Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Thought for the Day
Nothing will ever be accomplished if all possible objections must be first overcome.
— Samuel Johnson
10 Reasons to Become a Second Hand Rose (or Roger)
Buying second hand is a major way to reduce your carbon footprint on the earth. It is the REUSE in the green mantra "Reduce, Reuse, Recycle".
- Buying used merchandise helps to reduce waste in both the manufacture of new products and the disposal of old products. Any used and unwanted furniture, household items and clothing that is reused will not have to be manufactured and will stay out of landfills longer, toxic sites which contribute to global warming and green house gases.
- By shopping for second hand goods in charity, thrift, consignment, vintage and antique stores, you can help to support a charity or a small entrepreneurial business.
- Second hand costs less than new items. A find in a thrift store, charity shop or flea market costs only a fraction of it's original new price especially on high-end items.
- You can get much better quality items and pay low prices for used high-end designer items that you may never have been able to afford if purchased new.
- Shopping for second hand items is just plain fun. You never know what you'll find and the thrill of finding something amazing that costs next to nothing is much better than shopping for inferior quality new goods at the mega mall.
- There is a huge choice of second hand items available from a variety of venues including FreeCycle (PhillyFreeCycle for locals), Craigs List, flea markets, charity shops, vintage boutiques, antique shops and swap parties so there is no reason why you won't be able to find exactly what you want.
- Second hand household items and clothes are more original than the typical items that you buy in the mall, you are a lot less likely to see someone owning the same thing when you buy second hand.
- Buying second hand allows for buying larger quantities which you may not have been able to afford. You can come home with a huge bagful of back-to-school clothes from a thrift store for the same price as 2 new outfits from the children's boutique at mall.
- You often run across vintage hard to find items items in thrift stores that are no longer manufactured or available. I once found a wooden clothesline reel in a thrift store after searching half the city for one. The guys at the hardware stores said "they don't make them anymore, last time we carried one was about 5 years ago". Now I know to preserve and keep the one I found used because they are becoming scarce.
- You can very often find excellent one-of-a-kind original artwork at thrift stores done by students or professional artists for under $10 already framed. I once found an framed etching for $8 only to later discover it was by a well known Philadelphia artist and worth over $500!
Buying second hand is not only good for the environment, it is also good for your wallet and your eco-conscience , so it's a win-win situation any way you look at it.
Sunday, September 27, 2009
Thought for the Day
At long as people will accept crap, it will be financially profitible to dispense it.
— Dick Cavett
Friday, September 25, 2009
The Story of Stuff
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Thought for the Day
— Voltaire
Green Skeletons in Our Closets
- ask our dry cleaner if we can return the hangers for their reuse
- donate them to thrift stores who always need hangers
- find a recycling center that takes steel
All synthetic clothing (nylon, polyester, etc) is made from petroleum and most of us don't need to be educated on the political, social, economic and environmental impact of our use of and addiction to petroleum. Large amounts of crude oil are used in the manufacturing process of synthetic fibers, releasing deadly chemicals into the air, including hydrogen chlorine gas. Further adding insult to injury, these synthetic clothes, when discarded, will sit for hundreds of years in landfills. Cotton clothing, while constructed of a natural biodegradable material, has it's own downside with 50 million pounds of pesticides including cyanide, dicofol, naled, propargite, and trifluralin, all known cancer-causing chemicals being used each year to grow it. These pesticides run off into our waterways and cause genetic mutations and death to marine and animal life. So how can we lessen the environmental impact of the textiles we use?
- Be gentle to the clothes we already own to make them last longer
- Choose quality over quantity. A bargain blouse is not a bargain for the wallet
or the environment if after 2 washings it falls apart and ends up in the trash
due to inferior materials or workmanship - Buy from consignment and thrift shops
- Opt for organic cotton and naturally grown plant based fabrics such as hemp, bamboo and linen or silk, wool or recycled materials
- Donate usable clothing to charities or sell them at flea markets or consignment shops and give throw rugs, towels and blankets to animal shelters
- Reuse tattered clothing for household cleaning, painting, car washing rags
The two major ingredients in
combination, are extremely toxic petroleum-based chemicals that can cause numerous short and long-term health effects, including cancer, blood, kidney, and liver problems and even death. Add to that the environmental impact of manufacturing and disposing of these poisons and its easy to see we need to try safer alternatives such as:
- Store woolens in a cedar chest or cedar lined closet
- Launder clothes before storing because moth larvae are attracted to perspiration, dandruff, hair, food
and beverage stains - Store clothing in airtight chests or containers
- Airing clothing occasionally in sunlight and wind will reduce larvae on fabrics
- Avoid storing clothing in dark humid areas like attics
- Store clothes with sachets of nontoxic herbs and woods such as cedar, cloves, rosemary, eucalyptus, lavender, lemon, sweet woodruff, cinnamon sticks and bay leaves
- Pheromone traps are available for some species of moths. Place traps in closets and other areas where clothes
are stored
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Thought for the Day
Green on the Airwaves
Focus Earth with Bob Woodruff
Living with Ed
Stuff Happens
Renovation Nation
G Word
Greenovate
FIT TV (channel 261) has:
Every Saturday morning at 11 am Excellent radio program about organic gardening with Rodale Press editor Mark McGrath who answers all your organic gardening questions.
Living on Earth
Every Saturday morning at 6 am Sound Journalism for the Planet; hosted by Steve Curwood Living on Earth offers a podcast feed of the current show.
Humankind: Voices of Hope and Humanity
Every Saturday morning at 5:30 am Subjects: Protecting Our Planet; Simplifying Our Lives; Social Conscience; Taking Care of Yourself (w/herbs, relaxation etc); Young Voices; Meaningful Media and much, much more.
Monday, September 21, 2009
Gloom and Doom?....NOT
If it seems like the articles I've been posting are filled with gloom and doom, keep in mind these were originally written to educate the public in a blue collar working class neighborhood of the urgency needed in adopting a more sustainable lifestyle. Limited to 750 words, they had to be hard hitting and cut to the chase, shock, in fact. But once the scary education is over, the fun begins! Adopting a new green lifestyle can be quite an adventure as you will see when I begin to offer some of my non-toxic homemade cleaning "recipes". Oh and let's not forget about Vermiculture (worm composting).....red wigglers under the kitchen sink anyone?
Thought for the Day
— Albert Einstein
Chemical Soup
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Thought for the Day
The Case for Going Organic
• According to the EPA over 400 chemicals have been detected in human tissue; 48 were found in fatty tissue, 40 in breast milk, 73 in the liver and over 250 in the blood
• Over 600,000 tons of herbicides, insecticides, fertilizers, fungicides, and other chemicals are used annually to produce cotton in the 6 largest cotton producing states
• 700 million pounds of agricultural pesticides were applied in the United States in 2001.
• The most acutely toxic pesticide registered by the E.P.A. is aldicarb. Aldicarb has been detected in the GROUNDWATER in 27 US states
• Children whose homes and gardens are treated with pesticides have 6.5 times greater risk of leukemia than children living in untreated environments
• Pesticide poisoning remains a daily reality among agricultural workers in developing countries, where up to 14% of all occupational injuries in the agricultural sector and 10% of all fatal injuries can be attributed to pesticides.
• In 1995, pesticide-contaminated runoff from cotton fields killed at least 240,000 fish in Alabama
It has been estimated that pesticides unintentionally kill at the very least 67 million birds in the U.S. each year
• Approximately 300,000 farm workers suffer acute pesticide poisoning each year just in the United States
• In 1996, approximately 250 farm workers in California were accidentally sprayed with a mixture of highly toxic pesticides when a crop dusting plane applied the chemicals to a cotton field adjacent to a field where workers were harvesting grapes. Twenty-two workers were rushed to hospitals with symptoms of acute pesticide poisoning.
• We accidentally kill about 25,000 to 100,000 species of insects, plants and animals every year with pesticides and other toxic farm chemicals
Saturday, September 19, 2009
Thought for the Day
— Aldous Huxley
My Amateur Adventures in Journalism
In case anyone's wondering, the following "The Non-Consumerism" and "Green Begins at Home" posts are the half page articles I wrote which appeared in my local neighborhood newspaper. Since they were written by me, pro bono on behalf of a neighborhood non-profit organization and printed as a courtesy by the paper for that organization, I am (fairly) certain they belong to me and I am allowed to publish them on my blog. However, if I suddenly disappear and there are no more posts from me for, say, oh a week, then PLEASE, friends, family, neighbors and dedicated groupies, band together to scrape together the bail money because I will probably have been hauled away by "the man" for copyright infringement.
Non-Consumerism: A Key Element To Green Living
America is the largest consumer of manufactured goods in the world and while we constitute only 5% of the world's population we consume a whopping 24% of the world's energy. In the United States, there are more cars on the road than there are licensed drivers. Cars and other forms of transportation account for nearly 30 percent of world energy use and 95 percent of global oil consumption.
Most of us have accumulated a mind boggling amount of STUFF. Rendered danger zones to enter at our own risk, our garages, basements, attics and closets are stuffed to the brim with camping equipment, grills, lawn mowers, old, broken and extra furniture, bikes, children's and adult's toys and games, gardening supplies, lumber, tools, broken items waiting to be repaired and boxes still unpacked from our last move (because we can’t find space to put the stuff). Items that at one point in time were considered luxuries such as televisions, cell phones, computers and air conditioning are now viewed as necessities or deserved rewards for all our hard work and all the stress we endure. The quantity of natural resources used in the production of our purchases and the resulting quantity of trash we throw away is staggering.
Some of us shop and purchase as a hobby, as a social event, out of boredom, to relieve depression, to escape bad situations at home, to keep up with our neighbors, friends and family's lifestyles and a host of other excuses. To finance these purchases, we are incurring debt, mostly through credit cards, and working longer hours to pay for our chosen consumer lifestyles, resulting in spending less time with our families and friends and at other worthwhile activities. Worldwatch has reported that worldwide annual expenditures for cosmetics total $18 billion while the estimate for annual expenditures required to eliminate hunger and malnutrition is $19 billion. Hmmm, let’s see…makeup or eradicating world hunger, decisions, decisions.
We have been trained to think by Madison Avenue advertisers that we want and need that bigger, better, faster, newer product and those of us who don't own them are somehow out of touch. A case in point involves my own profession, graphic design. The MAC computer is the standard in the industry tool of the trade and no graphic artist worth their salt would own one that wasn't "maxed out" with the largest hard drive, memory and processing speed. As a result, a large number of us graphics professionals rush out to buy the newest MAC as soon as its release is announced by Apple, along with the corresponding updated software, to the tune of a minimum of $1,900 up to $3,500. It doesn't matter that we bought we our "old" computers less than 2 years earlier or that it is still in prime working order. It's just the thing to do, it’s a new toy and we need (WANT) it. This mentality spills over into all our lives. When TV stations recently went digital, many of us used that as an excuse to run out and buy that big flat screen we've been wanting, paying no mind to the fact our current TVs were still working perfectly and only needed a government supplemented converter box to function. Shortly after digital was implemented, a walk around the neighborhoods showed these discarded TVs sitting by the curbs destined for the landfill.
Ways in which we can reduce our consumption is to wait a year (or two or three) to upgrade our computers, wait until the TV breaks down before buying another one, repair items we already own instead of buying new, shop at and donate to thrift and consignment shops to give goods another chance before they end up in the landfill, buy vintage and antique clothing and furniture made of better quality fabrics and solid materials which have already stood the test of time, instead of buying that new particleboard or plastic treasure we’ve been eyeing, an item almost guaranteed never to remain intact long enough to be purchased by future generations at any antique or thrift store.
We need to change our way of thinking to view non-consumerism not so much as a sacrifice to be endured, but rather as a way to provide a more environmentally moral higher quality of life using the least amount of raw materials, natural resources, energy and waste possible, while at the same time dramatically altering the way we produce, consume and dispose of those goods we do use.
Friday, September 18, 2009
Green, Like Charity, Begins at Home
1) Buy an old fashioned refillable fountain pen, they're fun to use and add an elegant, artistic flair to your handwriting
Excess Packaging:
The above ideas are just a very small sampling of ways to reduce our use of disposable and excessively packaged products. Let's look around with a fresh eye at the products we use that get thrown away and think of more environmentally and financially responsible alternatives.
An excellent web video that will further stimulate your imagination and resolve is the Story of Stuff, which exposes the connections between the stuff we use and a huge number of environmental and social issues, and calls us together to create a more sustainable and just world.