local, organic foods -- you can enjoy fresher, tastier foods and improve your personal health. According to one study, organic milk has 68 percent more beneficial Omega-3 fatty acids than conventional milk. Making green food choices also has global consequences. Buying local means supporting the local economy and reducing the greenhouse gas emissions required to get food from its origin to your plate. Buying fresh food means reducing packaging and energy used for processing. Choosing organic foods means helping promote organic agriculture and responsible land use. To learn more check out How to Go Green: Eating.
  2. The average woman absorbs more than 4 pounds of cosmetics during her lifetime. Guys, you?re not off the hook.Your skin -- the body's largest organ -- absorbs up to 60 percent of the products you put on it every day, from soaps to shampoos to sunscreens. Considering that most of us use about 10 different products daily?that can really add up. Choosing green personal care products often means using plant-based ingredients in place of petrochemicals, preventing these chemicals from being absorbed into your skin. Learn how to keep your grooming regimen on the level with our How to Go Green: Women's Personal Care guide and Know Your Cosmetics Ingredients: Top Ingredients to Avoid.
  3. Making stuff takes lots (and lots and lots) of energy.Every object you own -- your furniture, your clothing, your beer cans, your stuff -- comes from somewhere; every object has an environmental impact. Nothing simply comes from "the store." To help mitigate the footprint of your material life, choose goods made from green (or greener) materials, such assustainably harvested woodorganic cotton, or repurposed and recycled materials. Your choices will help protect forests, habitat, clean water and biodiversity; ensure sustainable land-use practices; and reduce the amount of waste clogging up our landfills. Buying less stuff and second-hand stuff helps achieve this goal, too. See our How to Go Green: Furniture, andBuyGreen Guides for more info on sourcing these products.
  4. Clean, renewable power is already available to everyone.We use electricity to power our lights, computers, and televisions, but what happens before you flip the switch? Your electricity has to come from somewhere; more than half America's comes from coal-burning power plants, which also happen to be the country's largest source of air pollution. Bysigning up for a renewable energy program through your local utility, generating your own power, or purchasing renewable energy credits (also known as "green tags"), you contribute to our collective capacity for generating more clean power from wind, solar, and other sources and you help reduce demand for energy from more polluting sources. Learn more about how to make your electrical footprint lighter in our How to Go Green: Electricity guide.
  5. Better transportation means less global warming.Anytime you choose to walkride a bike, or take public transportation, you reduce (or totally eliminate) the carbon dioxide and particulate emissions created by driving a gas- or diesel-powered car. You'll help slow global warming and help stave off our date with peak oil. Choosing greener options ? such as a train over air travel ? for long-distance trips can immensely reduce your carbon footprint. Get to the nitty-gritty in our How to Go Green: Cars and How To Go Green: Public Transportation guides.
  6. Nature Recycles Everything. So Should People.Making proper use of the blue recycling bin has become an iconic action. Reducing the amount of stuff we consume is the first step (and the first word in the mantra reduce-reuse-recycle), finding constructive uses for "waste" materials is the second. Why? Nothing is ever really thrown "away" -- it all has to go somewhere. By recycling and reusing, we reduce the amount of waste that sits in landfills (where even biodegradable products often can?t break due to lack or oxygen and sunlight). Recycling materials also saves energy compared to using virgin materials to create new products. Some materials, like aluminum and glass, can even be recycled without being "downcycled," or turned into a product of lesser quality. See our How to Go Green: Recycling guide for more details.
  7. Your clothing choices impact more than just your appearance.Making clothing involves a large amount of materials, energy, and labor?including the pesticides used to grow crops for textiles, the dyes and water used to color them, and conditions under which laborers work. By choosing eco-friendly clothing ?- say, purchasing organic over conventional cotton, one of the world's most chemically dependent crops, you also choose a better product that is easier on the soil and groundwater. How you care for your clothes ?- using cold water in the washing machineeco-friendly detergents, and line-drying (at least part of the time) ?- can all reduce the impact of your wardrobe. Wearing second-hand styles helps diverts traffic to landfills, and in some cases ?- perhaps undurprisingly -- can be 95 percent more efficient that buying new. Learn more about greener choices in our How to Go Green: Wardrobe andLaundry guides.
  8. Water is not a renewable resource.Clean water is perhaps the planet's most precious resource, and, with the increasing effects of global climate change, for many regions across the globe, our ability to have enough high-quality H20 on hand could likely to change in the near future. Being water conscious helps reduce strain on municipal treatment systems and ensures there's enough to go around. By shifting away from bottled water, we can reduce global greenhouse gas emissions (from shipping), the energy required to produce (petroleum-derived) plastic, and the volume of waste trucked to our landfills (from empty bottles). Have a peek at our How to Go Green: Water Guide for more details.
  9. Greener goods are more humane.Just as its required materials and energy, all "stuff" requires another common resource: the human kind. If you opt for green and ethical goods, you are often supporting local and global craftsmen and communities. Supporting "Fair Trade" products and fair labor practices ensures that goods-- from coffee to clothing ? were not born in a sweatshop. Buying goods made in the U.S.A. (and preferably purchased nearby where they were made, which cuts down on transportation costs) means production practices are governed by strict labor laws. Read the How to Go Green: Wardrobe and Coffee & Tea guides for more.
  10. There's nothing corny 'bout peace, love, and understanding.When Dr. Wangari Maathai won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004, the awarding committee recognized her accomplishments by saying, "Peace on earth depends on our ability to secure our living environment." Maathai, the founder of the Green Belt Movement (one of Planet Green's NGO partners), has helped the world connect the dots between women's rights, sustainable development, democracy, and world peace -- get the details in the TreeHugger Radio interviewwith Maathai. The connection between peace and the environment has been cemented by Nobel Prize Laureate Al Gore and the IPCC, who have driven home the points that global climate change is an issue of science, technology, human behavior, ethics and peace, and that one person's actions can truly make a difference. Equating the two -- peace and the environment -- allows us to understand the big picture and the manner in which we're all connected.

Why to Go Green: By the Numbers

  • 1 pound per hour: the amount of carbon dioxide that is saved from entering the atmosphere for every kilowatt-hour of renewable energy produced.
  • 60 percent: the reduction in developmental problems in children in China who were born after a coal-burning power plant closed in 2006.
  • 35 percent: the amount of coal's energy that is actually converted to electricity in a coal-burning power plant. The other two-thirds is lost to heat.
  • 2.5 percent: the percentage of humans' carbon dioxide emission produced by air travel now, still making it the largest transportation-related greenhouse gas emitter.
  • 5 percent: the percentage of the world's carbon dioxide emissions expected to be produced by air travel by the year 2050.
  • 1.5 acres: the amount of rainforest lost every second to land development and deforestation, with tremendous losses to habitat and biodiversity.
  • 137: the number of plant, animal and insect species lost every day to rainforest deforestation, equating to roughly 50,000 species per year.
  • 4 pounds, 6 ounces: the amount of cosmetics that can be absorbed through the skin of a woman who wears makeup every day, over the period of one year.
  • 61 percent: the percentage of women's lipstick, out of the 33 tested, found to contain lead in a test by the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics.
  • 36: the number of U.S. states that are anticipating local, regional or statewide water shortages by 2013.
  • 1 out of 100: the number of U.S. households that would need to be retrofitted with water-efficient appliances to realize annual savings of 100 million kilowatt-hours of electricity and 80,000 tons of greenhouse gas emissions.
  • 3 trillion: the number of gallons of water, along with $18 billion, the U.S. would save each year if every household invested in water-saving appliances.
  • 64 million tons: the amount of material prevented from going to landfill or incineration thanks to recycling and composting in 1999.
  • 95 percent: the amount of energy saved by recycling an aluminum can versus creating the can from virgin aluminum. That means you can make 20 cans out of recycled material with the same amount of energy it takes to make one can out of new material. Energy savings in one year alone are enough to light a city the size of Pittsburgh for six years.
  • 113,204: the number, on average, of aluminum cans recycled each minute of each day.
  • 3: the number of hours a television set can run on the energy saved from recycling just one aluminum can.
  • 40 percent: the percentage of energy saved by recycling newsprint over producing it from virgin materials.

Monday

Online shopping – a greener choice


By: Paige Merritt

I was thinking back to childhood and how whenever we were looking to purchase an appliance or similar, we would flit from store to store and mall to mall to find the best product at the best price – burning up gas and cranking out all sorts of nasty stuff from the car exhaust as we went. It was just what we did back then as we didn’t have a great deal of easy access to information on products – and gas was dirt cheap.

Back then though, we didn’t have to face getting maced, shot, stabbed or crushed at big sales either and issues relating to the environment simply weren’t on the radar for most of us. How times have changed.
These days all the products you need are just a click away. You can buy just about anything online – and that can be a good thing environmentally speaking.
When gas prices spiked a few years back, many major stores reported losses in their “bricks and mortar” outlets (their physical ones), yet their online sales blossomed. Consumers and the environment had a win from the situation.

I’ve been involved with ecommerce and online marketing for many years now, so I guess I’m somewhat biased – but I really believe that shopping online instead of via bricks and mortar stores is not only cheaper (and safer judging by some of the Black Friday sales incidents), but a more eco friendly option. That is assuming of course you buy what you need rather than all your heart desires; which can be a bit of a risk when shopping online.

Saving gas and emissions
For example, I remember just about running out of a natural arthritis treatment  that really worked in alleviating pain for Niki the Wonder Dog.
I could have jumped in my 1.6 ton car and made the special trip to the place that stocked the stuff I needed some miles away, but I found it on eBay – and it was $20 cheaper even with delivery! It was sent to my post box (which is checked regularly and is on the way to other frequently visited destinations). So I saved twenty bucks, time, gas, plus the associated emissions.
There has been so many instances over the last few years where I’ve needed something rather obscure that would have taken me ages and many miles of travel to obtain in the “real” world – instead, I just buy it all online.

The freight and packaging issue
Some would say that the shipping of goods directly to purchasers isn’t exactly environmentally friendly, and that’s true; but back to the example above, what would you think would be the most efficient and greener of these two options:
a) 1 person jumping into a 1.6 ton vehicle to make a special trip
b) Spending 2 hours negotiating public transport to get to a location 15 minutes drive away
c) A parcel weighing 2 pounds being added to a delivery truck that’s headed for the post office or to the general area anyway.

One downside of buying online can be extra packaging; but I have noticed that many eBay sellers and smaller online businesses send their goods out in boxes they’ve recycled, or more accurately, reused.
You may also be able to actually reduce shipping miles by purchasing online. For example, Product X at your supermarket may come from across the country or from the other side of the world. By searching online, you may find the same product being made closer to home at a comparable price.

Buying direct from warehouses
Bricks and mortar stores are usually incredibly energy and resource hungry – all the lighting, air conditioning and elaborate stands designed to catch your eye. When you shop online, often your order will often be fulfilled via a warehouse that doesn’t have all the glitzy gimmicks and fixtures.

Additionally, sometimes warehouses are bypassed altogether. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon’s Green Design Institute found buying online from one of the USA’s major e-tailers resulted in 35 percent less energy consumption and carbon dioxide emissions than the traditional retail model. This was due to the products being shipped directly from the online merchant’s distribution partners to customers; skipping first going to a warehouse and then the store before they get to the end consumer.

Greener products, more choices
While many supermarkets are now stocking more environmentally friendly lines, some products just don’t seem to be carried yet  – you can usually find these online. The world of online shopping also gives you wider access to smaller businesses run by very environmentally conscious people who are genuinely striving to make a difference - it’s great to support these folks rather than the shareholders of big-box stores all the time.

Product research
Even if you don’t like the idea of purchasing something sight unseen; the Internet can save you a great deal of time, money and resources by doing your initial research online. For example, looking to buy an energy efficient washing machine? You can read bundles of reviews posted online by people who have purchased the brands and models you’re interested in. The Internet helps you to make a more informed purchase decision on green products; rather than just relying on an in-store sales person’s knowledge.

Online shopping safety
I’ve been buying stuff online for so long, it’s second nature to me; but I do realize there are still quite a few people  very apprehensive about ecommerce; and it’s understandable given some of the stories you read in the press about credit card numbers being stolen and identity theft.
However, the sad fact is that even if you only use your credit card offline; your credit card numbers are in the systems of the stores where you use it and those systems are connected to the Internet – and more often than not that’s how hackers get the details.
Still, it does always pay to be cautious when shopping online – here are some quick tips:
- Don’t be dazzled by low prices; some sites are merely fronts and will grab your money and run. Check into the company, see what others have been saying about them. Look for a physical address and phone number.
- Check for a privacy policy so you know what the merchant will do with your details
- Read any terms of service carefully before proceeding with a transaction
- Using credit cards is actually one of the safest forms of payment as in most countries,  your liability for an unauthorized charge is limited to $50 – $100. If a merchant doesn’t deliver the goods, or the goods are defective or misrepresented, you can also issue a chargeback via your bank – and the chargeback process is heavily weighted in the consumer’s favor.
- Before providing your credit card details, ensure the page the form is on is SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) protected. SSL encrypts data during transmission, to thwart anyone from intercepting it. You can tell if a page has SSL protection as the web address of the checkout form page will start with https:// instead of http:// and check to see if a small locked padlock appears either at the bottom right of your web browser or in the address bar area.
- If you need to create an account with the online store, ensure you use a strong password; one with at least 8 characters and not a common word or name.
Online shopping is fun, there’s nothing like the thrill of hunting for (and finding) a bargain. While hyperconsumption is never a good thing, responsible shopping online can reduce the environmental impact of the goods you purchase.

Michael Bloch
Green Living Tips.com