Sunday, December 30, 2007

Wave Energy


Wind and solar and wave, oh my! What will they come up with next?
Wave energy (aka hydrokinetic energy) was even predicted in 1908 to be the energy source of the future. Wave energy, however, has not been fully studied; the large, delicate, expensive buoys concern fishers who don't want to run into them, and nobody knows what the environmental effects will be... least of all Sonoma County residents responding to this November agenda item.

Hydrokinetic energy works by bouncing magnets in the rise and fall of ocean waves. If I had stayed in science classes I might be able to explain this more clearly and correctly. Apparently, 0.2% of the energy wasted in waves could power the entire world if harvested.

In related news, Google announced its intent to invest "hundreds of millions" of dollars in renewable energy to spark an energy revolution. And the ED's name is Larry Brilliant. Nice.

Saturday, December 15, 2007

42 Ways to Trim Your Holiday Wasteline



From Use Less Stuff comes 42 Ways to Trim Your Holiday Wasteline. While some border on impolite (turning down the heat before guests arrive to feast instead on their body heat?), some suggestions make sense - don't throw away leftovers, compost your tree, etc. Since Americans trash 25% more stuff from Thanksgiving to New Years, take a look at how you can throw away less.

Friday, December 14, 2007

EcoSherpa


Canadian-run EcoSherpa was launched in July 2006.
"The way we see it," say the EcoSherpas, "green alternatives need to be readily available, easy to implement & understand, and they need to be effective!"

Amen, eh?

In gossip, does anybody think maybe Garden Girl and Compost Guy should date?
Heeeee.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Green Business


The Green Business Program, which certifies businesses based on water, energy, waste and pollution prevention work above compliance, actually began in Sonoma County. W00t!

It was a Haz Mat program run by a firefighter to reward regulated businesses such as printers, auto shops, and wineries for not dumping their crap in the rivers (more complex, but that's how I like to think of it). Since beginning in 1996, more than 1,000 businesses have been certified green in the Bay Area. It was expanded and taken up by Associated Bay Area Governments (aptly acronymed "ABAG"), and now all nine Bay Area counties have Green Business programs (Solano and Sonoma are again in pilot phase):

Sonoma
Alameda
Conta Costa
Marin
Napa
San Francisco
San Mateo
Santa Clara
Solano


Monterey, Santa Barbara County, San Diego, Hawaii (and one through the Kona-Kohala Chamber of Commerce), Arizona, Alaska, New Mexico, Idaho, Montana, Michigan, Oregon, Georgia, South Carolina, Vermont, King County, WA, the City of Sacramento, the City of Kirkland, WA, the City of Boulder, CO, the City of Orlando, and even Cocoa Beach, Fla. have also sprouted their own programs... soon to be joined by programs in exciting locales such as LA or New York, I hope!

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Green MSN

On October 30, MSN launched a new green channel: GreenMSN.

GreenMSN is a "one-stop online resource for the latest environmental news, exploring the issues and taking action."

RSS! News! Video! All with the credibility MSN inspires!
*swoon*

Friday, November 16, 2007

Use Less Stuff


Use Less Stuff - pretty self-explanatory! - uses quantitative data to help people reduce their waste.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Produce in Season


As it is wintertime, and the idea that we can eat raspberries all year round is a bit silly, this tool from the government in Victoria, Australia seems like a pretty cool idea. You see a list of produce available in the area, click on it, and then recipes come up.

Here is a pretty guide to seasonal produce from the Food Network.

And here is a Southern California harvest chart.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Green Consumer Reports!

A dream come true! Bust those greenwashers with Green Consumer Reports.


The guide tells you what you should bother buying organic, including baby food, meat, eggs, milk, apples, bell peppers, celery, cherries, imported grapes, nectarines, peaches, pears, potatoes, red raspberries, spinach, and strawberries. It also says not to bother buying organic seafood or cosmetics.

It tells you how many dollars per year you'll save by shutting off the accent lighting (up to $28.65), or unplugging cell phone chargers when not in use (as much as $5.73).

I also tells you what chemicals to avoid when purchasing personal care products.

Monday, November 12, 2007

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch

Okay, so I usually try to keep this blog up-beat, do-able and exciting. Certain parts of environmentalism make good financial and health sense, and I try to focus on those. I don't usually go in for convincing people to be environmentally friendly with fear, doomsday predictions, and fire and brimstone admonishments. But OH MY GOD there is a continent-sized patch of garbage floating around in the middle of the ocean! With all the oil spills happening in the last weeks, one hitting too close to home, it's impossible not to notice a giant, whirling mass of garbage that is "too big to be cleaned up." Greenpeace explains the phenomenon, as does the San Francisco Chronicle.

The good news is, smart people in Kenya are using similar washed-up flotsam to make cool stuff.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Shower Timer

Well ring a bell and make me drool. I thought I was the stubbornest of the untrainable. Even four months of minimal showering in Morocco was not enough to break my junior-high-instilled habit of showering daily. Usually a 10-to-15 minute user, I never thought I could be trained to take a shower in five minutes.


Little did I know.

This amazing little shower timer (stolen from my co-worker's desk.. hi Laura!) has me whipped into shape! The first day felt rushed, but a week later I was squeaky clean with time to spare. And I have more time to read the Chron in the morning!

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Green Apartments in Berkeley

UC Berkeley started a cool thing called The Green Apartment, designed to show how ordinary college students can make their lives more sustainable without investing a lot of effort or money.


"We wanted to give the room a holistic concept, connecting the dots between the things students learn in the classroom and the choices they make in their everyday lives, said Desirae Early, a junior majoring in environmental economics and policy, a Green Campus Program coordinator and a Green Room Committee member.

Also see the Berkeley article and the Chronicle aricle.

This is my favorite quote from the article:
[Jonathan Hu, a sophomore and poli sci major living in the Green Apartments] added that women seem to find environmentally sensitive guys appealing. "I know that whenever I mention I'm part of the Green Apartment, it's always the females who are asking follow-up questions," said Hu.


Also in Berkeley is the beautiful, urban-infill, DOT-decorated Dwight Way.

Friday, November 9, 2007

Sonoma Mountain Village

Today, we held a meeting at a very cool place. Sonoma Mountain Village is a recycled Agilent campus in Rohnert Park, CA.

During the technology boom, 3000 people used to work and relax at this Agilent facility. During the technology bust, those thousands of people were downsized and vacated the campus. The very rich real estate-owning Codding family bought up the plant and brought in focus groups of young and old people. "What would you want if you lived here?" They answered: "A car-free center that has a movie theater, unique houses, and shopping." They are hoping that SMV will become Rohnert Park's downtown city center - which it currently lacks, despite being home to Sonoma State University (part of the Cal-State system).

But enough of the boring history. This place is going to be sweet. It has the second largest solar array in the world (beat only by Google). Codding Steel plans to make pre-fab houses from recycled cars - even better, they make them to each resident's specs, so you don't get the cookie cutter effect where all the houses in a planned neighborhood look the same. The Agilent campus is meticulously designed and people friendly, so it's got good bones for future development. The meeting room (nee Agilent's cafeteria) is bright and airy. "The first model homes should be available for viewing by mid-2008." Squee!

Read about it in the San Francisco Chronicle, or check out the satellite image of the site.

Thursday, November 8, 2007

CFL Recycling

"You're tryin' to make me go to THE-trash, I said
NO NO NO"


So, you are using those quirky, squiggly CFL bulbs to save energy, eh? Good! Like batteries, don't throw them away! It's illegal in California, Maine, Wisconsin, Illinois, Minnesota, Ohio and Indiana because the bulbs contain small amounts of mercury - safe for you even if the bulb breaks, but when tiny amounts of mercury end up collecting in the landfill, nobody is happy.

The good news is, Ikea takes them back. For more information, check out your state here.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Planet Green Blog

My beloved TreeHugger has been bought out, now to be included as a complement to Discovery's new Planet Green channel set to launch early in 2008.


Tips from them include:

The Closet Trick
Turn all the hangers in your closet around so they point towards you. When you take something out and wear it, turn it back around so the hanger points away from you. In six months, go through and re-think everything still on a hanger pointing towards you.

myGreen Spark
Fundraising coupon books for green businesses in SoCal or nationally.

(Note: Sorry November's been a patchy posting month! It's been a patchy internet month. I'll go back and in-fill the dates so you still get your regular dose of green. Apologies for the delay!)

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Green Wine

No, it doesn't come from green grapes. Green wine is what happens when you buy wine locally (even in Michigan, Ohio, and Pennyslvania).


And.. did you know that east coasters pollute less by consuming French wine instead of Californian wine?
Shocking! Shipping can be more eco-friendly than flying, and the United States are big.
This line comes from a study done by Dr. Vino (Dr. Tyler Colman, a wine blogger) and Pablo Paster (metrics specialist). Read more on TreeHugger.

Monday, November 5, 2007

Most People Greener Than You Think

Four out of five people worldwide say they would be willing to change their lifestyle in order to address climate change. Even in the U.S. and China. The BBC says so.

Saturday, November 3, 2007

Hourly Rent-A-Car

Want to get somewhere efficiently, but don't want to deal with the insurance/maintenance/registration/smog check/gasoline/parking costs of owning your own? Now you can! With both mainstream rental companies and newer innovations starting to offer hourly rentals, you'll most likely be able to find something in your own neighborhood.


If you are in the Twin Cities, check out Hour Car.
ZipCar and FlexCar just merged, one in Cambridge, Mass. and one in the Pacific Northwest.

This is a good thing. Cars are huge chunks of metal and electronics, and it's a lot of waste for each person to have their own.

Friday, November 2, 2007

Green Your Apartment

So winter is just around the corner, and most "Green Winter" resources are for homeowners who need to seal their basements up. But what if you want to green up your apartment?


1. Consider composting.
(from Low Impact Living's Green Apartments)
2. Buy bulk food to cut down on packaging.
(from Humboldt State University's "12 Ways to Green Up Your Apartment")
3. Bake, dry hair, cook, and iron in the early morning or late at night when you need the extra heat produced from these activities the most.
(from Apartment Living Think Green)
4. Use your dishwasher, but use it efficiently. It is actually greener than hand washing - it uses 35-37% less energy.
(from Apartment Therapy)
5. Donate your clothes hangers to your local dry cleaner to re-use.
(from Jeff Swett's Ezine Article Tips for Going Green in Your Apartment)
6. Collect grease, even olive oil, and dispose of it in the trash - not in the sink.
(from CHOW's Counter Measures: Ten Ways to Green Your Kitchen)
7. Buy your apartment cat a piece of tree.
(okay, this one from Apartment Therapy is silly)
8. Rent a steam cleaner to remove toxins tracked in from the bottoms of your shoes.
(from LA Green Living)
9. Open your windows to ventilate the toxins out.
(from GreenHomeGuide)
10. Get houseplants! They suck up carbon and filter dust and dirt. Amazing.
(from Cookiemag's Urban Green)

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Discardia and Green Gifts

I would like to submit an agenda item to the County Board of Supervisors declaring Discardia a government holiday. Dinah Sanders, who is the brainparent of Discardia, says, "Discardia is a new holiday. Why do we need a new holiday? Well, not exactly need, not as such, but this is a very good holiday." The next one happens Dec 21-Jan 8.


Discardia is the celebration of stuff-purging. It is the seasonal remedy for Affluenza. It involves:
1. Giving away the stuff you don't like or use.
2. Thinking about ways to buy less in the future.
3. Thinking about ways to give and ask for better gifts. This is especially timely for all you Christmas celebrators and New Years resolution makers out there, as Discardia coincides with Christmas and New Years this year.

The Heifer Project is pretty cool. You can give honeybees and knitting kits and goats.

You can also make stuff, including mix CDs and cookies, or a coupon book for fun things you will do with that person in the future. Check out the other post on Green Holidays for other green gift ideas, or look here at EcoArtware for inspiration!

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Use that computer baby!

So, a public service announcement. Don't be like me. When your laptop breaks, do what you can to fix it instead of buying a new one. It's super hard on the environment to make a new computer.

"'The manufacture of brand new computer models uses more than four times the energy and resources it would take to extend the life of an older machine for another few years,' says Sheila Davis, executive director of the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition" on The Green Guide.



Find information on computer takebacks, visit Computertakeback.com.

Ask Metafilter for ideas for making your old computer last.

Kevin 2.0 has instructions for turning your old laptop hard drive into a USB drive.

Also, check out people's ideas for Old Joel's old laptop, including "Set up the screen saver to scroll the Unabomber's Manifesto, then leave it unattended in the airport. Watch hilarity ensue."

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Once you were waste, now you are disaster relief..

Earthquake! We had an earthquake last night - minor, as it epicentered 2 hours south in San Jose-ish - but it inspired me to offer you the most duh green tip ever.

Take every water bottle you've used once - preferrably glass jars - and fill them back up with potable water. Store them in the back corner of your fridge (or freezer, if they're plastic).



1. Full fridges are easier to keep cool (take less energy).
2. A new use for that old bottle!
3. You'll never notice them.
4. You will have safe drinking water if THE UNTHINKABLE occurs. And I bet no matter where you live, there is some kind of unthinkable that might occur to your water supply, even if it's not an earthquake.

And on that scary doomsday note, I leave you to your filling.

Monday, October 29, 2007

EcoEscape

Oh, Eco Tourism.

EcoEscape is an online green trip planner for travels in the UK.
The International Ecotourism Society (TIES) offers training and resources for sustainable travel
and so does the Nature Conservancy.

Now, I tend to shy away from these things. Maybe it's growing up in Colorado, but I have never had the drive to travel to far away places and look at a mountain or something. Maybe it's a lack of adventurous spirit. Or maybe it's the 1990 trip to Cave of the Winds, where a well-meaning tourguide sternly told our group that we shouldn't touch anything, that our very breathing destroyed the caves a little bit. Sensitive five year old that I was, I tried to hold my breath most of the tour... aaaaaand suddenly you have a very unhappy five year old.
I still remember a guide in the Sahara desert complaining about the Czech tourists throwing water bottles straight into the sand. Cool to see the desert, but even careful me probably had a huge impact on the environment just by living there. Still, I'm happy I'll die having seen the Sahara. It's all a balance I guess.

On another note, the Lapa Rios Ecolodge in Costa Rica is powered by pig feces.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Green Dishwashing

My mom bemoaned the stinky perfumedness of every dish washing liquid soap she'd picked up over the last week. I recommended Method from Target, not knowing that Method's actually eco-friendlier than normal (well, as eco-friendly as you get in a disposable plastic bottle.. snark snark snark). Method's environmental policy statement, or "humanifesto," as they call it reads (in part): "we believe dirty, in all its slimy, smoggy, toxic, disgusting incarnations is public enemy number one. and good always prevails over stinky."



Also, it doesn't smell bad.

And my mom is happy once more.

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Green Laundry

As it is for most people, Saturday is my laundry day.

In my building, we pay twice: for the water and electricity used in the laundry room, as well as 1.75 for each run in the washer and each run in the dryer. The coin mechanisms are broken into a lot, so this does not include quarters sacrificed to figure out whether or not a machine works. Yikes. Quarters don't grow on trees, son.

You can only re-wear work shirts and pajamas so much before yes, you too start to smell like Pigpen from Peanuts - you know, with the stink lines following you in the air and stuff. A load a week might be unavoidable.

I do not relish the 3 hours I spent every week washing my clothes by hand in Morocco, so I am going to try to make my washing efficient AND sustainable this week. Oh, compromises.

Help with green laundry detergents from Co-Op America and Science Base (two very different viewpoints).

Since dryers use most of the energy bemoaned in laundering, many eco-launderers recommend line drying, especially on April 19 - National Hanging Out Day. However, many apartment dwellers including myself do not have the Right to Dry.

Exciting facts about line drying: using a clothesline once a week will reduce your carbon-based emissions 50 lbs. per year, and will save you $100 to $300 every year on household energy costs!

Here are some other tips for greening your laundry habits. Check out Sebastopol-based LineDry, an artistic statement about the beauty of line drying.

Friday, October 26, 2007

Homemade Bread

Well, I don't know if this is particularly environmentally friendly per se, but it certainly cuts out a transit step (blah blah carbon emissions blah).. pretty much, it's fun to make your own bread. I like food much better when I see everything that goes into it.




White Bread Recipe
2h30m time commitment: 20 minutes prep, 2 hours waiting.
Shopping list: sugar, active dry yeast, salt, vegetable oil, about 1/2 bag flour.
Stuff you should have: bread pan, big bowl, strong stirring spoon, liquid measure (a pyrex), dry measure (1 cup, 1/3 cup, 1/2 tablespoon, 1/2 teaspoon), serrated bread knife and cutting board (for eating!)

INGREDIENTS
2 cups warm water
2/3 cup white sugar
1.5 tablespoons active dry yeast
1.5 teaspoons salt
1/4 cup vegetable oil
6 cups bread flour

DIRECTIONS
Large bowl: dissolve sugar in warm water, then stir in the yeast. The yeast is happiest with a warm environment and food to eat, so don't boil the poor buggers to death. Wait until the yeast start eating - you can tell when the bowl has a layer of creamy foam.

Mix salt and oil into the yeast. Do not forget the oil like I did. This will require much kneading later and chewier bread.

Mix in flour one cup at a time. Knead dough on a lightly floured surface until smooth. I like to clean off the countertop and dump a thin layer of flour straight onto it because then I can pretend I have a bakery.

As my mom says, "When the dough looks smooth like a baby's bottom," put it in an oiled bowl, and turn dough to coat. Cover with a damp cloth. Allow to rise until doubled in bulk, about 1 hour.

Punch dough down! I think this gets the air out so you don't end up with big bubbles in your bread. Knead for a few minutes, and divide in half. Shape into loaves, and place into two well oiled 9x5 inch loaf pans.
Allow to rise for 30 minutes, or until dough has risen 1 inch above pans. Preheat your oven when it's almost risen. On second thought, don't preheat.

Bake at 350 degrees F (175 degrees C) for 30 minutes.


This stuff is made with white flour, so it's pretty much cake with less sugar, but you can modify it with wheat flour and honey, says my mom who made it as a hippie health nut back in her early 20s.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Green Heroes, Crazies?

So there are all kinds of people out there - green monks, if you will - adopting this environmental asceticism business. And if you look at how the majority of the world lives and deals with stuff, it's not entirely crazy.

No Impact Man swore off buying new things except sustainably made socks and underwear. Read the rules for the experiment

Alan Durning and his family went carless for a year in Seattle, as did this family in Minneapolis.

Find tips for sustainable living from the Sightline Institute and maybe join the green layfolk like me.

Apologies for today's liberal use of Catholic metaphors.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

New Belgium - Sustainable Beer

New Belgium Brewery, maker of Fat Tire Ale, goes to impressive lengths to make its production sustainable.


Founded by an electrical engineer and a social worker, its employees voted in 1998 to finance a conversion to wind power. New Belgium conserves water, signed on to the 2002 LEED-Existing Buildings pilot program, and recycles much of its materials used. Even spent grain becomes cattle feed. New Belgium comissioned an artist to create its facility stools out of old bike parts, and uses old bottlecaps to build tables. Last but not least, New Belgium has hired a sustainability specialist – keeping people like me in business.

Find out more at the New Belgium website.

Makes ya proud to be from Fort Collins!

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Tesco is Coming

Britain's equivalent of Super Wal-Mart will cross the Atlantic soon.


This may not be a terrible thing. Tesco has made some strides towards rectifying the negative impacts of big chain stores on neighborhoods and the environment.

The largest solar roof in the world will sit atop Tesco's California distribution center.

In the UK, they offer a 10p shopping "Bag for Life," replaced for free if it wears out.

And! It is starting to label its produce with carbon footprint stickers.

How cool is that?

But, as Harry warns, Tesco and other UK big businesses might be in it for the image, not the environment. "[Poll] respondents held BP, Tesco and British Airways most guilty of 'greenwash' aimed at creating an eco-friendly corporate image." I don't care why they do it as long as they're greening up, but this business of misleading greenwashing does concern me a bit.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Green Jobs!

As an employee with a one year job, I am always on the lookout for future employment and resources to help me get there. Behold! Today, my prayers were answered.


MonsterTrak offers a guide to all jobs green.

Actics is the new ethical Facebook with some eco-chic bigwigs like TreeHugger contributors, etc. - friend me here!


And an addition from Jen: another terrific search engine from Sustainable Business.

Find ethical jobs of all sorts at Idealist.

An article on GreenBiz.com describes the green job phenomenon.

And... GreenBiz itself "is looking for guest and regular columnists and feature writers. We're seeking contributions from business leaders as well as the journalists who write about them. If you're interested, send a brief query to managing editor Matthew Wheeland, at editor@greenbiz.com"

But my favorite of all is the The GreenBiz JobLink. You can even fill in the drop-down menu to search entry level jobs. Yesssss!

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Plastic Bag Makeover

I'm bored and penniless today, and wanted to find a craft project. What better to cheaply fill my time than a recycled plastic bag project from Craftster? You take the bags and iron them together to make a more permanent grocery solution.



Here is a plastic bag fusing tutorial that says you can use office paper instead of parchment paper. This is very exciting!

Here is my attempt, made from a Forever 21 bag, San Francisco Chronicle sleeves, and a picture from the cover of Harper's:


Things I learned:

1. It is good to have parchment paper. You have to be careful when you use separate sheets of paper.
2. It is good to have interesting plastic bags.
3. It is good to have a sewing machine.
4. Plastic bags totally do fuse together! Awesome!

Saturday, October 20, 2007

What To Do With a Water Hog Like Me

Confession. I am one of those bad people who take a shower every day.


It's cosmetic, and silly, but it is one of those things that helps me get through life. So here's what I do to make it better.

I keep an old yoghurt container and plop it in the shower with me. Then, I use this sullage/greywater to water my houseplants.

At least that's a pint or so that I'm not completely evilly wasting. I started off with two collectors, but it was more water than I could really use. Someday, I'll have a garden!

There is this thing called "Bucket" officially designed to harvest greywater, but for now I think I'll stick with the yoghurt containers.

Friday, October 19, 2007

Dear old Macalester..

As a progressive liberal arts college, it's about time my alma mater Macalester stepped up to the eco-plate.

Finally, more sustainable cups and napkins! They're ordering the cups from Clovernook, a non-profit based in Cincinnati, OH. "75 percent of the people working in Clovernook's factories are visually impaired, and the extra money collected from the cup sales is used to provide community outreach programs."

They had a Zero Waste Picnic in September... set aside the Eco-House...



... and they are hiring a Sustainability Coordinator for 2008. Apparently, President Rosenberg was one of 414 college and university presidents to sign on to the Presidents Climate Commitment. "Presidents signing the Commitment are pledging to eliminate their campuses' greenhouse gas emissions in a reasonable period of time as determined by each institution." This involves setting up a task force, completing a GHG inventory, creating and implementing a climate neutral plan, taking 2 of the 7 immediate steps specified in the plan, integrate sustainability into the curriculum, and communicating to the public about all this.

An advisory committee of Mac students, faculty, and staff have been molding the Sustainability Coordinator position since this spring.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Spudware and Tater Toppers

Edible utensils?! Short of bread in Morocco, I'd never have thought this possible - until Spudware, utensils made from potatoes!



These utensils are similar to medium tensile strength plasticware, though they withstand heat poorly. Even so, it took me almost 5 minutes with a spudware fork hanging out of my mouth for it to go starchy. The upside of all of this is that spudware biodegrades within 180 days in the landfill, unlike its plastic counterparts.

Local coffee service provider Sonoma Sun Coffee also has Tater Toppers (coffee cup lids) and Cornware - they usually sell to businesses, but they sell on a small scale as well.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Halloween Green

So Halloween is just around the corner, eh? Lots of candy wrappers and one-time-use costumes and stuff. *guilt guilt guilt* Okay, no, this post is just to tell you about some hilarious "green" costume ideas out there.


1. Compact fluorescent light bulb. "Start your costume by donning a tight, white turtleneck and slim white pants or tights. Then inflate a dozen or so long, white balloons, tie them end to end, and wrap them around you from chest to hips for that unique, spiral-bound light bulb look." Save energy while looking cool! (from Green Living.)

2. Used bubblegum. Dress all in pink and tape a shoe to your head. (from The Boulder Camera.)

3. Nerd. "Roll up your jeans, tape your glasses, and do your hair in pigtails." Suspenders and glasses a plus. (Courtesy Making Friends and Shannon.)

4. Robot, my costume of choice, inspired by this video.

(Check out HAUTE*NATURE, a fellow eco-blogspot.commer who listed #1 and #2.) Also, check out TreeHugger's list of green candy, and the Sierra Club's guide to a green Halloween.

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Green Up Your Driving Habits

So I have to drive sometimes. Like to take advantage of Home Depot's plant warrantee (they replace dead plants within a year.. oopsies)... I just can't walk or bike, and there aren't busses to go there. I can, however, make the best of things. Behold, top 5 do-able driving best practices to save gas - reducing costs and carbon emissions.




1. Go the speed limit. Herky-jerky stop and start means more gas. Plus, it makes the herky-jerk car behind you delightfully angry, especially here in California.
2. Have good directions and/or call ahead. No aimless driving around!
3. Windows instead of A/C.
4. Keep the tires full and go for regular tune ups. This means your car is operating most efficiently and you'll use less gas.
5. Take as much stuff out as you can. A heavy load means more gas.

Find out more from TreeHugger's How To Green Your Car.

Monday, October 15, 2007

Junking Your Junk Mail

Something for all you who live out there in the Mini-Apple, or St. Paul too: The Twin Cities Green Guide. Information on co-ops, tips for sustainable beer drinking ("Drink locally produced beer to reduce resources used in transportation.") and upcoming green events provided for your Minnesotan edification and delight.


The Green Guide also offers tips for any American to cut down on their junk mail. The Green Guide cites the EPA figures: 5.2 million tons of junk mail are shipped every year; .98 million of those are recycled and 4.2 million of those are trashed. That's 31 pounds of junk mail per person going into the garbage each year. The good news is, you can stop this mail before it even gets in the postal truck! Start with these three easy steps.

1. To stop getting Val-Pak coupons (you know you'll never get that carpet cleaning or those personalized checks!):
Send an e-mail to valerie@valpak.com with REMOVE FROM MAILING in the subject line. Include your address, city, state, and zip/postal code exactly as it appears on the Val-Pak blue envelope or mailing label.

2. To register with a Do-Not Mail Service:
Send a postcard with your name and address to:

Mail Preference Service
PO Box 643
Carmel, NY 10512-0643

3. To opt-out of credit card applications:
Call 1-888-5-OPTOUT (1-888-567-8688)
(You will have to share your social security number.)

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Buying Local

Two happy things happened this Sunday:

1. I bought bread from a bakery (Village Bakery, 1445 Town and Country Dr).
2. I bought pumpkins from a local farm (Frey Rd, off Highway 12).



The nice thing about buying things straight from the source is that I know more about the size of the carbon footprint my purchase makes, because I transport the product for 100% of its journey (or.. at least its final journey in finished form). And it gives me the chance to support local business & economy (I'm being turned into a republican, help! Quick, go look at the BALLE Project and leave me to wrangle with my growing conservative woes).

I mean, not like that makes any significant carbon difference, when I still continue to buy imported cheese from England with Wallace and Gromit on the packaging (shhh), but it gives me leeway to act smug and tout my $1.50 pumpkin with pride. I mean, I need every chance I can get to be smug. My carbon footprint is huge.

Calculate yours here. Especially if you travel abroad.. yikes. You're in for it.

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Recycline Preserve Toothbrush

I found a toothrbush in Mill Valley today that is made from recycled yoghurt containers. Wohoo!


The Recycline Preserve toothbrush can even be returned and they will grind it up again. Nice!

Friday, October 12, 2007

Acorn Squash stuffed with Pilaf

As fall approaches, why not enjoy some seasonable vegetables? After all, in-season produce is less likely to be flown in from Chile and more likely to have been grown locally.



Here's vaguely what you do:

Grease shallow pan.
Cut squash in half.
Clean out seeds (save for roasting!).
Placed squash open side down and bake 30 minutes at 375 degrees.

Cook brown rice - Uncle Ben's goes fastest, admittedly. You can throw some carrots in here for cooking.

Sautee onions and garlic in olive oil. Add diced apples. Stir in lentils.

Stir cooked rice/carrot/onion/apple/lentil mixture together. Season with cumin, salt, and pepper. Here is your pilaf!
Spoon this into your finished squash. Top with grated cheese if you're not vegan.

Then, turn the oven down to 300 and remove flesh from the seeds. Salt them and cover them with olive oil. Make sure you remove the covers from your stove burners as this is where the moisture vents out - I once broke an oven roasting pumpkin seeds with the stove burners left covered.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Hempz Pomade

Made of beeswax, Cannabis sativa (Hemp) seed oil and extract, and castor oil, my new hair pomade from Hempz isn't telling you that it actually includes PARABENS!

Aaah!

What a bad, uninformed purchase on my part!

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Green Breakfast

So I've finally replaced daily trips to Starbucks or the bagel shop with green tea and a protein smoothie. I like to re-use POM tea glasses or Acher Farms juice bottles to take them along to work with me. Saves money, time, a car trip and empty calories.


Here is my protein shake recipe:

1 banana
1/2 c vanilla yoghurt
1 c orange juice OR milk
1 c frozen strawberries, raspberries, mangoes, peaches, or blueberries
OR 3 tbsp. almond butter (use milk instead of orange juice. ew. also, freeze your banana ahead of time)
1 scoop protein powder

This packs about 30 grams of protein for breakfast overall, more if you use milk & almond butter. Not bad, eh?