Custom furniture comes NaturalLEE
[via Jetson Green]
While in the US December 26 is mostly known as "The day to go shopping while recovering from the wretched excess that is Christmas", in the UK, Canada and other Anglophilic parts of the world, it's still celebrated as Boxing Day. The name derives not from the tendency of family gatherings to descend rapidly into fisticuffs, but because that's the day when the rich folks in Britain would give boxes of geese and puddings and other festive leftovers to their social inferiors. However, the name may also reference the fact that it was December 26th when old-timey folks would take the boxes from their brand new top hats and steam engines and kick them to the curb where they'd sit until the end of time because Victorian Brits didn't have curbside pickup.
In the 21st century, holidays generate a whack of boxes and assorted other garbage, and one gift we can give to the planet is to dispose of it responsibly. In most places, Christmas cards, wrapping paper, and boxes are recyclable through your local program, which may be the easiest thing to do. If not, boxes can be reused, by you and by others, or, as we brought to your attention, can also be turned into a reindeer. Greeting cards don't have to hit the landfill; even the non-artistically inclined can easily repurpose them into all kinds of cutesy reusables. You can even avoid turfing the remains of the holiday feast - many areas now have "green bin" programs to pick up organic waste, while home composting is easier than you think. There isn't much you can't reuse or recycle these days if you put your mind to it, so celebrate Boxing Day by being a little kinder to the earth.
Pope Benedict XVI spoke of the Vatican's growing concern about the environment last night, during midnight Christmas mass. Benedict referred to one early father of the Catholic Church, Gregory of Nyssa, Turkey. "What would he say if he could see the state of the world today, though the abuse of energy and reckless exploitation?" the pope asked.
Recently, Benedict has spoken out more and more on the environment, and the Vatican has started to purchase carbon offsets.
Well, if you haven't gotten around to buying Christmas gifts yet, you've officially let your family and friends down once again and probably won't be able to show your face around the turkey without jeers and hisses. Still, there's always next year to redeem yourself and here's a solar-powered gadget that might just do the trick. This slim little music player has 1 GB storage space, supports MP3, WMA, ASF, WAV formats and offers FM radio, jpeg display and a few other run-of-the-mill features. The main point of interest, however, is that you never have to charge the battery, just leave it out in the sun for a few hours.
The caveat I'd offer here is that there's no manufacturer name offered and in the photo it looks kind of like, uh, what's a tactful way of saying an ugly piece of junk? On the other hand, it's only $129.95 so you haven't got much to lose, and all kinds of green cred to gain.
Nanosolar, the California company that has just begun marketing what's said to be the cheapest, most efficient solar panel ever, is getting scrooged by eBay. Following the manufacture of their first printed ultra-thin panels, the company put their second commercially produced panel up for auction on eBay. The bidding started at 99 cents, and when the bids hit $13,000 with 6 days left in the auction, Nanosolar decided to donate the proceeds to charity.
At that point eBay, in what looks like a misinterpretation of their own byzantine rules regarding charitable sales, deleted the auction. According to the Nanosolar blog, lengthy discussion with eBay failed to convince the online auction kings to change their mind, so Nanosolar hangs onto the panel, and some charity is out a few grand.
via The Green Skeptic
Continue reading GreenFinance: Toyota in eco-fight with GM over newer SUVs
# | Blogger | Posts | Cmts |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Patricia Mayville-Cox | 108 | 0 |
2 | Jonathon Morgan | 58 | 0 |
3 | Kelly Leahy | 54 | 9 |
4 | Josh Loposer | 43 | 0 |
5 | Patrick Metzger | 43 | 0 |
6 | Rigel Gregg | 40 | 1 |
7 | Rebecca Onion | 20 | 0 |
8 | Brad Linder | 20 | 0 |
9 | Laura Malesich | 16 | 0 |
10 | Ellen Slattery | 15 | 0 |
11 | Dalene Entenmann | 14 | 0 |
12 | Brian White | 9 | 0 |
13 | Lita Epstein | 8 | 0 |
14 | Deanna Glick | 2 | 0 |
15 | Marisa McClellan | 2 | 0 |
16 | Lara Gibson | 1 | 0 |
google holidash tips recycling BlogActionDay transportation solar-decathlon organic plants home activism AlternativeEnergy alternative-energy computers GlobalWarming california gadget cars GreenBuilding shopping heating food trees autobloggreen celebrity travel ClimateChange Bali green AlGore holidays ReusableBags beer recycle books christmas lead energy emissions solar DIY SolarPower farming featured conservation animals pollution electricity environment co2
Other Weblogs Inc. Network blogs you might be interested in: