Conscious Carnivorism = Making Meat in Labs??

31 05 2008

It sounds so sci-fi…but this article from slate.com suggests that the way to be a conscious eater is not to necessarily be a vegetarian, but to hope for a future where scientists generate meat products in labs, eliminating the pesky need for methane/carbon dioxide producing animals.

It’s an interesting concept, especially when many people would never choose vegetarianism as a lifestyle and when, as the article says, “creating a pound’s worth of beef releases the same amount of greenhouses gases—the equivalent of 36.4 pounds of carbon dioxide—as driving a car 155 miles at 50 miles per hour. And that’s an underestimate of the industry’s total impact, since the study didn’t account for emissions from farm equipment or the fuel expended on transporting product from killing floor to supermarket.”

Totally sounds unappetizing, but I’ll bet you people said the airplane sounded unappetizing back in when it was first invented, right?!
Link to Slate article on Making Meat in Labs




Organic Plant Sale This Weekend May 17 & 18 at Kilbourne Park

13 05 2008

This weekend at Kilbourne Park (3501 N. Kilbourne Ave, just west of Milwaukee Ave and Addison St) from 10 am to 2 pm there will be an amazing sale of organic seedlings…veggies, herbs, and flowers.

In the words of the Chicago Park District Website:

“Customers can expect more than 150 varieties of open-pollinated tomatoes, such as Aunt Ruby’s German Green Tomato, Copia, Green Zebra, and Black Cherry . There is a limited supply of tomatoes, so gardeners are encouraged to stop by early.The Kilbourn Park Organic Greenhouse accepts payment for plants by cash and check only.

On Wednesday, May 21 from 6 – 7:30 pm, the Kilbourn Organic Greenhouse will host Gardening Basics: Free Question Answer session by the Master Gardeners of CookCountyChicagoUniversity of Illinois Extension. Bring your questions and come to this evening’s discussion such as; how to plant, when to plant, fertilizing, composting, watering, mulching. We will have several Master Gardeners available to answer your gardening questions. This program is sponsored by Master Gardeners of Cook County Chicago, a program of the University of Illinois Extension.

Click here to visit the Chicago Park District Website




“Smart Home”–Green and High Tech at the Museum of Science and Industry

13 05 2008

The exhibit of the “home of the future,” a high tech and eco-friendly home designed to fit on an urban lot opened last week at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, and I had the good fortune of working in the gardens on opening day!

I wasn’t supposed to, but I snuck in the house on a break from my volunteer shift, and I tell you what…if I go missing anytime soon, it’s because I’m living in one of the upstairs closets of this chic eco-wonder.

With sensitive solar panelling, beautiful rooftop gardens containing succulents, a grill that uses the sun to cook items, an exterior that is virtually maintenance free…with shower tiles made of recycled glass, an energy system that generates more energy than it uses, a water reclamation system, and the fact that no trees were cut down for the structure of the home…this house is a high tech, heavenly haven of green living.

Sure, sure, not all of us can afford the $450,000 to $500,000 it would cost to put one of these over our heads, but it’s chock full of inspiration for one’s own home!

Out in the edible gardens right now are the early season veggies and plant like lettuce, bok choy, chives, and apparently I was the last person to learn that pansies are edible (as a sweet tasting garnish)! As the seasons change, more edible goodies will be added to the garden, which also includes several types of composting bins (one with worms), a rain barrel for watering the garden, and Earth Boxes, which many people enjoy with success, especially for gardens with not much space. Please come and visit us over at the Smart House!

Here’s a link with a video of the house just before opening day:

ABC News Video of the Smart Home




Dr. Hauschka and His Magic Nontoxic Makeup!

13 05 2008

After scouring the internet for endless hours, researching what make up was the best and least toxic, again and again I came across the brand name Dr. Hauschka.

(If you don’t know about the horrible chemicals that mainstream makeup companies are encouraging women to spread on their faces and bodies, check out my other post about Toxic Makeup, with links for further reading.)

I had first tried Zuzu brand eye makeup that I bought at Whole Foods, and though I liked the mascara, the eyeliner was horrible! An hour after application it was smeared all over my lids and down my cheeks.

The other day I saw that Whole Foods had started carrying Dr. Hauschka cosmetics, and though the eyeliner cost a small fortune (well, it’s all relative, but paying close to $30 for eyeliner is a lot for me.) However, I LOVE Dr. Hauschka’s eyeliner!! You can purchase his products cheaper online too.

Here’s a link to the ingredient list of Dr. Hauschka’s products.

Check out the website, and stop spreading toxic sludge on your face!

www.drhauschka.com




A Classy Trashy Look?

13 05 2008

This is a pretty interesting little article on cnn.com about designers turning trash into fashion. I think the funniest part is where it mentions Target objecting to the re-use of their plastic shopping bag on the Timbuk2 recycled bag. So, they reject to the use of their plastic bags for others’ profit, but what steps are they taking to recycle their own bags? The only good thing about Target plastic bags is that they’re more durable that grocery store plastic bags so you can re-use them, but the amount of plastic bags I see in trees on a daily basis makes me nauseous.

http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/05/13/trashy.fashion/index.html

MIAMI, Florida (CNN) — Fashion designers are giving new life to worthless candy wrappers, newspapers and plastic bags; turning trash into trendy tote bags, purses and jewelry.

 

 

 

art.timbuk2.jpg

 

Target stores objected to this Timbuk2 purse which included plastic bags with its bull’s-eye logo.

 

From “post-consumer and industrial waste” comes durable, funky accessories reportedly worn by celebrities such as Lindsay Lohan, Cameron Diaz and Petra Nemcova.

One self-described eco-fashion label, Ecoist, has partnered with Coca-Cola, Luna Bar, and Aveda to create handbags made from misprinted and discontinued packaging.

“We tap into that source of waste because it is reliable and unfortunately it’s abundant,” said Ecoist co-founder Jonathan Marcoschamer. “We believe that for the next few years there’s going to be a significant amount.”

How about 7.6 billion tons of waste? That’s how much trash American companies toss each year, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

During the past four years, Ecoist said, it has sold more than 100,000 accessories created by its designers in Peru and Miami, Florida. The bags — some of them one-of-a-kind — are priced from about $30 for smaller versions to about $180 for larger ones.

“For now, we’re an immediate solution for many of these companies to utilize waste for something that’s creative and promotes environmental awareness,” said Marcoschamer.

 

Ecoist isn’t alone. Katherine Rasmussen, owner of the label Reiter8, creates totes from recycled boat sails. Nicola Freegard and Robin Janson, the design team behind Vy&Elle, have recycled 100 tons of vinyl billboard ads to create wallets, bags and a variety of other products. Another designer, Anna Built, has opted to create jewelry from recycled tin cans.

But it’s not always easy being green. Timbuk2, a company famous for its messenger bags, has encountered resistance in its attempt to produce totes made from discarded plastic bags.

The idea seemed feasible when Timbuk2 formed a partnership with RootPhi, which developed a machine capable of bonding plastic bags together. The machine, called the Lamitron, allowed them to produce a new fabric while maintaining the visual details of the original plastic bag.

The timing seemed appropriate; San Francisco had banned the use of plastic bags, and other cities worldwide were considering similar initiatives.

Despite a following of some 3,000 potential customers on the Timbuk2 Web site, the bags are unlikely to be sold any time soon, if at all. The companies have encountered legal and technical hiccups in their efforts to mass produce the bags. “Everyone is afraid to be the large-scale manufacturer, to stick their toe in the water. It’s a risk and a cost issue,” says Doug Patt, co-founder of RootPhi.

Tinbuk2 also found that, while trash may no longer have an owner, logos on trash still do. Target sent Timbuk2 a cease and desist letter last September when they discovered that some Lamitron bags contained the company’s bull’s-eye design. RootPhi and Timbuk2 scrambled to identify and remove the offending bags from its limited collection of prototypes.

“We encourage and promote recycling efforts, including ones that use our recycled bags,” said Target in a written statement to CNN. “However, in this particular case we believed that the prominent use of our bull’s-eye design mark implied a sponsorship or affiliation with Timbuk2 that did not exist at that time.” Target said Timbuk2 has cooperated.

Perry Klebahn, Timbuk2’s CEO, acknowledges that Target wasn’t technically wrong. “The onus was on us to talk to Target and get them to say OK, in this particular case, to grant us a license. If we really are going to make use of this, we should be responsible as the manufacturer.”

However, the initial draw for Timbuk2 was the possibility that it could simultaneously clean up neighborhoods and satisfy a market demand for highly localized and personalized eco-products. “What’s great here is that no two bags are the same… What if you could roll into a town and make artifacts that have a local flavor?” Klebahn said.

His vision was that one day anyone could drop off their used shopping bags at Timbuk2 and receive a customized tote bag a few weeks later. For now, the masses will have to wait.

Eco-fashion has certainly proven it has enough caché in the fashion world. Last year, British designer Anya Hindmarch created an instant eco-fad with her $15, limited edition “I Am Not A Plastic Bag” bag. The cotton bags quickly sold out in London and New York — with hundreds of people lining up for them. The bags even fetched $400 on eBay and spawned a dizzying number of knock-offs.

Atlanta, Georgia, boutique owner Joyce Justicz said she doesn’t think consumers buy eco-fashion exclusively for environmental reasons. “They buy them because they’re cute and it’s an added bonus,” she said.

 

 

Will the trend last? Yair Marcoschamer, another Ecoist co-founder, is optimistic.

“Businesses and individuals have realized that if something isn’t done [about the environment], this is going to have a profound effect on each of our lives,” he said. “Consuming products that are fair-trade, that are environmentally responsible, is our responsibility as consumers.”




Nutrias, Nutrias, Everywhere…

15 02 2008

My latest obsession is the (I think) adorable Nutria, with its fat little body and Cheetos-orange chompers. They can grow to be two feet long, three and a half feet if you count their tail!

Nutrias, as you may well know, were brought to North America from South America by furriers. During a ferocious storm, some of the nutrias escaped their cages and have been proliferating across the continent ever since. Although some people claim nutrias make wonderful, docile pets, and others claim they make for delicious bbq, most consider them an “invasive species” as their ravenous appetites and lack of natural predators cause them to destroy many wetlands and river banks.

All I know is…if I didn’t live in a tiny Chicago apartment, I would totally want one! Read this one fella’s blog about his nutria pets, it’s too cute: Riverlogue

For more nutria info:

Nutria.com

Wikipedia on Nutrias

National Invasive Species Information Center




Product Review: Burt’s Bees Soap Bark and Chamomile Deep Cleansing Cream

8 02 2008

So, until I perfect homemade recipes for soaps and shampoos and lotions and such, I’m testing out natural products as a way to make my life more chemical free. I decided to post reviews here, so you can find unbiased details on products for your face and body.

First, a fun fact: Did you know Burt’s Bees was bought out by Clorox?

And now, onto the review of Burt’s Bees Soap Bark and Chamomile Deep Cleansing Cream.

Burt's Bees Deep Cleansing Cream

I currently use Cetaphil to wash my face, and I love it! But I want to use a more natural product, and I love Burt’s Bees…

The Deep Cleansing Cream though…I didn’t like it as a face wash. It was ok. The cream had an invigorating tingly mint thing going for it, but I felt like it didn’t fully wash off my face. In the interest of not being wasteful, I used up the rest of the container as a shaving cream, and for that, it was fine. I would probably not buy the Deep Cleansing Cream again.




Less Carbon Guilt for Passengers and Pilots?

8 02 2008

My mom is a pilot, and has offered recently to give me some flying lessons. As exciting as that sounds, I have had mixed feelings about the pollution and carbon dioxide created by flying as well as the fossil fuels used in flights. Thus, I find minor relief in an article such as this from the BBC news website, where they talk about forest destruction being more of a climate change culprit than flying. So, for all you pilots and passengers out there, why not check the article out, and plant some trees and support the carbon offset program of your choice to undo some of your carbon damage?

Here’s a reprint of the article, with the web address where it originally appeared:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7201114.stm

The aviation industry has become public enemy number one for environmental groups, says Martin Wright. But, he argues in this week’s Green Room, they should focus their efforts on “the real elephant in the room” - forest destruction.

While we’re agonising over our plane-addiction, we’re missing the real ‘elephant in the living room’ of climate change: forest destruction

Ask some vaguely green people what’s the single biggest thing they can do to tackle climate change, and most will respond with a guilty smile: “yes, I know, I should stop flying.”

A few brave, selfless souls do just that. But the rest of us are far too used to cheap, quick getaways to kick the habit completely.

There’s nothing like a few months of unremitting English mizzle to soften the resolve of the most committed “no flyers”.

Environmentalists will always struggle to persuade people to eschew pleasure in favour of the planet. After all, no-one likes being told off for having a good time. Any argument that says, in effect: “save the planet - stay at home in the wet” is hardly going to win hearts and minds.

Sure, there’s always the slow train to Provence. But like so much of the Slow Movement (food; travel; life, even), it still reeks of privilege. It’s more expensive, it takes (and lasts) longer.

There could be all kinds of ways - from subsidies to sabbaticals - of making it more accessible for those whose only hope of a great escape is an Easyjet south. But for the moment, life in the slow lane is still a velvety green luxury for the favoured few.

So until such time as fuel prices go through the roof, or draconian caps on carbon stifle the market, air travel will remain a seductive option for all but the deepest of greens.

It is already the largest single source of carbon emissions after energy, contributing up to 10 times as much as aviation.

The Stern Report, no less, warned that rainforest destruction alone would, in the next four years, release more carbon into the atmosphere than every flight from the dawn of aviation until 2025.

Burning forests produces a particularly nasty double whammy of warming. As they burn, they send vast swathes of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. And once they’re gone, they can’t soak up the carbon from industry, cars and power plants.

But despite all this, people get far more exercised over the evils of aviation than they ever do over forest loss.

This is partly because aviation looms large on those instant “carbon calculators”, designed to give a rough-and-ready guide to an individual’s impact.

Deforestation, for the most part, doesn’t, as it’s virtually impossible to quantify individual responsibility for forest loss - unless you happen to be a timber trader or a palm oil planter.

But it’s also because the forests are disappearing in “faraway countries”: the chainsaws and fires aren’t exactly on our doorstep, so it’s easy to believe it’s nothing to do with us - and there’s nothing we can do about it, either.

This is bitterly ironic, because politically and economically it would be much easier to make massive reductions in deforestation than to achieve similar cuts in air travel. And in terms of curbing climate change, that would be massively more effective, too.

So if we could just persuade people to be as excited about saving forests as they feel guilty about flying, then maybe we’d achieve something.

That means making forest conservation everyone’s business - literally. And one of the best ways of doing so is to make the future of forests worth investing in - not just for the planet, but for your own pocket, too.

After all, you don’t need complex technical fixes to stop forest destruction. You just have to make trees worth more standing than felled. And with the fate of civilisation cradled in their canopy, they should carry quite a price tag.

On paper, it’s a no brainer. By any rational calculation, forests can yield better returns when kept intact than when cleared.

Take their role in protecting watersheds, for example, or their value as a source of fruit, nuts, shade-grown coffee, game and medicinal herbs - even, in some cases, a genuinely sustainable source of high-quality timber.

That’s been the basis for a range of initiatives known as “payments for ecological services”.

In essence, these are deals between forest communities and “buyers”, who benefit from the forest remaining in place - such as towns and cities downstream, or the owners of mines or hydro plants, all of whom depend on the water supply that the forest ensures.

Cool Earth, a charity set up by businessman Johan Eliasch, allows individuals to buy parcels of rainforest - not for their own profit, but to hold them in trust on behalf of local communities, so taking them out of the clutches of the loggers.

It’s an intriguing scheme, but it’s still driven by charity, not business.

Sound investment

But once you introduce forests’ ability to store carbon into the equation, then the balance sheet really starts to shift in their favour.

According to one recent study, most ventures which drive forest destruction - whether logging or for agriculture - generate around $5 (£2.50) for every tonne of carbon released as a result of the forest loss.

Europeans are typically paying up to seven times that amount to offset the same amount of carbon.

And as emissions trading takes off, so the carbon price will rise. One estimate puts the value of greenhouse gas storage in some forests at a healthy $2,200 (£1,100) per hectare.

And it’s that which is pricking the interest of the financial markets. Invest in a forest now, and you can expect its value to appreciate substantially over the years - especially since, after the recent UN climate conference in Bali, forest owners can expect to “sell” their benefits on the emerging global carbon markets.

All of a sudden, it opens up the prospect of massive investments from pension funds, drawn to the long-term security which standing forests can provide.

Halving forest destruction by 2030, says the Stern Report, would cost around £10-£15 billion a year - that’s roughly the same as we spend on alcohol in Britain alone. It is, in other words, a sum which should be readily available - as long as there’s the prospect of a decent return.

The Global Canopy Programme - an alliance of forest scientists - is urging the adoption of a global market in forest carbon credits to help unleash a tide of investment.

Forum for the Future and others are working on schemes for forest-backed bonds; some are predicting the launch of Forest PEPs. Such is the potential value in keeping forests intact that even those masters of the dark arts of finance, the hedge funds, are starting to sniff around.

Microchips inserted in selected trunks can report instantly if they’re felled - and then track the timber, electronically fingering everyone involved

There are all manner of pitfalls, of course. For some, it smacks of “carbon colonialism”.

Others warn that such schemes will inevitably favour wealthy landowners, who can cope with all the complex legal processes involved, rather than forest peoples themselves.

Then there’s the question of proving that a particular stretch of forest, which may lie in a remote, hard-to-monitor area, really has survived intact.

But these are not insuperable obstacles. Investors don’t have to buy up forests to make a return on them; they merely have to ensure they share in the proceeds of their conservation over times.

So they can for example rent, or lease, an interest in the forests from local communities, who are in any case best placed to safeguard the assets - and so can reasonably expect to share in the profits, too.

On the monitoring side, satellite mapping is now sophisticated enough to zero in to the scale of individual trees, providing pinpoint, 24-hour surveillance. Microchips inserted in selected trunks can report instantly if they’re felled - and then track the timber, electronically fingering everyone involved.

So in a few years’ time, you could sit at home on the sofa, and, via your laptop, check up on the health of “your” patch of forest, in real time.

Result? The world will have a million or more eagle-eyed forest monitors, casting a protective eye over the green canopy of their investments. (And only occasionally, you’d hope, needing to utter the anguished cry: “Oi! That’s my pension plan going up in smoke!”)

The logic is simple; the implementation will be anything but. But if we wait till we’ve a perfect system, we’ll be wasting precious time; time in which thousands of square miles of forest will be irrevocably lost.

Martin Wright is editor (at large) of Green Futures Magazine




Purchasing Lye Online for Homemade Soap Making

29 01 2008

Lye is an unavoidable element of making soaps, like it or not.

Back in the pioneer days, soap was made from animal fats and a lye created from ashes. Because lye can be used to make meth,  I wasn’t able to find it in any stores in Chicago, but it’s easy to order online!

Here are two places to check out:

Lehman’s www.lehmans.com
Lehman’s is where I ordered a big honkin’ container of lye. They shipped quickly, and I didn’t have to fill out any waiver forms like other websites require you to.

Camden Grey www.camdengrey.com
This is where you can buy some of the cheapest 2 pound containers of lye, which is great since lye is so toxic and dangerous to store (especially if you have pets and children). The only reason I didn’t order from them is because I didn’t feel like going to Kinko’s and faxing over a waiver form.




Cleaning Toilets Naturally, Without Toxic Chemicals

20 01 2008

I recently purchased the book Green This! Volume One: Greening Your Cleaning by Deirdre Imus. It’s filled with information about the harmful chemicals in our cleaning products and natural alternatives.

Cleaning Your Toilet Naturally

Imus says all you need to use for a disinfected toilet is white vinegar. Simply pour one cup in the back of the toilet, and let it sit for thirty minutes before flushing.

Pour vinegar into the bowl and scrub around too.

Be Sure to Clean Your Toilet Brush!

Think of all the nastiness that collects on your toilet brush…gross, right? Although she recommends replacing your toilet brush every six months, I think if you just follow her instructions to clean the brush with hot water, soap and vinegar, it will be fine, and be less wasteful too.







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