Kristin

3/30 Nature Challenge – Play!

Play outside

Play outside like these kids skipping on and off a bench, doing cartwheels and dancing to a song they sing.

2/30 Nature Challenge – Walk around the block

Park

Go for a walk around the block. It’s a great way to meet your neighbours and build community.

Green Challenge #5 – Dye Easter Eggs Naturally

Happy Easter, everyone!bunnies

Your Challenge

Dye your Easter eggs this year using ingredients from your kitchen.

  • Red tones: beets, red cabbage leaves, black currants, apple tree bark, birch bark
  • Blue tones: elderberries (or elderberry juice), blueberries (or blueberry juice)
  • Green tones: spinach, parsley, ivy leaves, St. John’s wort
  • Yellow /brown tones: elderberry leaves, safran, lilac flowers, camomile flowers, carrots, onion peel, tea, coffee

Materials

Amount for 2L water

Soaking time

Cooking time

Vegetables 500g - 30-40 min
Leaves/flowers/berries 30-100g a few hours 30-60 min
Bark/wood 30-100g 1-2 days 1-2 hours
Powder 3-4 tea spoons 30 minutes 30 min
Tea/coffee 30-50g - 20-30 min

1. Preparing the dyeing liquid

  • Cut plants in chunks, maybe grate
  • Soak if applicable (see table above)
  • Mix with water for dyeing liquid and cook for the respective amount of time
  • Filter the liquid before putting the eggs in
  • Tip: potassium carbonate intensifies the colour; vinegar brightens the colour

2. Boil eggs (hard)

3. Put boiled eggs for about 30 minutes in the cool dyeing liquid

  • Pick up the eggs with a spoon once in a while to check the colour intensity

4. Rub your Easter eggs with a few drops of oil if you like them shiny.

What is the Green Challenge? Every other week we will suggest an action to empower you to protect and restore a healthy planet. They are usually small and simple steps to reduce your carbon footprint and do something good for the environment. Thank you for stepping up and taking on the challenge!

Spring is here!

We had a fantastic time at Seedy Saturday last weekend. Thank you to our dedicated volunteers Bernice, Cassidy, Lana and Paul who spent their entire day getting their hands dirty making seed balls, crafting newspaper planters and recycling toilet paper rolls to seed starters. Over 300 people stopped by our table and carried away spring in a ball or box.

Missed us on Saturday? Here is a video how to make seed balls. It’s a great spring break activity for your children!

And another one on how to make toilet paper roll seed starters:

Are you still full of energy? Try the newspaper planters too. Find the full description in our Green Challenge #3 – Newspaper planters.

Green Challenge #4 – Become a library member

This week’s challenge is short and sweet: I have rediscovered my love for the Calgary Public Library. Through the Sustainability Book Club I get to read lots of interesting books; the stimulating discussions make them even better. However, there is only so much space in my place. And honestly, I am not reading every book more than once. Why buy it for a one-time adventure and then let it collect dust on my shelf? Lending books from the library reduces consumption and connects me with my community. Sounds great to me!

Your Challenge

Get or renew your membership with the Calgary Public Library. For only $1.00 per month you get access to a vast collection of books, magazines, DVDs, CDs, e-books, newspapers and more.

Wondering if e-books are the more eco-friendly alternative to printed books? Here is an interesting article from May 2012 that asks “Are eReaders Really Green?

What is the Green Challenge? Every other week we will suggest an action to empower you to protect and restore a healthy planet. They are usually small and simple steps to reduce your carbon footprint and do something good for the environment. Thank you for stepping up and taking on the challenge!

Watersheds 101

At our first Sierra Speak Out! session this year we enjoyed a fantastic presentation about watersheds by Sharon MacDonald. Sharon lives in Waiporous in the beautiful Ghost River Valley, part of one of Southern Alberta’s watersheds. Here’s a brief summary how watersheds work and what impact humans have on them.

 

Green Challenge #3 – Newspaper planters

The warmer weather this week makes me dream of spring and growing my own little garden. Mind you that my place only has a balcony; nevertheless there are still many things to plant. But more on that later; today we start small.

Good News or Bad News?

Over 650,000 Calgarians per week read a printed newspaper; some of them only once, others every day (2011 NADbank). Just the two most popular local newspapers, the Calgary Herald and the Sun, had a weekly circulation of 1.1 million newspapers in 2011. That’s over one million printed newspapers in one week!

“Manufacturing 1 ton of newsprint, which is enough to create approximately 280,000 broadsheet pages, requires the contents of 12 mature trees.” (Brendan Koerner, Slate) Let’s say one issue of a newspaper contains 20 broadsheet pages; then one ton of newsprint would equal 14,000 newspapers. With over one million newspapers we print up over 850 trees in Calgary (or we would if it would all be fresh paper; fortunately many newspapers use at least 50% recycled paper).

It’s great that we can now recycle them through the blue bin. According to the City of Calgary we have recycled “178,582,000 kg of paper and cardboard, which is enough to make 250,000,000 notebooks and saves 3,000,000 trees from being cut down” from July 2009 – July 2012. That is really amazing! Now help us to do even better, recycle a little less and reuse more.

Your Challenge

One neat idea I found the other week was turning your newspaper into planters. You only need one full sheet of newspaper for a planter, some soil and seeds you want to grow. Try not to use colourful or glossy pages as the ink could harm the plants and the soil. Once the seedlings have grown you can plant the whole thing with paper and all in a container or a bed in your garden. Read the full instructions here.

Want to do more? Home Made Simple has eight more suggestions what to do with your newspaper. Try them out and let us know how it goes in the comments below.

What is the Green Challenge? Every other week we will suggest an action to empower you to protect and restore a healthy planet. They are usually small and simple steps to reduce your carbon footprint and do something good for the environment. Thank you for stepping up and taking on the challenge!

CTV’s Kevin Newman Interviews Elizabeth May in Washington on the Keystone Pipeline decision

Watch the CTV video of Kevin Newman and Green Party leader Elizabeth May here: http://www.ctvnews.ca/video?clipId=861995

KN: Green party leader Elizabeth May was in Washington the day that new Secretary of State, John Kerry and our Foreign Affairs minister, John Baird held that key meeting on the pipeline decision. Ms May thanks for joining us. How do you read the tea leaves there –does the pledge by new US Sec State to provide his answer to keystone in the near term- do you think that means this pipeline is heading for approval ?

EMay: I think it’s too soon to say – I’ve been talking to members of the Senate and the Congress here in Washington during my visit over the last number of days and there’s a lot of increased enthusiasm about what President Obama said in his inauguration address about the need for the US to seize leadership on the climate issue, to embrace clean tech, to do much much more to bring down green house gases. And John Kerry was, before being appointed Secretary of State, a prominent critic of the XL pipeline . So I think we’re a long way from knowing which way this is going to go.

KN: So you’re saying Secretary of State, Kerry, can’t stay true to himself and approve this pipeline.

EMay: Well, that’s a good way of putting it- I mean John Kerry has been on his own for years, I’ve seen him in climate negotiations when he had no other reason to be there except that he was concerned and committed. He showed up in Copenhagen, he showed up in Bali. This is a man who understands the climate issue and now he’s led by a President who’s says the United States is going to take the lead because we owe it to our children we owe it to our grandchildren and the United States is not going to stand by and watch other countries seize the technologies that get us past fossil fuels. I don’t see John Kerry being at all happy with the prospect of approving Keystone XL – particularly when we know there will be, next weekend, a large demonstration in Washington DC, opposing the Keystone pipeline. It is not going to be a decision that will sit well with John Kerry if he ends up feeling that he needs to approve it.

KN: But you know – I’ve been reading a couple of recent quotes from the Washington Post e.g. who recently in an editorial said “ignore the activists who have brazenly chosen to make Keystone XL a line- in-the -sand issue” and then there’s a publication Nature-which I think we can both agree is a pretty substantive magazine with scientific peer reviewed findings and it says “The administration should face down critics of the project, ensure that environmental standards are met and then approve it.” Now those are progressive publications. Doesn’t that give Obama some political cover?

EMay: It gets hard to do that when Canada doesn’t have a real climate plan. If Canada was coming – I go back to when Mulroney was the architect of an acid rain plan that worked and the approach was come to the US with clean hands, show the US that we’re taking the appropriate steps in Canada and then asking them to do the same.
In this case what Stephen Harper’s done is to destroy most of our environmental laws, cancel our commitments under Kyoto, behave as a rogue nation in world, and actually have no domestic plan to meet even the weak target that Stephen Harper has set. So how then do we tell Barack Obama- Accept our bitumen crude- We’re going to be good actors on climate. We don’t have credibility to say that which actually undermines the case that the keystone XL pipeline should be approved.

KN: Alright Elizabeth May – thanks for being with us.

EMay: Thank you so much.

*** Transcribed by Janet Eaton, volunteer trade and environment campaigner with Sierra Club of Canada***

Carve a Song

Last weekend, we went on our annual overnight trip to Lake Louise to see the Ice Magic carving competition. This year’s theme was Carve a Song, and we were brought into another world of angels, crazy trains, dancing ewes, monster mash and Yakutian folklore. Sunny, mild temperatures and lots of powder snow made for a fantastic time snowshoeing the Pipestone Trail and hiking to the Fairview Lookout overlooking Lake Louise and the Chateau.

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Green Challenge #2 – Get out!

Our group just spent a fantastic weekend snowshoeing in Lake Louise! The weather was mild, the snow fluffy and perfect for skiing and snowshoeing. It is on weekends like this that I notice how good it is to be outside: sunshine, quietness, healthy food, fun with friends, my to-do list left behind in Calgary and the sweet exhaustion after a day-long workout in fresh air.

Nature Deficit Disorder

Last October, Ken Schmaltz from the Calgary Outdoor Recreation Association talked about Nature Deficit Disorder at our Sierra Speak Out! session. It is a phenomenon in children that don’t spend enough unstructured time outside. While many parents register their children in structured activities like soccer, hockey and swimming lessons their children do not get much time outside on their own. This video provides a good overview of nature deficit disorder and what we can do about it:

A study by the David Suzuki Foundation published last September shows that 70 per cent of Canadian youth between 13 and 20 years spend an hour or less outside each day. An American study by the Kaiser Family Foundation showed that children aged 8 – 18 years spent an average of 7.5 hours per day in front of a screen.

 ”Getting outside as a family can help create a nature habit… we found that if youth spend time outside when they’re young, they’re 20 per cent more likely to take part in outdoor programs or to explore nature on their own when they’re older.” — Leanne Clare, Connecting Youth with Nature project, David Suzuki Foundation

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