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  • Horny Toad: Fitness AND Eco Fashion Friday. BOOM.

    Horny Toad: Fitness AND Eco Fashion Friday. BOOM.

     

    They loved him up and turned him into a… horny toad.

    -Delmar, ‘O Brother, Where Art Thou?’

     

    OK, so the video has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with this post, but it’s what I think of every time.

    Back in October I was in Boulder Colorado checking out the Green House, and we were given Horny Toad gear to wear for our Saturday morning yoga class.

    I am super picky about my clothes anymore, and I love my Horny Toad gear, in spite of the fact that what I have is a full size too small. More on that later.

    It’s not cheap, just so we’re clear on that upfront. It’s meant to be quality wear that lasts, and I don’t mind paying for that.

    Horny Toad is eco-friendly

    Horny Toad is a Santa Barbara-based company that produces fitness and casual wear. The majority of their line is made with sustainable fibers like organic cotton, and ‘clean cellulosics such as Tencel® and Modal® and also recycled poly.’ They claim their products age well, and I believe it: they are definitely well-made. They also say that they look good longer, so you can go longer between washes, and I can go along with that. They don’t wrinkle up quickly and something about the texture of the color (if that makes any sense) makes them look freshly put-on for longer.

    Horny Toad is responsible

    • creation of the Planet Access Company: along with Search, a Chicago not-for-profit, PAC provides training and employment for those with developmental disabilities.
    • In addition, they fund outdoor trips for PAC workers and Horny Toad employees.
    • Horny Toad (and sister company Nau) locations are powered with energy from green-e certified wind farms. Employee commutes and sales force travels are offset for a lighter footprint.
    • Support of local issues and events: it’s a long list.
    • Voted by Outdoor magazine as a 2010 Best Place to Work, based on work environment, environmentally friendly business process and company-supported employee work-outdoor life balance.

    Horny Toad fits true to size

    Too bad for me, the only size options they had on hand were large and small. I am broad shouldered and tallish and don’t particularly like when my clothes get too grabby; I generally wear a medium for comfort. The small fits, but since yoga clothes are by nature form-fitting, the pants especially are more tight than I like. Fine for at-home and with a long layer overtop; not so fine for taking photos of myself and posting to the internet. Sorry, Charlie.

    Horny Toad is good yoga and fitness wear for tall people

    This is probably my favorite feature. The pants have two additional self-healing seams— meaning that they come to you long and you can cut to where you need them and they won’t fray. Usually workout pants are just a hair too short on me and I look stupid in my floods.

    Horny Toad is wicked comfortable

    Horny Toad jacketI have a thing about seams. I don’t like to be aware of them. These seams don’t bug me in the least and I LOVE THEM. The fabric is also impossibly soft. If it weren’t for the fact that it’s a tad tight (giving me a slight grasshopper look) I’d probably live in my Horny Toad gear.

    I DO practically live in my (not sure what to call it; it doesn’t have a hood) let’s say jacket. It’s slightly different than the one that the site has for sale right now (pictured below); it’s a full zip with a collar that I wear folded over or popped depending on my mood or the chill in the air. It’s soft and really warm without adding any bulk, and it doesn’t look like workout gear. The clean lines and quality fabric just make it look nice, not to mention slimming, and I wear it all the time.

    Horny Toad offers an awesome guarantee

    “Wear any Horny Toad piece, and if you don’t get a compliment within 3 wearings, send it back. Or, if you simply find something wrong with it, we’ll take it back for refund or replacement.” How about THAT?

    Horny Toad has this dress.

    Ever since I tried the Uniform Project I’ve been especially on the lookout for items that have multiple wear possibilities. I think I need this dress for summer.

     

    Metamorphose Dress from Horny Toad ~ Convertible Wear

     

     

    Horny Toad seems like real people.

    Go check out their website. They just seem like incredibly fun and genuine people with a social and eco conscience and exactly the kind of company I love to support.

    Once I get a little cash in my hot little hands I’ll be buying fitness gear that actually fits me from Horny Toad ’cause I’m loyal like that.

    What brands do you like to work out in?

     

    Horny Toad Eco Activewear

     

     


     

    Check out other Fashion Friday posts here and link up if you wrote your own 🙂

     

     

  • #VlogMoms: ‘What’s an event that changed your life forever?’

    #VlogMoms: ‘What’s an event that changed your life forever?’

    warm february

    What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger
    Stand a little taller
    Doesn’t mean I’m lonely when I’m alone
    What doesn’t kill you makes a fighter
    Footsteps even lighter

    -Kelly Clarkson, “What Doesn’t Kill You (Stronger)”

    Yeah, I’m quoting Kelly Clarkson. What of it?

    Kelly, in turn, is referencing Nietzsche when he said “That which does not kill us makes us stronger.” And studies suggest that’s totally correct. Depending on the situation, of course, but not every hardship or traumatizing event causes permanent damage. Sometimes they prepare you for something coming down the road.

    This week, Jennifer of Hip As I Wanna Be asked the VlogMoms: Describe a moment in your life (other than the birth of your children) that changed you for the better forever.

    Here’s my answer.

     

     

    The event in question for me was pretty sucktastic on a lot of levels. I survived. And it was one of those moments, like Robert Frost’s path forking in the wood, like Robert Johnson’s crossroads, that force you to make a decision about how you’re gonna live the rest of your life. I call these moments hinges, because becoming unhinged is always a possibility.

    In this case, the hinge swung me towards becoming an advocate. Towards not tolerating the intolerable. I believe people are basically good, dammit, and I was going to demand that they live up to that.

    I had basically spent my whole life up to that point being told to keep quiet, to keep secrets, and I had done it because I thought the only person I was hurting was myself. I was wrong.

    I can’t keep quiet anymore.

    You shouldn’t either.

    Make some noise. Get loud. Make your mark on the world.

    Be not merely good. Be good for something.

    Look,

    I really don’t want to wax philosophic,

    but I will say that if you’re alive,

    you got to flap your arms and legs,

    you got to jump around a lot,

    you got to make a lot of noise,

    because life is the very opposite of death.

    And therefore, as I see it,

    if you’re quiet, you’re not living.

    You’ve got to be noisy,

    or at least your thoughts should be

    noisy and colorful and lively.

    -Mel Brooks

    What event, what hinge, changed YOUR life forever?

    Tell me about it.

    And check out how the rest of the VlogMoms responded:

    Postscript: It’s totally 60 degrees outside. In February. I recorded this video on my deck in a tank top. Hence the harshness of the light but WHATEVER. FEBRUARY.

     

     

  • Gamechanger: Animal, Vegetable, Miracle (Book Club Day)

    Gamechanger: Animal, Vegetable, Miracle (Book Club Day)

    farmers market squash and zucchini

     

    This is the story…

    of how our family was changed by our first year of deliberately eating food

    produced from the same place where we worked, went to school,

    loved our neighbors, drank the water, and breathed the air.

    -Barbara Kingsolver,
    Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life

    In early 2008 I took two books out of the library that changed my family. The first was Richard Louv’s Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder. The second was Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle. Her story is absolutely what inspired me to alter our story, and those two books are what inspired this blog.

    Kingsolver’s game changing, life changing story involves her family’s journey from the food desert of Arizona back to the land in Virginia, and their commitment to one year of living la vida local. It’s one part memoir, one part historical narrative, one part cookbook and one part political manifesto, with a healthy dose of ethical undertone thrown in for seasoning.

    After reading it, I…

     

    undertook my own eat local project

    …which eventually grew into a real love and appreciation of my co-op’s farmers market. I developed friendships with the farmers and small businesses I saw there week after week, felt really good about where my dollars were going, and have been asked to work with my local chapter of Slow Food USA this year to help others discover the joys of local food and like-minded companionship.

    learned to cook…

    … sort of. I’m still no chef, trust me, but I can cook lots of simple meals and have become brave enough to try more complex recipes and experiment with brand new ones. We embraced new foods like rainbow chard just because it was in season. My kids have been exposed to a whole world of tastes and textures that I never was, and they have learned to cook as well. It’s healthier for them on so many levels— the willingness to try new things, the ability to control their own sugar and fat intake as they grow older, and I can’t help but think that my boys will make such good husbands one day with their cooking prowess.

    tried to garden.

    I’m not very good at it, and every year Jeff announces that this is my last gardening attempt. Stick a fork in me, I’m done. I’m terrible about the upkeep, and the weeds pop up faster than I am willing to pluck them. Granted, there is a wonderful taste of victory when you cook and eat your own fresh green beans, heritage tomatoes, lettuce greens, basil and rosemary and parsley. There is also potential for soul-crushing defeat when deer consume your entire vegetable plot overnight just as your efforts begin to set fruit. I continue to plant those seeds and starters in spring, because to me there is no better symbol of hope… but for us, in our shade garden, it’s not the same symbol of freedom that it was for the Kingsolvers.

    stopped buying processed junk.

    Not entirely. But mostly, I eat real food. And I’ll preach that practice until the day I die. Our bodies have evolved, slowly, for generations, to efficiently use the nutrients found in food. To eat anything else is to willingly submit to volunteering your and your children’s bodies as guinea pigs for science experiments. This seems like hyperbole, but I’m not kidding. How many illnesses might be attributed to consistently consuming things our bodies aren’t fully equipped to process?

    stopped wasting food.

    Seriously. Now that I know how much effort goes into growing and cooking the stuff, throwing it out just kills me.

    changed my shopping habits.

    I’m far from perfect, but I buy mindfully, in the grocery store and everywhere else. I care a whole heck of a lot about who my dollar benefits and how my choices affect the earth. I strive to keep my money in the community, or at least supporting companies whose ethics I support.

    cherish food moments.

    Not every meal is a masterpiece, and to be honest I don’t cook special meals as often as I did when I first started all this (I wasn’t working full-time in 2008). But I do ask my kids to help me when I cook new things, and we eat them together, and remember them together later. Holidays are especially precious. Food and memory and emotion are all tied up together in our lives, and when you roll up your sleeves and work hard to produce something memorable, there is something glorious about that.

    What I still haven’t done…

     

    canning and preserving.

    I’ll come right out and admit it: I’m scared. I’m afraid of doing something wrong and poisoning us all. The lovely people at Ball sent me a starter kit— I think I won it somewhere, I can’t even remember— and it has been collecting dust for a year at least. This summer I swear I will have someone teach me.

    raised poultry.

    My favorite passages of Animal, Vegetable, Miracle involve turkey raising, and I’m not even going to tell you about them because I want you to read them. But I will say this: I learned from this book that turkeys are too stupid to have sex without human intervention. I already knew that chickens have been bred to have breasts so large, they cannot even support their own weight on their own two feet, meaning that those “cage-free” specimens at the grocery store are meaningless. I have friends who raise eyebrows at my willingness to raise and slaughter my own fowl, but at least I would know that those birds got a real life and a humane death.

    However, based on my inability to take care of a carrot bed, Jeff’s putting his foot down about the chickens I covet. We’ll see. Maybe in a few years, when the kids are older and can help out there.

    Rocking my thinking… again

    My first time reading Animal, Vegetable, Miracle I was fascinated by all the info that was new to me, by their project, and it propelled me into a new way of life. Reading it again, three years later, I was more struck by Kingsolver’s assessment after the year was over:

    If our special way of eating had seemed imposing at first, gradually it was just dinner, the spontaneous background of family time as we met our fortunes one day, one phone call, one hospital visit, wedding, funeral, spelling bee, and birthday party at a time. It caused us to take more notice of food traditions of all kinds— the candy-driven school discipline program, the overwhelming brace of covered dishes that attend a death in the family. But in the main, our banana-free life was now just our life…

    Our plan to make everything from scratch had pushed us into a lot of great learning experiences. In some cases, what we learned was that it was too much trouble for everyday… Altered routines were really the heart of what we’d gained.

    The difference between a book and a blog is that with a book you get to have closure, an ending.

    Sometimes with this blog I become discouraged; I don’t start a lot of new projects anymore. I don’t know what to write about because all this has become the backdrop of my life. It didn’t happen all at once; it was one step at a time, sometimes two steps back. But I find out-of-season, trucked-cross-country apples just don’t taste as good. When I go back to drinking soda, I feel yucky. And when we make our cakes out of a box, we all feel like we’ve cheated ourselves out of something more expensive, more time-consuming, more effort— but also just better for us, better tasting, better feeling.

    We’ve internalized so much and it has become normal for us, our routines have become forever altered.

    I’ll keep writing because I don’t think I can stop, just as I don’t think I could start eating apples flown in from New Zealand or buying factory-farmed chickens, even if they are hyperlocal. My hope has always been to inspire someone else to begin the journey, because if we could do it, surely you can.

     

    But if you wouldn’t mind leaving me a comment about what you’d like to know about?

    That would make my day.

    hen flapping wings
    Hey you! Start squawking! Tell me what I should write about next!

     

     

    Animal Vegetable Miracle book coverCould you live an entire year eating locally or the food from your garden? Barbara Kingsolver transplanted her family from the deserts of Arizona to the mountains of Virginia for their endeavor. Join From Left to Write on February 21 as we discuss Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life by Barbara Kingsolver.

    As a member of From Left to Write, I received a copy of the book to highlight and dog-ear and otherwise prep for future blog posts. All opinions are my own.