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  • Seven for Saturday: News You Can Use 4/9

    Seven for Saturday: News You Can Use 4/9

    digging for victory

    “Digging for Victory, 1941” via The Commons

    Hoe while it is spring, and enjoy the best anticipations.

    It is not much matter if things do not turn out well.

    Charles Dudley Warner

    Weather forecast says warm for the next few days and the ground is sopping wet; planning to spend some time getting nice and mucky and putting seeds into the ground. While I know we will lose the majority of what we sow to insects and benign neglect and DEER, I feel like we have to give it a try. Again. For my own piece of mind.

    Here’s what grabbed my attention this week. What caught your eye?

    1. Companion Planting: Make efficient use of your space and attract beneficial insects

    Dude, I will try anything. Maybe if I surround the whole plot with something poisonous (foxglove?) the deer will keep out?

    2. Oil On Dead Dolphins In Gulf Linked To BP Spill, Scientists Say

    And (in my mind) the companion piece, ‘Is sushi safe?’ It is mind-boggling to me that people can believe that the BP oil spill and nearly 12,000 tons of radioactive water being emptied into the sea at Fukushima will have no repercussions for marine life. The ocean is a vastly complex ecosystem and we have introduced all kinds of badness into it. Sushi? I really wouldn’t if I were you.

    3. “I Was Itching Like a Crackhead”: Study Finds College Students Addicted to Media

    The majority couldn’t even complete the 24 hour media fast as challenged. “These college students were born in the late 1980s and early 1990s. They didn’t grow up with ubiquitous one-to-one school laptop programs, downloadable education apps for mobile phones and e-books instead of traditional textbooks—and they’re uber addicted. What’s going to happen to this current generation of media saturated kids when they get to college?” Good question.

    4. Is My Child About to Be Snatched?

    Another great one from Lenore Skenazy, the Free-Range Mom. “From 1990 to 1998, the murder rate went down 20 percent in America. On TV news it went up 600 percent.” Stranger danger has been hyped to fever pitch in this country and it’s ridiculous. I hate the feeling of being constantly manipulated by the TV screen.

    5. How Many Slices of Bacon Does Your Dinner Equal? 3 Restaurant Shockers

    I know they say that posting calorie & nutritional info on menus doesn’t change eating habits, but I’m not so sure. I was at IKEA a few weeks ago and I did pass on the cheesesteak after seeing 990 calories in big block letters (the menu mysteriously omits the calorie count on the swedish meatballs, though). In any case, I like this system of measuring a meal by the number of slices of bacon it represents, since bacon is pretty much universally recognized as the devil. Before you order that deep-dish pizza (or Olive Garden pasta), know how many deliciously crunchy slices of bacon devilry you could be eating instead… and still be consuming way less fat and sodium.

    6. The Subtle Power Of Noise Pollution

    “Noise has been shown to raise blood pressure and blood-borne concentrations of stress hormones and fatty materials even when people are asleep. These can accumulate over time to block blood vessels and trigger a heart attack.” It makes sense; sleep is a time for your body to restore itself and its ability to do so will naturally be impaired by the stress of constant noise. The question becomes, what can we do about it? Are noise-blocking curtains and earplugs enough?

    7. Typewriters Are The Next Annoying Retro Fad

    Jeff made me get rid of my typewriter collection when we moved 🙁 so I guess I won’t be making my fortune selling them to young hipsters. But what I loved about this article was the comments: is it true that the qwerty keyboard was set up to slow people down as they typed, so they wouldn’t hang up the typewriter ribbon? And that’s why the more commonly used letters are on the left? And therefore most speed-typers are lefties? FASCINATING!!

    VIDEO:

    Girl wants horse; girl has no horse; girl trains family cow to show jump. I LOVE THIS.

     

     
    ** Hey, did you enter to win my $100 Hersheypark/ Hotel Hershey gift card? Ends tomorrow! **

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  • Local Family Fun This Weekend

    Local Family Fun This Weekend

    kid soccer champ

    I’m spending my weekend on the YMCA athletic fields (not that I’m complaining, mind you, just relating information). But there are a lot of cool things going on that I would be hitting if I weren’t cheering from the sidelines, and I want to share.

    In the interest of not spamming my Facebook friends, I’m gathering up my favorite things happening in the general Delaware & Southern Pennsylvania areas this weekend and posting them here. It’s simple- green- organic- happy- LOCAL! Fun!

    2011 Green and Healthy Living Expo

    Saturday April 9th from 9:00am to 5:00pm at the Bob Carpenter Center. Parking & admission are free. Dozens of local vendors exhibiting, including the Delaware Center for Horticulture, Delaware Energy Office, Habitat for Humanity of New Castle, Partnership for the Delaware Estuary, Rain Gardens for the Bays, Royal Pest Management (they have stink bug solutions!) and loads more. Face painting & other activities for the kids; door prizes include a $200 gift basket from Newark Natural Foods and family passes to Cherry Crest Adventure Farm.

    There will be collection sites set up for household batteries, cell phones, ink cartridges, eyeglasses, plastic bags & nail polish bottles, and FREE shredding of up to 2 boxes of your top-secret confidential documents 🙂 courtesy of East Coast Shredding.

    Peanut Butter & Jams welcomes Daria

    Saturday April 9th at 11:30am at the newly reopened Queen Theater in Wilmington. PB & Jams is kids’ music that won’t make Mom & Dad want to stuff their ears with gauze! My own kids saw They Might Be Giants play PB & Jams in Philly, and if that’s not an awesome first concert I don’t know what is. (Well, I danced onstage with Neil Diamond at my first concert, but ya’ll can’t be me.)

    Anyway, “in this unique interactive show, kids get to become part of world music by playing along on authentic instruments from the four corners of the globe such as guiros, buffalo drums, shekeres and much more…kids will also be able to make their own recycled rattle, play it along with the show and take it home.” Coming soon: Milkshake, Joanie Leeds, and Gustafer Yellowgold.

    What is Sustainability?

    Saturday April 9th from 6:00 to 8:00pm at the Meadow (Newark Natural Foods). Talk with Raz Godelnik, CEO of Eco-Libris, and other green peeps about “ideas for simple practices in daily life that can positively impact your own personal (and family) health and well-being, your community and the environment.”

    Before the talk, pop over to the co-op and pick up some just-arrived locally-grown, pesticide-free veggie and herb plants! Whoop whoop!

    Great Train Robbery

    Sunday April 10th at 3:00pm at the Strasburg Rail Road. The robbers (really improvisation actors from Act 1 Productions, recognizable by their early 20th century dress) will be mingling with guests at Strasburg’s train station, shops and on board the train. Unsuspecting passengers will be given “loot” to carry onto the train. As the robbers move from car to car, they will interact with the passengers and try to swipe some loot.

    As the passengers give up their loot, they can also hand over real cash – for a good cause. All money collected on the train will be donated to the Woge’s Warriors, a Relay for Life team based in Lancaster, PA. The American Cancer Society Relay For Life is a life-changing event that gives everyone in communities across the globe a chance to celebrate the lives of people who have battled cancer, remember loved ones lost, and fight back against the disease. (If you can’t make it this weekend— we can’t— there will be other robberies taking place in July & October.)

    Between the Folds

    Sunday April 10th at 5:45pm at the Colonial Theater in Phoenixville. I watched this documentary a few weeks ago and was completely blown away. This chronicle of ten passionate origami artists is simply beautiful in every way. (Or, spend the whole afternoon! At 2pm a Silent Movie Cornucopia begins with organ accompaniment, featuring Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and Laurel & Hardy.)

    The Colonial is an old historic theater that regularly shows classic movies (my first time there was to see the three Indiana Jones films in one go, and I know they did the Back to the Future trilogy recently as well), as well as hosting musical acts and family-friendly shows. If you can’t make this one, I very highly recommend you Netflix Between the Folds and check out what’s upcoming at the Colonial (hint: the Three Stooges, The Sound of Music, The Wizard of Oz, The Godfather marathon, and lots more).

    That’s what I’d do. What are YOU up to?

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  • Whenever you’re ready…

    Whenever you’re ready…

    hyacinths

     

    The first day of spring is one thing, and the first spring day is another.

    The difference between them is sometimes as great as a month.

    -Henry Van Dyke

     

    forsythia

    No winter lasts forever;

    no spring skips its turn.

    -Hal Borland

    forsythia-branch

    April is a promise that May is bound to keep.

    -Hal Borland

    daffodil

    The calendar says spring.

    The backyard flowers say spring.

    My allergies say spring.

    The air says, put your sweater back on. It ain’t spring yet.

    Whenever you’re ready, Mother Nature.

    I’m rarin’ to play, and I’m tired of waiting.

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