eco friendly weblog
Apr 29

Test Your Child’s Toys For Safety…
filed under: Baby Bottles, Uncategorized by admin

Here is a great new way to test your child’s toys:

Spring is here finally at HealthyToys.org and we have new test results!  We tested 13 of the most popular toys as voted on by HealthyToys.org supporters and over 500 other popular toys over the last few months.  Unfortunately, these test show that far too many toys still have elevated levels of toxic chemical in them. However, for the first time, HealthyToys.org has also screened 250 organic and natural children’s products for harmful chemicals. These tests confirm that natural and organic toys are substantially cleaner then other toys.

Visit HealthyToys.org to see the results today!

Apr 21

Celebrate Earth Day
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With so much of us tryng to teach our children how to be better to our earth, there is something we all need to keep in mind.  Don’t get caught up in buying too much for the kids.  It’s best to educate them rather than buy them something to entertain themselves with.

Some of the happiest times of my childhood was taking a family bike ride together.   Exploring our own backyard was such a great time.

So this earth day, take the kids outside and enjoy a fun filled nature day!

Happy Earth Day!

Apr 15

Green Living Tips- no matter where you live.
filed under: Uncategorized by admin

Make energy efficiency a priority.  Consider using solar panels, even if just to heat your water.

Save water.  Adjust downspouts to collect water in a bin to use for gardening.  Install low-flow fixtures, such as faucets and shower heads.

Invest in a fuel efficient car.  Trade in that gas guzzling SUV for something smaller and more affordable.  Bigger is not always better!

Apr 09

When ordering take-out, keep it ‘green’
filed under: Uncategorized by admin

Another great article from Earth911

Help lick waste by ordering ice cream in a cone, not in a disposable cup. (©istockphoto.com/Diane Diederich)
Help lick waste by ordering ice cream in a cone, not in a disposable cup. (©istockphoto.com/Diane Diederich)

Tools and Resources from Earth911.org
Reuse and Recycling Services
Environmental Events

By Patti Roth
Provided by Earth911

Perhaps it’s a frothy Frapuccino. Or spicy bean burritos. Don’t forget steaming pizzas with onions and olives. No matter your tastes, plenty of scrumptious snacks are regularly picked up at favorite eateries around the country and enjoyed at home.

While packaging is part of the deal with to-go orders, various restaurateurs and patrons are devising fresh approaches to make take-out more lean and green. Happily, some environmentally responsible techniques are delightfully simple. Other efforts to reduce waste take a bit more effort. But, if it’s kinder to the environment, each bite is going to be so much tastier.

Think About It

If you’re debating what to eat, try to select menu items that involve the least amount of disposable components. Perhaps a hearty sandwich would be just as satisfying as a multifaceted meal that requires elaborate packaging, a throng of plastic utensils and extra containers for sauces and condiments.

This approach works for snacks and desserts too. At the ice cream shop, ask for your scoops of rocky road in a cone, rather than in a disposable cup. Not only will you not have excess packaging, but you get to eat your “cup” too. Sweet.

Another point to consider is driving distance. When ordering take-out, choose restaurants that don’t require a long drive. Even better, order from restaurants in the neighborhood, then hop on a bicycle or take a stroll to pick them up.

Speak Out

Do you really need straws and plastic knives when you’re eating at home, with your own silverware handy? What about condiment packets (for relish, ketchup and the like) that you weren’t planning on using anyways?

Let restaurants know you’re interested in their environmental practices. Ask questions. Make suggestions. Tell the restaurant staff to skip all the stuff they routinely toss in that the customer tosses out. Remind them to leave out yet another paper menu - there are enough stuffed in the kitchen drawer. Perhaps they’ll be inspired to be more discriminating with others and ask before automatically including extras, or maybe they’ll consider using earth-friendly alternatives to what they’re using now.

Plenty of establishments are switching from traditional polystyrene and plastic containers to more eco-friendly packaging and utensils made with materials such as bamboo, potatoes and sugar cane. Some of these products are compostable. Other environmentally preferable packaging includes recycled paper products that are chlorine free.

Want to help inspire your favorite spot to use products like this? One way to do this is through printable suggestion cards available through the Green Restaurant Association (GRA). Print them out (on recycled paper!) and hand them to the manager, or stick them in the folder with your check.

Looking for a green restaurant in your area? You can also use the GRA to find restaurants that meet its environmental standards.

BYOB

Assign your reusable grocery store bags to double duty. Use them at restaurants to cart home leftovers and when picking up take-out orders. In addition to bags, add other items to the bring-your-own repertoire like coffee mugs. Starbucks, for example, offers a financial incentive (a 10-cent discount) for supplying your own. Coffee lovers apparently are taking advantage of that approach: according to a Starbucks spokeswoman, customers in 2007 supplied their own beverage mugs almost 20 million times.

Recommend Reusables

If you enjoy take-out regularly from specific places, ask those restaurant owners if they’d stock reusable to-go containers, such as glass or stainless steel. Tell them you’ll return the container when you’re back for another dinner. It’s sort of a library approach to packaging. You drop off the used containers and pick up fresh ones packed with food each time you go. The advantage to the restaurant is reduced costs on disposable packaging and loyalty of regular diners.

If the restaurant doesn’t like the idea of reusable containers, bring your own. Some eco-minded restaurant-goers tote around personal food storage containers to wrap up their leftovers and also use them for take-out items -  just make sure the restaurant agrees to use them.

No matter what your favorite take-out joint may offer, you can take these easy steps to maximize your eco-friendly efforts and minimize your footprint. Restaurants will appreciate your increased patronage, and you’ll feel good about taking your trash levels down a notch or two.

Patti Roth is a freelance writer, vegetarian and dog enthusiast based in South Florida. She incorporates green tips and practices in her lifestyle -as well as in her articles.

Apr 07

The Big Thaw: How to Help…
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From National Geographic’s The Green Guide:

Figure Out Your Footprint

As you cool your home this summer, you might well be helping to warm up the world. Air-conditioning and other power-hungry appliances are major contributors to the average household’s carbon footprint, a measure of personal impact on climate through the production of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.

Average Annual Household Pounds of Carbon Dioxide Saved

1,000
If you recycle glass, plastic, and paper.

800
If you take the bus to work instead of driving.

720
If you line-dry half your laundry loads instead of using the dryer.

700
If you maintain a tight seal on your refrigerator door and keep the appliance’s coils clean.

55
If you replace a 75-watt incandescent lightbulb with a 20-watt compact fluorescent bulb.

Here are some ways to shrink your footprint’s size:

Safe Climate Calculator
Online questionnaires are a way to calculate your current energy use. This calculator includes options for residents of the U.S. and Canada, as well as for other countries.

U.S. Climate Technology Cooperation
This carbon equivalency calculator translates units of greenhouse gases saved into easily understandable equivalents: gallons of gas saved, acres of forest preserved, and more.

The Green Guide
This National Geographic consumer publication and website has many suggestions for following a low-carbon diet. The actual amount of carbon dioxide a household releases depends on the fuel sources used by its energy provider. The average American produces more than 22 tons (20 metric tons) of carbon dioxide each year. For more information on carbon savings, including carbon calculators for each room in the house, see The Green Guide’s Green Home section.

Apr 04

CDC: Rocket fuel chemical found in baby formula
filed under: Uncategorized by admin

ATLANTA - Traces of a chemical used in rocket fuel were found in samples of powdered baby formula, and could exceed what’s considered a safe dose for adults if mixed with water also contaminated with the ingredient, a government study has found.The study by scientists at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention looked for the chemical, perchlorate, in different brands of powdered baby formula. It was published last month, but the Environmental Working Group — a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy organization — issued a press release Thursday drawing attention to it.

The chemical has turned up in several cities’ drinking water supplies. It can occur naturally, but most perchlorate contamination has been tied to defense and aerospace sites.

No tests have ever shown the chemical caused health problems, but scientists have said significant amounts of perchlorate can affect thyroid function. The thyroid helps set the body’s metabolism. Thyroid problems can impact fetal and infant brain development.

However, the extent of the risk is hard to assess. The government requires that formula contain iodine, which counteracts perchlorate’s effects. The size of the infant and how much formula they consume are other factors that can influence risk.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration, aware of the debate over perchlorate in food and water, has not recommended that people alter their diet or eating habits because of the chemical.

The study itself sheds little light on how dangerous the perchlorate in baby formula is. “This wasn’t a study of health effects,” said Dr. Joshua Schier, one of the authors.

The largest amounts of the chemical were in formulas derived from cow’s milk, the study said.

The researchers would not disclose the brands of formula they studied. Only a few samples were studied, so it’s hard to know if the perchlorate levels would be found in all containers of those brands, a CDC spokesman said.

“This study provides no data on potential health effects of perchlorate. Health authorities continue to emphasize that infant formula is safe,” said Haley Curtis Stevens of the International Formula Council, which represent formula manufacturers.

Earlier this year, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said it was considering setting new limits on the amount of perchlorate that would be acceptable in drinking water. A few states have already set their own limits.

The agency issued a statement Friday saying perchlorate exposure is a serious issue and “a top priority” for EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson. EPA officials expect to announce a decision soon about future steps in dealing with the chemical.

The EPA has checked nearly 4,000 public water supplies serving 10,000 people or more. About 160 of the water systems had detectable levels of perchlorate, and 31 had levels high enough to exceed a new safety level the EPA is considering.

___

CDC: http://www.cdc.gov/

Apr 02

Getting Ready for Spring- the Green way
filed under: Baby Toys, Uncategorized by admin

Here is a wonderful article from Earth911- written by Karen — some good tips here.  If you need some natural home cleansers- please check out our organic eco friendly line by Eco Home.

Spring evokes feelings of purity, freshness, growth and joy as we transition from the gloom of winter into the rays of summer’s sunshine.

But if you’re really looking to embrace the glory of spring, it won’t come without a little elbow grease. Here are our favorite eight ways to get the the most out of a green spring.

1. Lose Weight and Feel Great

It seems that during winter, you’re not the only one who might have “packed on the pounds.” Has your living space become inundated with items such as holiday gifts you’ll never use, magazines with recipes never cooked and chunky attire used to brave the elements? Lighten the load this spring by cleansing your living palette. You’ll have a fresh start and may feel a little lighter yourself.

While clutter-clearing, make it easier to sort items by creating four piles: Keep, Donation, Recycle and Trash.

  • Keep: We often associate spring with fresh starts, but that doesn’t have to apply to everything. If your gardening spade and hoe are in tip-top shape, don’t buy brand new twinkling tools that you don’t need. This goes for all the items in your home. If they aren’t broken, why replace them?
  • Donation: Taking an inventory of your belongings shows you that tastes change and upgrades happen - and, unfortunately, some of  those “What was I thinking?!” moments as well. Even though items become disposable to you, they may have many useful miles left in their life cycles. Keep items out of overcrowded landfills by asking family and friends if they have use for any of your unwanted items. Your little sis who is moving into her own apartment, can make use of your old set of dishes, and Aunt Carol can use those extra muffin cups to bake for her next garden party. Anything leftover can be donated to local charities.
  • Recycle: If your countertops and tabletops haven’t seen the light of day in weeks because they’re covered with books, magazines, catalogs and mail, then it’s time for a change. But, we don’t mean for you to heave everything into the wastebasket - recycle instead. Consider this: A family of four uses 1.25 tons of paper per year on average, and the U.S. EPA reports that recycling one ton of paper saves 3.3 cubic yards of landfill space, as well as enough energy to power the average American home for six months.
  • Trash: Landfills should be used for items that truly have no other useful purpose. Be cautious when disposing of hazardous materials, as inappropriate distribution can cause toxic components to leach into the soil and groundwater.

2. Spring Cleaning

You weren’t the only one hiding from Old Man Winter this year. Dust, dirt and grime settled in also, and now it’s time to kick them to the curb. But be aware, some cleansers and polishes contain chemicals that can cause irritation to the skin, eyes, nose and throat, nausea, dizziness and other effects. Also, water used to rinse away their residue goes down the drain, carrying these ingredients with it. Less harmful ingredients exist in products from companies like Eco Me Home.

If you’re really feeling green,  make your own cleaning products  with vinegar, baking soda, lemon juice, borax and water. Also, cut back on  paper towels and opt for a reusable cloth.

3. Deep Clean

Spring cleaning often goes beyond routine cleansing, dusting and vacuuming and involves home maintenance. One of the simplest things you can do to improve indoor air quality, while reducing energy bills, is replacing furnace filters on a monthly basis. Filters collect dirt and other particles so they don’t enter your living space, and when they are clogged, airflow decreases. Therefore, the furnace works harder - making it less energy efficient. Other ways to increase efficiency while spring cleaning are:

  • Cleaning off coils on the back of your refrigerator to scatter heat away from the unit.
  • Vacuuming clothes dryer ducts. Bob Vila created an excellent video if you haven’t performed this task before.
  • Sealing gaps with weather-stripping or caulk around windows and doors to prevent warm air from entering your home.
  • Checking out other comprehensive lists of home maintenance tips to make sure your home is ready for spring.

4. Dirty Laundry

After all that cleaning, it’s probably time to do a load of laundry. If you have an Energy Star washer, you’re cutting energy costs by 33 percent and water usage by 50 percent. If you don’t own one of these machines, then you can reduce costs by washing clothes in the coolest water possible.

According to the California Energy Commission, the dryer is the second biggest electricity-hogging appliance in the home. If you wish to lower energy costs, use the drying sensor, if the model has one, and regularly clean the lint trap. Or, you can forego drying altogether. Let nature do the job by switching to a clothesline or a drying rack.

5. Car Care

Having a car devoid of dirt and salt from winter conditions is a way to protect your investment, but if you do an at-home car wash, you may be doing more harm to the environment than you think. Water and contaminants from your vehicle flow freely down the driveway into the storm drain and into rivers, lakes and streams without first being treated. When washing cars at home, remember these tips provided by the Maryland Department of the Environment:

  • Park on gravel or grass so soapy water soaks into the ground, becomes filtered and recharges groundwater.
  • Use soap that does not say “harmful, danger or poison.” Try eco-friendly versions such as Simple Green’s products.
  • Turn off the hose when you’re not using the water. During a 15-minute car wash, you could use 150 gallons of water if there isn’t an automatic shut-off nozzle.
  • If you’re out doing errands already, stop by a commercial car wash, which is connected to a sanitary sewer whereby dirty water is carried to a treatment plant. Newer facilities may also recycle 10-80 percent of their wastewater for an additional environmental benefit.

6. Rainwater Preservation

Springtime brings more rain-showers than most of us can handle, but come mid-summer, gardeners and lawn-care enthusiasts usually end up praying for rain. It seems like such a waste to have excess water one month and a shortage another. Luckily, rainwater harvesting has gone mainstream, and it’s easy for homeowners to take advantage of recapturing “lost” water with a rain barrel. Your roof collects rainwater and funnels it through gutters or downspouts, where it can be collected. But be sure to leave room to provide easy access the spigot. When your plants need a drink, just use the water from the barrel instead of turning on the hose.

7. Green Thumb

Now that you’ve side-stepped hydration issues with your lawn and garden, you’ll need to take care of other problems like weeds and bugs:

  • Weeds: Instead of using herbicides that leach chemicals into the soil and end up in water runoff, pull weeds by hand or saturate them with vinegar. If you do use herbicides, be sure to make sure you properly dispose of their containers or any excess liquids once you’re done.
  • Bugs: Give them a sharp spray with water, and if that doesn’t work, try an insecticide soap. Mix one gallon of water with three tablespoons of liquid dish soap, and spray on both sides of plant leaves to deter insects.

8. Get Ready for Grilling

Now that you’ve tackled all of your spring projects, kick back, relax, and enjoy the fruits of your green labor. You’ve worked hard, so reward yourself with a treat from the grill.

Natural gas and electric grills have the least negative impact on the environment, especially if you recycle your propane tank when finished. For those of you who believe grilling isn’t grilling unless it’s done over charcoal, consider that it releases greenhouse gases and soot particles. If you just can’t live without this smoky flavor, look for eco-friendly alternatives to charcoal briquettes such as those that use recycled coconut husk waste or have the Forest Stewardship Council or Rainforest Alliance SmartWood certification logo.

Mar 30

Recyclable Pizze Box?
filed under: Uncategorized by admin

Pizza-box mystery: Recyclable, except when they’re not

Tools and Resources from Earth911.org
Reuse and Recycling Services
Environmental Events

By Lori Brown
Provided by Earth911

Many people assume that pizza boxes are recyclable. In fact, most boxes have recycling symbols on them and are traditionally made from corrugated cardboard. They are, in and of themselves, recyclable.

However, what makes parts of them non-recyclable is the hot, tasty treat that comes inside them, specifically, the grease and cheese from pizza that soil the cardboard.

So there you have it, pizza boxes that are tarnished with food, or any paper product that is stained with grease or food, are not recyclable — unless you remove the tainted portions.

But why is this? And what are the implications for the general, pizza-loving public? Mmm, pizza.

How it Gets Recycled

Food is one of the worst contaminants in the paper recycling process. Grease and oil are not as big  a problem for plastic, metal and glass, as those materials are recycled using a heat process. But when paper products, such as cardboard, are recycled, they are mixed with water and turned into a slurry. Since we all know water and oil don’t mix, the issue is clear.

Grease from pizza boxes causes oil to form at the top of the slurry, and paper fibers cannot separate from oils during the pulping process. Essentially, this contaminant causes the entire batch to be ruined. This is the reason that other food related items are non-recyclable (used paper plates, used napkins, used paper towels, etc).

“The oil gets in when you’re doing your process of making paper,” said Terry Gellenbeck, a solid waste administrative analyst for the city of Phoenix. “The oil causes great problems for the quality of the paper, especially the binding of the fibers. It puts in contaminants, so when they do squeeze the water out, it has spots and holes.”

But what about other things regularly found on paper products, like ink? “Most inks are not petroleum-based so they break down fast. Food is a big problem,” Gellenbeck said.

Also, be mindful of adhesives that may be on the pizza box (coupons, stickers, etc.) as those are contaminants. Known as “pressure sensitive adhesives (PSAs)” these can ruin the recycling process just as much as oil or food remains.

Sneaks

Many people admit trying to “sneak” their pizza boxes in with cardboard boxes and such. In reality, this does more harm than good as the contaminated cardboard could ruin the whole recycling batch.

In fact, contamination in the recycling business is a big problem. Some estimates put the costs of irresponsible contamination in the neighborhood of $700 million per year industry-wide. Gellenbeck estimates that for Phoenix, contamination costs approximately $1 million annually, because of damage to machinery, disposal costs for the non-recyclable material and wasted time, materials and efficiency. With the city processing 129,000 tons of materials in 2008 (around 7 percent of this is cardboard), money is an important factor as to why residents should know what their municipalities do and do not accept.

So, What Do I Do?

The easiest remedy for this problem is to cut or tear out the soiled portions of your pizza boxes and trash them. For example, you can tear the top of the box off, recycle that and throw away the bottom part containing the grease. If the entire box is grease-free, the whole box can be recycled with a guilt-free conscience.

Another option to recycling cardboard is to compost it, although the grease rule still applies here as well. “Even with oils, you shouldn’t compost [greased cardboard]. It causes rotting, you get more bugs and smell and it’s just not good for the plants,” said Gellenbeck.

Most importantly, being well-versed on what your local recyclers accept, can make the biggest difference. “It all depends on where your processor sends your paper, too,” said Gellenbeck, whose authority applies only to the city of Phoenix. “If you can keep a particular thing like the food out, the plastics out, all those things that really shouldn’t be there, it would help.”

Mar 27

Lights out in 84 countries for Earth Hour 2009
filed under: Uncategorized by admin

From  AP News- this is truly inspiring.

CHICAGO – The lights are going down from the Great Pyramids to the Acropolis, the Eiffel Tower to Sears Tower, as more than 2,800 municipalities in 84 countries plan Saturday to mark the second worldwide Earth Hour.

McDonald’s will even soften the yellow glow from some Golden Arches as part of the time zone-by-time zone plan to dim nonessential lights between 8:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. to highlight global climate change.

“Earth Hour makes a powerful statement that the world is going to solve this problem,” said Carter Roberts, chief executive of the World Wildlife Fund, which sponsors Earth Hour. “Everyone is realizing the enormous effect that climate change will have on them.”

Seven times more municipalities have signed on since last year’s Earth Hour, which drew participation from 400 cities after Sydney, Australia held a solo event in 2007. Interest has spiked ahead of planned negotiations on a new global warming treaty in Copenhagen, Denmark this December. The last global accord, the Kyoto Protocol, is set to expire in 2012.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon encouraged the convention to reach a fair and effective climate change agreement and promoted Earth Hour participation in a video posted this month on the event’s YouTube channel.

“Earth Hour is a way for the citizens of the world to send a clear message,” Ban said. “They want action on climate change.”

Other videos have been posted by celebrities such as rocker Pete Wentz and actor Kevin Bacon and WWF has offered Earth Hour iPhone applications. Search engine Yahoo! says there’s been a 344 percent increase in “Earth Hour” searches this February and March compared with last year.

New studies increasingly highlight the ongoing effects of climate change, said Richard Moss, a member of the Nobel Peace Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and WWF’s climate change vice president.

“We have satellites and we have ships out at sea and we have monitoring stations set up on buoys in the ocean,” Moss said. “We monitor all kinds of things people wouldn’t even think about. The scientific research is showing in all kinds of ways that the climate crisis is worsening.”

But not everyone agrees and at least one counter-protest is planned for Saturday.

Suburban Philadelphia ice cream shop owner Bob Gerenser, 56, believes global warming is based on faulty science and calls Earth Hour “nonsense.”

The resident of New Hope, Pa., and owner of Gerenser’s Exotic Ice Cream planned to illuminate his store with extra theatrical lighting.

“I’m going to get everyone I know in my neighborhood to turn on every light they possibly can to waste as much electricity as possible to underline the absurdity of this action … by being absurd,” he said.

Earth Hour 2009 has garnered support from global corporations, nonprofit groups, schools, scientists and celebrities — including Oscar-winning actress Cate Blanchett and the Archbishop Desmond Tutu.

McDonald’s Corp. plans to dim its arches at 500 locations around the Midwest. The Marriott, Ritz-Carlton and Fairmont hotel chains and Coca-Cola Co. also plan to participate.

Nearly 200 U.S. cities, towns and villages have signed on, from New York City — which will darken the iconic Empire State Building and Broadway marquees — to Igiugig, population 53 on Iliamna Lake in southwestern Alaska.

Among the efforts in Chicago, 50,000 light bulbs at tourist hotspot Navy Pier will dim and 24 spotlights that shine on Sears Tower’s twin spires will go dark.

“We’re the most visible building in the city,” said Angela Burnett, a Sears Tower property manager. “Turning off the lights for one hour on a Saturday night shows our commitment to sustainability.”

The Commonwealth Edison utility said electricity demand fell by 5 percent in Chicago and northern Illinois during last year’s Earth Hour, reducing about 840,000 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions.

“It goes way beyond turning off the lights,” said Roberts of the WWF. “The message we want people to take away is that it is within our power to solve this problem. People can take positive constructive actions.”

Mar 26

Being Eco Wise..
filed under: Uncategorized by admin

Buy a better bottle- It takes 1.5 million barrels of oil to produce all the plastic water bottles Americans use each year.  Try our cool Ecousable bottles with fun designs for the whole family.  My daughter loves holding on to her bottle with dinosaurs on them.