Spice Up Your Breakfast

By Joe R on June 3rd, 2010

Tired of standing there first thing in the morning, wearing your bunny slippers and running through your busy day in your mind, all while munching on cereal and staring at the clock?  Put down the bowl and mix it up a little.  It takes a little preparation but the reward is an actual savings in time all the while getting a healthy and fun start to your day.  That’s right, make a breakfast smoothie! Read more…

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Snow snow, go away. Come back another day.

By Katrina on March 16th, 2010

With the recent move to a snowy winter climate, there has been an abundance of discussion regarding snow removal from our streets and driveways.  Are the de-icing methods we use good for our cars, our roads, and most important, ourselves and the Earth?

The most commonly used method of snow removal is a de-icing chemical called sodium chloride (rock salt). It’s the same stuff we put on our food to make it taste better. Millions of tons of this salt are spread on our streets and roadways countrywide. But when the snow melts, where does all that salt go?

The salt dissolves, mixing with the water. The chloride ends up in the Earth’s soil and in turn, back into the water, affecting everything from important bacteria, the trees, small and large mammals, birds, fish, and all the way up to humans. Only a slight increase in chloride within the soil can kill off the bacteria that helps break down plant matter, which in turn can affect the soil’s fertility and erosion rate.

Chloride can also change plant systems. Plants that are especially sensitive to chloride increases,  such as Pine Trees being over thrown and choked out by other native species of plants that can tolerate higher chloride levels such as Cattails.

As for our flying feathery friends, they can’t tell the difference between pebbles; required for their proper food digestion; and salt granules. Swallowing a few large road salt granules can be fatal to birds.  Animals such as deer, elk, moose, etc. will lick the salt off the road which puts them directly in  harm’s way of our cars and traffic.

Road salt, although having little effect on human health, can be tasted in our drinking water after a winter that needed heavy salting. Increased levels of salt intake can cause high blood pressure, or make already high blood pressure, worse. Most of the effects of sodium chloride towards humans is seen through corrosion of our home’s plumbing, cars, bridges, and structures made from steel, as well as the corrosion of the land we build on.

There are more environmentally friendly options that can be used. Calcium Magnesium Acetate is less harmful to the Earth and still works at lower temperatures.  A nitrogen fertilizer called Urea can also be used and it will help plants as it melts ice.  Potassium Chloride does the same thing to a degree – but the chloride still ends up in the Earth’s soil.

The Vancouver Olympic Committee chose a product called SafePaw , a de-icer that is supposedly environmentally safe and animal friendly, to clear the snow from surrounding delicate ecosystems. Missouri is using a mixture of rock salt and beet juice to keep roads clear. Illinois invented a fluid receptacle de-icing system. The receptacle is configured with a sensing unit and a heating element to heat fluid within the fluid receptacle which in turn heats the pavement to prevent ice from forming. Maine uses a product called Ice B’Gone; a deicer that uses a measured amount of sugar added with the chloride salt allowing longer time-effectiveness, and reduces corrosion as well as reducing the overall impact on the environment. Ice B’Gone is environmentally effective and meets the strict requirements of the Pacific Northwest Snowfighters Association (PNS) for corrosion and toxicity, as well as aiding in significant corrosion reduction. South Dakota is developing a new non-corrosive deicer from sodium carbonate and waste-wood products.  Although, it is too early in the developmental process to know about its environmental impact.  And finally, Oregon uses a combination of an eco-friendly anti-icer/de-icer and pure lava rock to keep the snow and ice at bay. The anti-icer/de-icer is chosen from the Pacific Northwest Snowfighters Association Qualified Products List, that provides no impact on streams or fish. The lava rock is used instead of sand and is picked up and recycled after the snow and ice have melted.

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The crap people buy to be energy efficient

By Jeff on February 8th, 2010

Some companies create some of the most useless things in the name of being environmental. Below is a short list I have compiled some of the most useless.

The Zoo.

Solar powered dancing panda
Solar powered light up squirrel
Solar powered climbing orangutan

I call this bunch the zoo.  I’ve bunched all these items up because it seems if you strap a solar panel to any animal made out of plastic you can call it an environmental product. I don’t care if the animal dances the Macarena, it’s still crap.

Using a solar panel instead of batteries to power a lightbulb up a squirrel’s hiney, or having gears that make a panda dance doesn’t make it environmentally sound.  It still crap made out of plastic.

Wardrobe

Brasserie Solar Panels
Who thought, “Hey, what I really need is a display board strapped to my chest.”
Brasserie Solar Panels

Solar Powered Neck Tie
“Hey Bob, are you wearing your solar powered neck tie?”

“Why yes I am.  The solar panel for my climbing orangutan broke, so I have to use this tie to power its little motors.”

GOD help me if I ever hear this conversation.
Solar Powered Neck Tie

Solar Powered Sunglasses
Geek!
Solar Powered Sunglasses

Growing Ring – Growing a plant in Jewelry
Mary, will you marry me?  I have this groovy ring with a plant in it.
Ladies how would you react if the special man in your life gave you a ring with a plant in it?
Growing Ring

Household Items

Cardboard Toilet
Yeah, this one grossed me out. My family and I do quite a bit of camping.  We have never said I wish I had a cardboard box to defecate in.  Albeit, I bet the box can be used as a handy stool.  (sorry about the pun)
Cardboard Toilet

Stainless Steel Straws
Why? The disposal of straws that big of a problem? I remember back when I was a kid we had paper straws that worked just fine.  Why can’t we just go back to them?  I would hate to be the first person to trip while sipping my grande mocha latte with a double shot of espresso and non-fat milk and jam the straw through the top of my mouth.

H2O Water Powered Can Shaped Clock
Novel idea, but again WHY?  Is the energy it takes to make this novelty clock really saving the planet in the long run?
H2O Clock

Combined Washing Machine and Toilet
I know. I know another toilet.  But this one is somewhat of a good idea.  This handy dandy appliance uses the gray water from your washing machine for your toilet.  But the way they designed it is the washing machine is right above your commode.  I don’t know about you, but I have accidentally dropped things in the toilet.  Now do I want my clean clothes above the commode…NO.

Or better yet.  How many times have you been doing laundry and thought, “Golly I really have to go to the bathroom.  I wish there was a toilet right here.”
Washing Machine/Toilet

Newspaper Log Roller for Starting Fires
Um, isn’t burning wood in open fireplaces one of the most inefficient ways to produce heat, and produces tons of pollution?  How hard is it to crumple up some newspaper?  Have we become that lazy?
Fire Starter

Paper-Bag Light
Really?  Who thought, hey what would really look cool on my end table would be a paper bag with a light bulb in the middle.  I guess it would be an improvement if your end table was a mini fridge.
Bag Light

Misc. Items

NoPoPo Urine Powered Mini Lantern
OK, there is no way in hell I’m going to try to pee in a little double A battery.  And if you have one, and I ask to borrow some batteries, please have the decency to not give me your pee pee batteries.
Mini Lantern

Green Coffins
Do we really need this?  If you want your deceased body quickly decomposed back to mother earth, just  yourself in a paper bag, or better yet, nothing at all.
Green Coffins

World’s Smallest Solar Powered Racing Car
What a waste of energy to make this tiny car.  I have never heard someone say, “Gee Frank I really wish I had a small solar powered race car that I can loose with in the first week I have it.”

Racing car

LED Wineglass Markers
This items I can see maybe buying. I can also see if we had a big party and everyone had one of these lights on their glass  


Here.

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