Search This Blog

Preserve (The Earth)



I've been using Preserve toothbrushes for years, and like a good little eco-minded girl, I've sent them back to the company for recycling. It's easy, you just print their prepaid mailer label and slap it on any mailer you have lying around. Problem? Sometimes you don't have one lying around. Solution? Yes! Preserve just announced their toothbrushes will be sold in mailer pouches you can save and send. Could that get any easier?

(Image)

Upon Having a Baby


A friend of mine recently wrote an article entitled something like 'Having a baby isn't eco-friendly'. I totally agree! But, I have found ways to stay true to my eco-minded beliefs.

When you have a baby, you learn that things are always messy and you are always cleaning up. Whether it's diapers or wipes or the many paper towels you go through. Your always trying desperately to keep that little muffin of yours looking their cleanest. I debated cloth diapers, only to discover the trade off isn't always as eco-friendly as you may think. I looked into the disposable-cloth hybrids and quickly shot that idea down when I saw the price per unit! There are some things I just can't afford. And I'm not going to let the guilt weigh me down every day. What I can do is keep up with what I can do. Here are some ways I DO stay eco-minded with my little Juliette.

*I support many organic and eco-minded companies such as, Seventh Generation, Earth's Best, Alba Organics, California Baby, Little Twig, Kate Quinn, Gerber Organics, Small Changes by Kee Ka, Kee Ka, Babyganics and more.

*I make Juliette's baby food, which cuts down on not only my costs, but in fuel costs, manufacturing costs (all those containers). I stick to organic ingredients (some things I'm not willing to compromise on). On occasion I've given into time constraints and given her Earth's Best Organics baby food, saving the jars to fill with my own concoctions later of course!

*I buy Juliette lots and lots of toys made from wood! Also, organic fabrics. She loves her MiYim toys and wood rattles.

*I am a huge purveyor of used goods, I support 2 local buy/trade/sell baby stores and have happily accepted many hand me downs. I also have given hand me downs to those having babies and am storing Juliette's clothes for another baby someday. The more babies that can use each item of clothing, toy or baby gear the better. It's a pass it on theory and it makes me happy! I love having her wear something that had another life, brought another baby happiness or was part of a baby's room.

As Juliette gets older I'll be taking her to the farmer's markets each weekend to pick out our week's goods, introducing her to each vendor and teaching her about the origin of each item. I want her to know that strawberries are not a winter fruit and that sweet potato was her first food! I can't wait! I am not going to hide vegetables in her food, I want her to learn to love them. I want her to play in the dirt, get messy and above all have fun. I can be clean up patrol, that's my job!

Image: Juliette 7 months on a trip to Kent, CT

Pin Me Pretty

We all need something pretty and special to help keep us on the green path. Here's one that would make my piles of hand washing a little brighter!


Where to buy? Click here!

10 Reasons To Eat Local


Looking for a reason to get on the "eat local" bandwagon? Here's 10:

1. Local food tastes better! Why? Because it hasn't traveled as far and is fresher, also the food is picked when ripe.

2. Local food is better for you! Why? The closer your food is to the original source (ie the ground) the less time it took to get to you, and the less nutrients it lost en route.

3. Local food preserves genetic diversity! Why? Small farms often grow a variety of foods to provide a long harvest season.

4. Local food is safer! Why? Your local farmers aren't anonymous like the big companies are.

5. Local food supports local families! Why? Because you cut out more of the middlemen and keep local family farms in biz.

6. Local food builds communities! Why? Because you get to know your farmer, honoring a time honored tradition between farmer and consumer.

7. Local food preserves open spaces! Why? Think about it, the more farms you have locally the less industrial space is taken away from nature.

8. Local food keeps taxes down! Why? Farms give more in tax money than they take in services, so be keeping your farms close by you keep the tax dollars available for other things.

9. Local food benefits the environment and local wildlife! Why? Smaller farms tend to be better environmental stewards, they keep the soil fertile instead of stripping it of all nutrients. Also less travel for the produce means less emissions into the air.

10. Local food is an investment in the future! Why? By supporting local farms, you help keep them in business, ensuring their future success.

(Image)

Where Does Your Milk Come From? (Besides Cows)


I'm constantly on the hunt for the words GRASS FED. If I could I'd only drink dairy from grass fed cows. This as many of you may know is very hard to accomplish. Grass fed milk is the easiest of all dairy items to find, and I am lucky to find it at my local health food store less than a block away. Cheese, sour cream, yogurt etc, not so easy. Also, I'd love to know what farm made my products! Hard to do! Well, maybe not anymore...

My sister sent me this great site where you can source your milk, that is of course if you're not sure where it comes from already....

Plug in the plant code and voila!

Scour your fridge and check out this site.

(Image)

H&M Does It Green


Just when I thought I was off shopping for a little while ( I just stocked up on a few summer essentials) H&M goes and debuts it's new eco-friendly line, and it's actually tres chic!

All pieces are made with organic or recycled materials. I am lusting after a jacket myself. Hopefully when I make my way there on Saturday it won't be completely pilfered.

(Image)

Leave it A Jar






Many of you know of my hankering for jars, I collect great shaped ones I see, I save way more than I will ever need and I'm always trying to come up with new uses for them. Let's review, I use them to store my qtips, cotton balls, loose candy, drinking glasses, vases, bulk food storage, candles...the list goes on. Now that I have a baby and am making my own baby food I'm using my cute small jar collection even more!

I recently stumbled upon this great site which sells the more darling jars and I knew I had to share. They also have kits for jar labeling! I think I might be in trouble. The site is Burgon & Ball and they've got a ton more amazing things I've gotta check out, but these jars stopped me dead in my tracks, I think I like the Delicious Jam jar one most of all.

Uh oh, I just discovered they sell their own line of skincare, I'm in trouble now for sure.

(All images from site)

Shift Your Habit


I was sent this great book, Shift Your Habit by Elizabeth Rogers to review. At first I thought, oh here's yet another book on going green with all the typical suggestions. But once I opened it I realized how much information was packed into this book and how worth a read it really was.

Instead of just telling you what the change, this book offers real data, real statistics on why the change matters. Not only do you find out how shifting your habits changes things for the planet you also find out how these changes help you financially. Which at this time in our lives couldn't be more relevant.

Here are some of my favorite ways to shift my habits from the book:

Make you own baby food
Save up to $1,500 per year. Juliette has only been eating solid food for about a week, and we've been making all of her food. I've already noticed how much less pricey it is for me to make it. We bought a huge bag of organic sweet potatoes from Trader Joe's for under $4.00 and she's had at least 5 meals already with it and I cooked up the rest and have frozen about 7 portions for later use. Whereas 1 jar of Earth's Best Baby Food is $1.20 at my local store.

Buy a laptop instead of a desktop computer
Save up to $45 in your electricity bill each year, and conserve roughly 450 kilowatt-hours of electricity.

Buy a multivitamin instead of individuals
Save up to $350 per year plus you conserve the production energy used to generate additional supplements and containers

This book just came out yesterday, so don't hesitate to snag a copy for yourself at you local bookstore! I'll be sure to post tons tips from the book too.

(Image)

Hurry 40% off won't last!



Have a baby? Know a baby? Know someone expecting a baby? You must go to Pure and Little and stock up on a few goodies at 40% off. The entire site is 40% off right now! Only til tomorrow, so get to it!

I scored a few California Baby items we use and a new set of my favorite Under the Nile Burp clothes. As we enter into solid foods, I know they'll come in handy.

Thanks Michele for passing along the savings!

The Meatrix!

I watched this video a few years ago and thought it was time to share it with my readers...



For more great information check out their site!

Send Some Love WWF Style



Valentine's day on the cheap? Send e-cards to the ones you love. I found this cute one at the WWF website.

J'adore Acorns




Last year I collected a bunch of acorns from my parents property with the hopes of displaying them in my new set of Ikea huge jars. Needless to say it didn't go well, after a few days I noticed they all had inhabitants! Little bitty worms. They were gone before I could realize what had occurred. Now, these acorns are more my style...

Click here for more information.

Customize Your Sigg


You've probably already got one you eco-savvy readers, but in case you haven't shelled out yet, you can now customize them. You can go with the standard logo, "Peace Love And _____ (you fill that in) or you can upload your own photo. Pretty neat huh. I see mine as 'Peace Love And Juliette' or just a big picture of my little girl on the side of mine....

Go to cafe press to snag one of your own

(Image)

What To Get Your Sweetiepie?

This year, pucker up and give out free kisses, that's super eco-friendly! That being said, only kiss the ones you love of course, and if you must spend a few buckaroos stick to the earth friendly kind. Ditch cut flowers to a beautiful plant for the office, to remind them of your beautiful face each time they lay eyes on it...other ideas?

Treat them to a full body massage with natural body oils, bake an organic apple cinnamon pie!

Here are some more easy to buy online purchase you can have sent right to your hot stuff.

Recycled leather, oh yes!


Ashley Watson Card Holders $80 at Beklina (use this code for 25% off: DCFEB, thanks Daily Candy) You can slip in a coupon for that massage...sexy!

Darling little cookies from One Lucky Duck. They are Raw organic, sans butter, white flower and sugar yet are oh so delicious!

Treat your honey to sumptuous new towels in Valentine's red of course! These babies are made of beechwood fibers. From Branch Home.

Revive the art of the notecards by giving a beautiful set of these 100% cotton (yes, that means no trees!) cards for a cool $16 from Letters Lubell.

Whatever you do end up doing, remember it IS the thought that counts, don't waste your money on cheap crappy chocolates or candy nobody wants. Invest in something he or she will love, or give something free, like your time and attention.

All images from sites linked above.

My Ethical Journey: The Meat I Eat

There’s a little voice in all of our heads, that voice is the voice of reason, it lets us know the right path in life. Sometimes we drown out that voice and continue down the wrong path. That voice doesn’t give up though, it only gets louder and finally you listen. I am sorry to say I’ve been drowning that voice out for too long, it’s time to listen.

For the past decade I’ve indulged myself in devouring each and every book I could find on the subject of the food industry (a few dozen). With subjects ranging from organic vegetable farming, grocery store politics to the horrors most animals suffer (99%) in their path to our dinner plates. I’ve had the proverbial curtain lifted away and I’ve seen the reality that is modern factory farming. I have learned the pitfalls of agriculture in today’s world and have learned how those who work in the industry abuse the rights of their workers and animals all to turn a buck faster, quicker and cheaper. The things I’ve read about would bring up your dinner in a heartbeat. They enter my mind at odd hours, and speak to me when making food choices daily.

What I have finally been able to admit is that I haven’t done enough, as much as I have wanted to do to end my contribution to that world. We vote with our dollar, literally we are farming with each food choice when you think about it. I have said for years that I want to only eat meat/poultry that has been raised and slaughtered humanely. I’ve explored what the term ‘humane’ means to me, and have come up with a pretty comprehensive definition. Humane to me means that when animals give their life to us for consumption we should in return care for that animal in their life and in their death. This means not only doing the bare minimum but to exceed that and create a happy life for these animals. To allow them to be the animals they are, providing for their most natural instincts. Whether it be a dust bath for a chicken, grazing for a cow, a clean sleeping spot for a pig or the joy of nuzzling their offspring. Just because they end up on our dinner plates does not mean they don’t deserve to live their lives happily, seeking sunshine, companionship and rearing their young. Isn’t this image exactly what we think of farming anyhow?
For too long I’ve accepting and ordered food without really knowing where it came from. I’ve let the inconvenience rule and the desire for the dish take over my true feelings of conviction. I won’t do this any longer. Don’t get my wrong, I have worked hard to seek out meat from responsible sources but when it’s “too hard” I give up and simply eat. This is what needs to end.

Eating humanely is not like any other diet, where you can sneak cookies and only hurt yourself in the end. Giving up your morals in this instance is allowing another animal to be hurt and tortured. There is no doubt in my mind. Some 99% percent of meat/poultry in this country is raised on factory farms. Repeat that out loud, 99%. There is no way anyone is exempt from eating factory farmed meat unless they are a vegetarian or they only eat meat that they have learned it’s source. And there is NO factory farm that treats their animals humanely. NONE. It is an oxymoron. Life on a factory farm is hell on earth. Most animals never see the light of the sun, and if they do it’s only as they peak their head out of the truck on their way to slaughter. They are systematically abused by workers (in ways that would bring tears to your eyes) and often not even killed properly.

Kevin and I have been very active in trying to find our food sources for years, but on occasion we just eat blindly. The voice inside my head has become so loud I can’t not listen anymore. I am in the middle of reading Eating Animals by Jonathan Safran Foer. He describes how being an ethical and responsible carnivore is harder in our society than being a vegetarian because people can handle vegetarians much easier because it makes sense to them. And more importantly it doesn’t shine the spotlight on their eating habits as much. For me to refuse a meal at someone’s house because I am vegetarian seems normal these days, oh, here’s the alternate veggie meal. Even on airplanes you can choose a vegetarian meal, but nowhere can you check of ‘Ethical.’ To turn down food and explain that you are uncomfortable eating this meat because of where it’s sourced is much sticker. Especially if you’ve been spotting eating responsible meat you can’t even lie and say you’re not eating meat anymore.

This journey requires much more than choosing organic labeled items. I've learned those don't show the whole picture. This is about reaching out to companies, restaurants and finding out the truth about what I am eating. I have the right to know don't I?

So, here I go, embarking on yet another adventure. When I look into my 5 month (!) old daughter’s face I see all that is pure, hopeful and beautiful about this world, and the last thing I want to do is start her off with bad karma. It may sound hokey, but so what. I don’t care. I’m her mama and I’m always going to trust me gut. She will eat the most wholesome food that I can afford, and if that means meat only a few times a month, so be it. She’ll learn to love other proteins. Unlike us, she doesn’t have food memories yet. She doesn’t have to ‘kick the habit’ so to speak. Maybe she’ll teach us a thing or two, she already has in many other ways…

I can’t say I won’t stumble and choose to eat blinding again, but I promise myself, and my family that this is a priority worth keeping.