Category: Green Home & Garden

  • Advantages to a Cold Winter

    Advantages to a Cold Winter

    not a groundhog

    There is no way that this winter is *ever* going to end as long as this groundhog keeps seeing his shadow.

    I don’t see any other way out. He’s got to be stopped. And I have to stop him.

    -Bill Murray in ‘Groundhog Day’

    February 2nd was Groundhog Day, and usually on that day I am lamenting Punxsutawney Phil’s prediction that another six weeks of winter remain to suffer through. Sure, the calendar already says that, but having a rodent rub it in my face is generally more than I can bear.

    Except, this year on February 2nd I was running around in a tank top and capri pants. Heck, I’ve only had to break out the heavy gloves a handful of times this season, and I don’t think Jeff has fired up his battery-operated socks even once. I can’t remember a single day where I sat in a just-started car and could see my own breath.

    Part of that, admittedly, is because I spend a lot of time inside, but that doesn’t change the fact that this has been the mildest winter that I can remember, and frankly six more weeks of this is no big deal.

    Except that ecologically speaking, it sort of is a big deal. Winter serves a purpose in the grand scheme; it’s a time for life to lie dormant and prepare to burst to life when warm weather arrives.

    When we don’t have a cold, snowy winter:

    • flower in snowTrees don’t ‘harden off’ properly to protect themselves from the random cold snap. If we get a sudden cold snap close to spring— which pretty much always happens, usually the day after I’ve bought Cass and me light spring dresses— those trees will be damaged.
    • Without snow pack, overwintering insect and amphibian populations aren’t properly insulated and can be severely impacted by a sudden cold snap. That may sound good to some, but those supply much-needed food for birds and woodland animals.
    • Snow also supplies vernal (seasonal) pools. No snow = no water = vernal pools may not fill completely or last until summer, affecting the reptiles and amphibians that inhabit those spaces.
    • Plants, especially those native to warmer places, become confused. They’ve reached their required cold temperatures for optimum growth, so a warm stretch would cause them to think it’s time to bloom. Problem is, if we experience another hard freeze after buds have emerged, those tender shoots are likely to be damaged, and damaged buds bear no flowers or fruit.

    Damaged early buds mean no explosion of spring flowers, no showers of petals from trees, no “blooming most recklessly,” no “April comes like an idiot, babbling and strewing flowers.”

    It means a diminished chorus of spring peepers.

    It means no “spring has sprung,” more like a “spring kinda sauntered in while we weren’t paying attention and it wasn’t all that interesting.”

    Don’t get me wrong, there are about eleventy million posts on this blog about how much I love spring. But this year I hope the stupid groundhog is right and we get a few weeks of for-real winter. Because as much as I love this…

     

    first flowers of spring

    it just means more when we’ve been through this.

    snow couch
    "Tell the kids to go out & play, and what do they do? Build a snow couch & watch snow TV"

     

     

  • Check It: Vinegar and Baking Soda in the Cleaning Aisle

    Check It: Vinegar and Baking Soda in the Cleaning Aisle

    cleaning with baking soda

    A man builds a fine house;

    and now he has a master, and a task for life:

    he is to furnish, watch, show it, and keep it in repair,

    the rest of his days.

    -Ralph Waldo Emerson

    We went to Target to get a desk for Cassie (Jeff built her a nice “office” to try and keep her craft detritus contained to her room) and I grabbed some (organic!) chicken and yogurt for the kids. Opposite the fridge aisles is an aisle dedicated entirely to eco-cleansers… and right smack in the middle of the Methods and Seventh Gens and Mrs. Meyer’s?

    Baking soda, white vinegar and Bon Ami!

    While cleaning with baking soda and white vinegar has become a common notion on the internet, it was pretty surprising to see a huge chain like this acknowledge that. Not even my co-op does this… I just thought it was super cool and I hope it reflects a changing consumer attitude about cleaning products. After all, no store does anything without thinking it will mean a $$ return for them. Presumably this is what customers wanted! (And of course, means they will eyeball all those other ‘green’ cleaning choices available. I don’t really have a problem with that.)

    Have you seen any stores doing this?

    Or is my specific Target eco-awesome?

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  • What if Light was Tangible? Would We Still Waste It?

    What if Light was Tangible? Would We Still Waste It?

    “Light” a short film directed by David Parker, initially began as a project intended to bring awareness to energy waste. Bleeding, crying lights were meant to metaphorically parallel the way in which we invisibly squander our natural resources without much thought. While the original sentiment remains, the film also grew into a poetic statement about a world run amok and the human tendency to exploit that which we hold dear.

    Light from Sunday Paper on Vimeo.
     

    Haunting and beautiful and thought-provoking. But if I’m being super honest the first thought that popped into my mind was that Jack Handy quote: “If trees could scream, would we be so cavalier about cutting them down? We might, if they screamed all the time, for no good reason.”

    Ahem. Anyway:

    Really simple ways to conserve electricity
    (thus saving money):

    • Unplug devices when done charging; unplug charging cords from the wall when not in use.
    • Use power strips to power your TV and peripherals (DVD, game systems, etc) and click the whole thing off when you’re done with the TV. Same goes for your computer.
    • Plug in small appliances only when you’re using them.
    • Turn off those lights!

     

    Are you a conscious energy conserver?

     

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