Provoking My Thoughts
Here are some things that caught my attention this week that are related, in one way or another, to living green.
Here are some things that caught my attention this week that are related, in one way or another, to living green.
I just took one of those quick calculate your carbon footprint quizzes online, and guess what. My carbon footprint is above average!
I’ve got a new post up at Primal Parenting’s blog about shrinking your trash. Check it out.
I was contacted today from someone who had seen this blog about doing some writing. They are looking for someone to write for the ‘light greens” out there. Those who aren’t yet treehuggers but are on their way to becoming so.
I have been making big changes in the food my family eats over the past six months. I’m trying to take us all organic eventually for our health. But I’m also trying to change what we eat so that it helps not just our bodies but the earth, too. After reading Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver, I realized just how much our food choices effect the environment.
As I’ve mentioned before, my town is going green. There are some very exciting, progressive things happening in my little town that has always prided itself on its old fashioned community way of life.
Here are some things that caught my attention this week that are related, some way or other, to being green.
I’ll be blogging each Thursday over at Primal Parenting magazine’s website. Take a look at this week’s post about keeping things out of landfills while purging.
I went to a meeting last week at our borough hall because I’ve been invited to be a committee to researching the possibility to green our municipal energy. At the meeting we had a question and answer period with someone from a company that would do an energy audit of our municipality and then come back to us with a “sustainable energy master plan.” They would make recommendations as to how all of the energy that our municipality uses (borough hall, police station, fire station, traffic and street lights, etc.) could be changed to use sustainable energy sources.
I’m about 2/3 of the way through Barbara Kingsolver’s book Animal, Vegetable, Miracle. The book has got me thinking about organic food (which I have been buying some, but not all, in the past few months), sustainability, small farms, shopping locally, growing a vegetable garden this summer, and it’s got me thinking about a lot of other things, too.