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Posts Tagged ‘Green Living’

Ah… New Years! The birth of a fresh start, a new year, an opportunity to repeatedly write the wrong date because you aren’t used to it yet…and the dreaded or highly anticipated or totally ignored New Years resolutions!

But listen. A resolution doesn’t have to be scary, or huge, or monumental. It can be just a small goal, you take baby steps toward the whole year. You might even take a few steps back, it happens! But really it is just bringing a goal or thought to the forefront of your mind, so that you can include it in your life. Not so scary!

Caring about the environment can be a goal, and it doesn’t have to be huge.

It can be as simple as picking a house in your room, and looking at it with fresh eyes.

The kitchen. How much trash do you throw away each day? How many plastic items do you have/use? Do you use disposable or single use items frequently? Try to compost your food scraps; try to buy items at the grocery store with less disposable packaging, and more recyclable packaging. Try to replace worn out plastic items with things like glass, metal or wood. Try to reduce or get rid of single use items completely (or reserve them for guests or special occasions only) Yes that means more dishes 😉 but really thats all the extra effort it will take to use ceramic plates, glasses and your silverware! Make it a family project, I can’t tell you how many awesome conversations I have had over the sink with my family members, with one of us washing, one of us drying, and one of us putting away. It can be fun!

The bathroom. How many items in a bathroom are plastic? How many are recyclable? Can you reduce the amount of plastic by using bar soap, wash clothes, solid shampoo/conditioner, bamboo toothbrushes, charcoal flossers? Can you reuse some of the plastic there?

Bedrooms. When you get the itch to spring clean (Anyone? No? Just me?) Try having a yardsale, or donate items to friends, family, churches, community centers, or donation bins and non profits. Don’t just throw stuff in the trash that will end up in a landfill! Try to extent the item’s life as long as you can, plus you can help other folks while you do it!

Not too bad right? It has taken me only 10 minutes of writing so far to share these ideas, so I bet you could think these thoughts about your own house in the same amount of time, and over the course of the next few months and this year, slowly make some changes in your household that will help the environment!

I also bet you could come up with even more or better ideas than these ones!

Give it a try?

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Inside the Atlantic City Pier is a small, bright, cheerful store with an assortment of wonderful scents literally pouring out of their doors. If you happen to meander inside, you will find yourself surrounded by colorful bins of soaps and bath balls, small jars with a disturbing resemblance to ice cream tubs full of scrubs and baskets of other beauty products. You are inside Lush, a store full of fresh, hand made and eco-friendly cosmetics.

Lush prides itself on many eco-friendly practices, including using recycled paper and vegetable dyes for their packaging, if they use packaging at all. Many Lush beauty products are in tins or are “naked.” They don’t believe in animal testing, and they are all about living green and getting people to contribute to helping the planet in small ways, because together it will lead to big things.

In their About Lush section, they have tips for green living, and how to keep a green bathroom.

The staff in the Atlantic City Lush are knowledgeable, kind, and helpful. Any question you have, they can answer. The girl that waited on me also sent me away with free samples of soap, which I have to admit, I am now hooked on.

Sometimes it is hard to realize how many different ways you can be eco-friendly, you hear so many big ideas like buying solar panels for your home or buying electric or hybrid cars.  But there are also little ways you can help  like using eco-friendly cosmetics and soaps in your bathroom. It is like running a race, you can take small strides and still reach the finish line with everyone else!

LUSH

by Jessica Westerland

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Yes, it is that time of year again!

Clean Ocean Action is running their beach clean-ups again, Saturday October 24 from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

RTEmagicC_beach_sweeps_logo_02_jpg

Since the beach sweeps started in 1985 with just 75 people, it has now grown to over 70,000 volunteers that have collectively removed more than 3.5 million pieces of debris from New Jersey’s beaches and waterways. There are many different sites to choose from, ranging from Essex county down to Cape May County.

ATLANTIC COUNTY LOCATIONS             

  • Atlantic City – Albany Ave at the Beach Patrol Station
  • Brigantine – 17th St, South
  • Longport – 35th Street
  • Margate – Granville Ave
  • Oceanville – Forsythe Wildlife Refuge, Visitors Center
  • Ventnor – Newport Ave – Sponsored by Adventure Aquarium of Camden

 CAPE MAY COUNTY LOCATIONS  

  • Avalon – 30th St.  
  • Cape May – 2nd Ave Beach- Site Sponsored by Lower Cape May Regional Education Association 
  • Del Haven – Sunray Beach at Eldredge Avenue
  • North Wildwood – 15th Ave at Beach Patrol Building (Pending due to Beach Re-nourishment)
  • Ocean City – 9th St Music Pier
  • Sea Isle City – JFK Blvd ***October 17, 2009***
  • Strathmere  – Webster Ave
  • Stone Harbor – 95th St. PENDING!
  • Wildwood – Poplar Ave.

 ESSEX COUNTY MEETING LOCATION 

  • Glen Ridge/Montclair – Toney’s Brook at Woodland Ave near Pierson Place

MIDDLESEX COUNTY LOCATION

  • South Amboy – Raritan Bay Waterfront Park, Meet at the Gazebo 

MONMOUTH COUNTY LOCATIONS   

  • Aberdeen – Fisherman’s Parking Lot at Cliffwood Beach
  • Asbury Park – Convention Hall at the Boardwalk
  • Atlantic Highlands – Meet at East End of Boat Launch at Atlantic Highlands Marina – Site Sponsored by NuStar Energy
  • Avon – Pavilion at Norwood & Ocean Aves
  • Belmar (2 Sites) 1. Belmar Fishing Club, First Ave; 2. 16th Avenue beach 
  • Bradley Beach – Gazebo at 5th & Ocean Aves
  • Brielle- Fisk Avenue and the Public Access Point at the Drawbridge
  • Deal – Philips Ave beach
  • Keansburg – Laurel & Beachway Aves
  • Keyport –  New Location: Cedar Street
  • Loch Arbour/Allenhurst – Euclid Ave
  • Long Branch – Meet at Turning Point Cafe, Pier Village
  • Manasquan – Main St beach
  • Middletown Twp (4 sites)1. Leonardo Public Beach North; 2. Leonardo Public Beach South at Beach Ave; 3. Ideal Beach at Ocean Ave & Bayside Pkwy; 4. Bayshore Waterfront Park at Fishing Pier parking lot next to Seabrook/Wilson House
  • Monmouth Beach –  CANCELED! Due to Construction
  • Ocean Grove – Meet at Flagpole on the Beach
  • Sandy Hook – Parking Lot E – Site Sponsored by Wakefern Food Corp. ShopRite, Enterprise Rent-A-Car
  • Sea Bright (4 sites) 1. Ferguson Beach, north of Rumson/Sea Bright Bridge; 2. Meet at Gaiter’s Restaurant Oceanside; 3. Meet at Riverside Cafe (Mirasol Restaurant); 4. Meet at Public Beach parking lot – Site Sponsored by Monmouth County Association of Realtors
  • Sea Girt – Boardwalk at Beacon Blvd
  • Spring Lake – South End Pavilion at Atlantic & Ocean Aves
  • Union Beach – Florence Ave at Front St (by Statue)

OCEAN COUNTY LOCATIONS  

  • Barnegat – Municipal Dock at end of East Bay Ave
  • Bay Head – Central Market at Rt 35 & Mount St
  • Beachwood – Public Beach, Compass Ave 
  • Brick – Brick Beach III on Rt 35 North, next to Ocean Club and across from Bayside Park
  • Lakewood – Lake Carasaljo, meet across from St. Mary’s Church on Rt 9
  • Lavallette – Philadelphia Ave beach
  • Mantoloking – Downer Ave beach
  • Normandy Beach – Meet at Labrador Lounge at Peterson St & Rt 35 North
  • Ocean Gate – Wildwood Ave Pier
  • Ortley Beach – Third Ave beach
  • Pt. Pleasant – Maxson Ave beach and River Ave beaches – Sponsored by Bank of America
  • Pt. Pleasant Beach (2 sites) 1. Jenkinson’s Aquarium on the Boardwalk – Site Hosted by Jenkinson’s Aquarium; 2. Maryland Ave.
  • Seaside Heights (2 sites) 1. Grant Avenue on the Boardwalk; 2. Bayside boat launch along Rt 35 South
  • Seaside Park (4 sites) –  1. Stockton Ave on the boardwalk; 2. Second Avenue; 3. Midway Beach at 6th Lane; 4. Island Beach State Park – Bathing Pavilion #1

 

I am the Wildwood Beach Captain, on Poplar Ave. I and my crew will be there bright and early, getting some sun (hopefully) and helping out the enviroment.  Every time I am surfing and I watch gulls and sea birds swooping across the horizon, dolphins cutting in and out of waves, and fish and rays swimming under my board, I can’t help but feel protective towards the marine life that shares their habitat with me. I clean up the beaches to help keep these marine animals alive and healthy, as well as keeping my fond memories of the beach at sunset clear of unsightly trash. Who wants a photo of a gorgeous sunset with chip bags and empty bottles strewn around? No one! So make a difference, come out and help keep our beaches clean.

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Idealbite.com is a bright, eye catching website that is devoted to giving its readers and followers small tips that can help their lives be more eco-friendly without stress.

If we all knew what we could do in the day to day to impact the planet and our communities in a positive way, we’d do it. But for most of us, there are not enough hours in the day as it is, never mind finding the time to learn which products are environmentally friendly and which aren’t, or what a label means when it says “organic,” “natural,” or “sustainable.” Ideal Bite is here to help, providing insight and inspiration, level-headed advice, and tried-and-true recommendations for people who aspire to align their everyday actions with their personal values.

Instead of having just general tips, they have tips for all subjects: health, fashion, home, living, entertainment, mama bite, and other topics inside of those. You wake up and want to learn something about eco-friendly fashion? There is a section for that. Not only are the tips refreshing and relevant to everyday, they are accompanied by inspiring pictures and charming illustrations.

On a personal note, they also referenced The Cure and 2 of their songs cleverly in one green living tip about eco-therapy. Being an avid Cure fan, I appreciated the humor.

Speaking of personal, that is exactly how the website feels. Personal, close, like you are reading one of your friend’s blogs. Their About Me section includes information about the team, and a page that tells the story of how the website was born, and the differences their readers have made already.

At least 11,973 Biters kept their tires properly inflated, saving enough gasoline to drive a hybrid car around the entire Earth

At least 14,967 Biters bought a CD online, keeping 3,300 lbs of plastic and paper out of the production stream

Take some time to check out this website, I don’t think you will be disapointed! You can also sign up to have their tips sent to your email, that way if you don’t have time to browse everyday you can read a quick tip while checking your email. So let yourself be inspired! And get outside soon and have an adventure.

photo by Jessica Westerland

photo by Jessica Westerland

 

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Hello! It has been a while, I have been immersed in work. I did find time to read at my job, and lately I have been reading a book that is green in color as well as  ideas.

It is called the green book.

 It is by Elizabeth Rogers and Thomas M. Kostigen. It puts out there “solutions to explain how waste, water, energy and time can be saved.”

It is broken up into categories, like home, entertainment,  travel, technology, work, school and each category chapter lists different areas and how you can be more green and responsible.

Not only does it include the tip, it tells you just WHY you should follow it. For example under the School Chapter, it has a subheading: Pens. It suggests using refillable pens, and gives the price for them which is about the same as disposable pens. It then explains why you shouldn’t use disposable ones, “their components and packaging are made from nonrenewable resources and can contain environmentally damaging chemical.” Next it proceeds to inform the reader that

 Every year, Americans discard 1.6 billion pens. Places end to end, they would stretch more than 150,000 miles- equivalent to crossing the Pacific Ocean from Los Angeles to Tokyo moree than 25 times!

The book has another angle to attract attention, there are inserts with famous people talking about how they make a difference to the environment, like Will Ferrell, Jennifer Aniston, Faith Hill, Tim McGraw, Dale Earnhardt Jr, Tyra Banks, and Robert Redford to name a few.

I like the book, I originally saw it at the Wetlands Institute in Stone Harbor for sale, and after thumbing through it, I decided to get it from the library to check it out further. You certainly can’t miss it on the shelf, it is a lovely shade of flourescent green.

Another great reason to check out this book is that in the back it has a references section, with internet addresses to all the things in the book, from topics like recycling and the big picture, to specific items likes hoses and napkins. I could spend days checking out all the sources used in this book!

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