energy efficiency, green buildings, slow foods, hybrid cars and alternate fuels.

"A society built on green design, sustainable energy and closed loop systems, a civilization afloat on a cloud of efficient, non-toxic, recyclable technology." ~~Alex Nikolai Steffan

Monday, November 29

GREEN(ER) HOLIDAYS

Full Disclosure:  I am a loyal and sappy fan of John Grisham's book, Skipping Christmas, published in 2001.


Here are four books for your consideration for your December reading offered by Green LA  Girl. And, oh yes, support your local library as a part of your holiday season. 

Scroogenomics: Why You Shouldn’t Buy Presents for the Holidays
by Joel Waldfogel. 


In Salon, Mary Elizabeth Williams writes you shouldn’t be put off by the title:
The book is no polemic; it’s a study in retail trends, spending and debt habits, and a simple call for a better use of our money than Itty Bitty Book Lights for people we barely know…. I’m not at all against the kind of giving that’s organic…. I think people should go on giving to the people they know well. Sometimes givers find transcendent, wondrous things. It’s the obligatory I’m opposed to.
Cheap: The High Cost of Discount Culture by Ellen Ruppel Shell.

In Salon, David Sirota uses Ellen’s book to help him rail against vanity gadgets — that break easily and contribute to environmental ills:
As Shell’s book subtitle rightly suggests, there is indeed a “high cost of discount culture” beyond the soul-crushing pain of customer-service purgatory and weekends ruined by big-box stores. It is the high cost of cheap we don’t think much about — a cost that increasingly eliminates any benefits of low price.
**Kudos to all of you who boycotted retail stores like K-Mart that chose to open on Thanksgiving Day eliminating another opportunity for low wage employees to have time off from retail hell.

The Price of a Bargain: The Quest for Cheap and the Death of Globalization by Canadian journalist Gordon Laird. 

In TriplePundit, Frank Marquardt reviews the book:
At its core, The Price of a Bargain is about sustainability. Our modern economic practices have created massive amounts of waste—both human and environmental—by externalizing the true costs of things. As the U.S. economy shifted from manufacturing to consumption, the quantity of things around us grew dramatically, but our wages began to fall. Bargains provided an illusion that our standard of living was keeping pace. Laird makes a strong case that illusion is over for good.
Tinsel:A Search for America’s Christmas Present by Hank Stuever. 

According a Salon review by Laura Miller:
Tinsel explores the considerable gap between the Christmases most Americans have and the ecstatic holiday nirvana they long for…. Stuever gently unveils a place where, in celebrating their most iconic holiday, people long for a past that never existed, beguile each other with bogus sentimental yarns, scare themselves with the imaginary menaces lurking “outside” their sanctuary and try to retreat further into a safety that actually bores them stiff.”
What will you be reading over the holidays?

Saturday, November 27

SHOP LOCAL, SHOP GREEN 2010 ALTERNATIVE MARKETS

This year's list of alternative markets and other local gift ideas that make a difference are up at the Shop Green page on Green Tallahassee.

Monday, November 22

CONSIDERING THANKSGIVING OF CLEAN WATER

When the weather changes, many of us in north Florida think of the outdoors and celebrate the exceptional fall weather by reconnecting with the abundant beauty that is north Florida. 

Recent conversations about the interest of Nestle Corporation in tapping the
Wacissa River as a source for more bottles of water that we don't need has engaged a number of conservation groups and activists interested in preserving what is left of our aquifer and natural beauty of rural north Florida.   


This week, the Suwannee River Water Management District( SRWMD) met with concerned citizens, including the groups Protecting our Wacissa River and Springs and Friends of the Wacissa.  

The most important thing is knowing who will make decisions about permitting and how tapping the Wacissa as a bottling resource will affect all of Florida.  Access to potable water is the most critical issue facing our planet and the more we diminish our resources, the sooner we reach a critical juncture.  

There are several things that we, as citizens, can do to support the efforts of these small groups that have raised awareness:

  1. Go to the Suwannee River Management District website and learn who is on the Board and how the permit process works.
  2. Stay informed and sign up for regular E-mails from the Save the Wacissa website.
  3. Share this information with a colleague at work, someone in your neighborhood, someone who may not be active in environmental issues.  The more people who are aware of the issue, the more difficult it becomes for decisions to be made without public scrutiny.  
Finally, there is a great article from the Monticello News, published last month, that gives a great summary of details to date and lays out a little history, with some interesting quotes from the public relations firm representing Nestle.  The process could take over a year, giving more likelihood that the interest in posing objections from the public will wane over time. 

". . .the decision would depend on a host of variables, including the outcome of the testing and data gathering and the willingness of the Suwannee River Water Management District (SRWMD) to issue a permit."
 Read the entire article at this website

Read updates on the Save the Wacissa web page or join their Facebook page here.

Raise a glass of tap water at the Thanksgiving table in support of access to clean, free drinking water for everyone, everywhere.
 

Wednesday, November 17

NEWEST FARMER'S MARKET OPENS NEXT TUESDAY

Tallahassee's newest opportunity to find fresh produce opens next Tuesday at Southside Farmers’ Market.   Open from 10:30a.m. until 2:30 p.m., November 23rd, the market will offer assorted greens, squash, cabbage, pecans, sweet potatoes and more.  


Located at Trinity United Presbyterian Church, corner of Pasco & Gore (Next to the Walker/Ford Community Center).  Some farmers accept food stamps and WIC.

Plans are to hold the market twice a month.  

Monday, November 15

AMERICA RECYLE DAY - GIVE AWAY ONE EXTRA THING

Here's something extra for our mantra: reduce, reuse and recycle.  Take something out of your house that you no longer use and give it to someone who can use it.  It should still be in working condition and something that you hadn't previously thought about removing from your home, car, office, etc.  For inspiration, below is a video clip from Apartment Therapy about giving away something useful. 

You can also join Tallahassee Freecycle and really look around for things that add to the clutter in your home.  Refuge House Thrift store always needs children's items and household goods.  They're located on Gaines Street (on your way to Bragg Stadium).

Keep Tallahassee-Leon County Beautiful ,committed to Reduce, Reuse, Recycle! has a list of where to recycle your stuff.

Happy hunting for your thing to move out of your house today.  I'm off to find mine!





Day 20: Empty Outbox The 20/20 Home Cure from maxwell gillingham-ryan on Vimeo.

Saturday, November 6

BOXED WATER IS BETTER?

A new company is promoting its product--water--under the tag line "Boxed Water is Better."  But, is it?  The water boxed in cartons are being promoted as an environmentally friendly replacement for the plastic water bottle.  When asked on their website why we need to buy water when we can get it straight from our tap, the answer was "It’s a good question but I’m not too interested in the answer."  The company claims:
Boxed Water uses containers that are made from trees that come from certified, managed forests. Shaped just like an orange juice or milk carton, the containers are shipped flat to their filling facilities and filled locally with carbon-filtered municipal tap water that’s “simple and refreshing.” This process uses less energy than shipping empty plastic or glass bottles.
 Still, there's all that manufacturing and shipping of the carton to be considered, when one could just fill one's own container with municipal tap water.

Speaking of bottled water, Sunday's rally at Wacissa Springs County Park from
1:00 PM -4:00 PM is to raise awareness about Nestle Corporation's plan to pump water from the Wacissa River for--bottled water.

Check out what folks are doing to protect the Santa Fe River at this website.

Tuesday, November 2

TODAY