Tag: climate change

  • #GIFtATree in 5 Seconds: Create a GIF or Send a Tweet

    #GIFtATree in 5 Seconds: Create a GIF or Send a Tweet

    treehugger

    The clearest way into the Universe is through a forest wilderness.

    —John Muir

    This treehugging photo is from the first post I published on this site, in 2008. Cass still pretty much looks exactly like this, and while she’s not really compelled to give them spontaneous displays of affection anymore, we’re still treehuggers at heart.

    That’s why we love the #GIFtATree holiday campaign from NBCUniversal and the Arbor Day Foundation. During the month of December, if you create and share a holiday GIF from greenisuniversal.com, or send a tweet using #GIFtATree, a tree will be planted in a state park or national forest— up to 25,000 trees!

    The GIFs are very cute and are animated; creating them would be a fun activity for kids, especially over winter break. Every time you share one a tree is gifted, not just once. 

    I made one during the Rockefeller tree lighting special in NYC, and Cass made one a little bit later, and I was quite a bit delighted to find she’d made the exact same one I had.

    #GiftATreenot animated bc I couldn’t quickly figure out how to put that here and dinner’s almost ready

     

    Every tweet you send out that includes #GIFtATree counts as a tree gifted, too. What an easy way to make a difference: after all, just one large tree can provide a day’s supply of oxygen for up to four people. Over the course of a year, just one mature tree will absorb more than 48 pounds of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, releasing oxygen in exchange.

    thousand forests one acorn Ralph Waldo Emerson

     

    There are many practical reasons to protect existing trees and plant new ones:

    • Trees help clean our air and water
    • Trees improve our mental and physical health
    • Trees help to fight climate change
    • The cooling effect of trees saves energy
    • Trees provide habitat essential for wildlife

    Trees are so important to our ongoing physical existence, and we’ve come to think of them in ways that correlate to our emotional existence. Trees are dependable; they stay in one place. Like trees, we aim to lay down firm roots in the earth, but lift our arms and faces to the sky. We strive to grow strong like tree trunks yet flexible like branches in a storm. We try to breathe in the bad and breathe out the good. And when we are tired, broken down, we remain resilient, confident that the next season will come and we will once again be bursting with energy and new growth, like trees in spring.

    mossy tree

    Most importantly, trees are promises. Trees are potential.

    Inside a tiny acorn lies majesty that can weather a thousand storms.

    Go on, make yourself a pretty little card and feel good about your role planting a tree. Or three. Or three dozen!

    (And while you’re thinking about all this tree related goodness, pin this list of ways to repurpose or recycle your Christmas tree for later.)

     

  • Snowdrops 2012: Spring is Here? Already?

    Snowdrops 2012: Spring is Here? Already?

    first spring flowers

    Those who contemplate the beauty of the earth find reserves of strength
    that will endure as long as life lasts.

    There is something infinitely healing in the repeated refrains of nature—

    the assurance that dawn comes after night, and spring after winter.

    ― Rachel Carson

     

    This was pretty much the winter that wasn’t, huh?

    Hard to believe that the snowdrops are already pushing their way to the surface, their faces turned away from the brightness of the winter sun.

     

    early spring 2012

     

    We were supposed to get a bit of snow yesterday, and I’m vaguely disappointed we didn’t, as I would have loved to have photographed these defiantly shooting through snow. Ah well. One of these years I’ll get that shot.

    To put it the early emergence of the snowdrops in perspective:

    So spring is more than two weeks early this year, the first year since I started blogging that I haven’t chronicled dealing with the SADness. Odd. But it figures.

     

    spring in february

     

    How do you feel about the early spring?

     

    Bring it on? Or not quite ready?

     

     

  • Choose Reality: The Climate Reality Project

    Choose Reality: The Climate Reality Project

    Across the globe,

    cataclysmic weather events are occurring with such regularity

    that it’s being called a “New Normal.”

    But there’s nothing normal about it.

    -Al Gore

    So, around here we had an earthquake, a massive hurricane, tornado touchdowns and severe flooding. ALL IN ONE WEEK.

    Know how often any of those things usually happen around here? Oh, pretty much never.

    I know from Lisa of Retro Housewife Goes Green‘s updates on Facebook that her part of the country (Oklahoma) has had record-breaking heat and drought. She’s not the only one I’ve seen updating this summer about fires breaking out, about the godawful heat, about hopes for rain.

    Dallas broke a record today, posting its 70th day in the triple-digits this year. Some cities in Texas are close to doubling records, and the state has had the hottest U.S. summer on record— worse than Oklahoma’s Dust Bowl. Combined with the worst drought year on record.

    And then there’s things like this glacier in Greenland that shed about 77 square miles worth of ice in just two years. Or the fact that the tsunami created by the earthquake Japan caused an ice shelf the size of Manhattan to break away from a (presumably weakened) glacier in ANTARCTICA, 13,000 kilometers away. I don’t know just how freaked out I should be by those specific events… but I’m pretty damned freaked out all the same.

    24 Hours of Reality will focus the world’s attention on the full truth, scope, scale and impact of the climate crisis. To remove the doubt. Reveal the deniers. And catalyze urgency around an issue that affects every one of us.

    -Al Gore

    Tomorrow, 24 presenters in 24 time zones will broadcast the reality of the climate crisis. Each hour people living with the reality of climate change will connect the dots between recent extreme weather events — including floods, droughts and storms — and the manmade pollution that is causing our climate to go haywire. The round-the-clock, round-the-globe snapshot will feature a new multimedia presentation by Al Gore, delivered once an hour for 24 hours. From Tonga to Cape Verde and Mexico City to Alaska, the event will feature scientists, celebrities, business leaders and concerned citizens, along with our former Vice President.

    I’ve donated my twitter feed (@robinelton) to the cause, since tomorrow is Jeff’s and my niece’s birthdays and I won’t be online much. What that means is the team at The Climate Reality Project will update my feed with pertinent, real-time info while this event is taking place. Donate your own feed here or just follow @climatereality to keep up with what’s happening.

    We can’t fight an enemy we don’t know.

    Tune in when you can. And spread the word.

    climate reality project

    http://climaterealityproject.org/