| Show 212 - Green Gifts Fair and Practically Green |
|
| Saturday, 07 November 2009 19:47 | |
Listen Now - Click Here!
Guests:
CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT MORE ABOUT THE GREEN GIFTS FAIR Ami Voeltz from Do It Green is here to talk about the new 2010 Do It Green Guide and the upcoming Green Gifts Fair! The purpose of Do It Green! Minnesota (formerly The Twin Cities Green Guide) is to educate Minnesotans about green and sustainable living and promote building healthy, local communities through:
Do It Green! Minnesota will ensure that people of all incomes will have access to our publication and activities, and we will serve as a model for other cities and states nation-wide.
Green Info and Tips:
Light Green Tip #294 - Compost Your Pumpkins
After you've finished celebrating Halloween, compost your jack-o-lanterns, instead of tossing them in the garbage (unless, of course, you are going to be turning them into yummy pumpkin pie, muffins or even flan).
Pumpkins, which of course are 100% natural, will break down quickly as compost in your yard, providing you with valuable nutrients for your lawn or garden. As you probably know by now, pumpkins aren't exactly light, so they otherwise take a considerable amount of fuel to haul to the landfill -- plus their bulky size means they take up space.
To get the best results in your compost bin, smash up the pumpkin a bit to provide more surface area. Layer with other types of materials, like shredded leaves, green weeds or grass clippings. Keep the pile moist and turn it over frequently.
If all that sounds like too much work, don't worry about it. In most areas, you can simply toss things in a pile, and just alternate materials as you get them. It may not make the most super-dooper compost, and it may take a little longer to break down, but you'll still get some nice nutrients, and you'll be helping the planet one little bit at a time.
Dark Green Tip #999 - Water Filters!
The lowdown on water filters! For the most part,most US city drinking water is perfectly safe. But after hearing reports of pesticides, pharmaceuticals and other industrial contaminants in water supplies, people often turn to water filters for added peace of mind. First of all, always select filters certified by the National Sanitation Foundation (NSF), which tests products to ensure that they remove what the manufacturers say they do... and realize that no filter will remove every contaminant of concern. With that in mind, here are the most common types and the major contaminants they can handle.
*They remove: lead, PCBs, chlorine byproducts, certain parasites, radon, pesticides and herbicides, the gasoline additive MTBE, the dry-cleaning solvent trichloroethylene, some volatile organic compounds, some levels of bacteria, and a small number of pharmaceuticals.
*What they remove: per-chlorate, sulfates, fluoride, industrial chemicals, heavy metals like lead, chlorine byproducts, chlorides, and pharmaceuticals.
*They remove: bacteria.
*Distillers remove: heavy metals (including lead), particles, total dissolved solids, microbes, fluoride, lead and mercury. BUT... and this is a big but... The best way to ensure clean and safe drinking water, of course, is to protect our watersheds, which act as natural filters absorbing chemicals, pollutants and sediments.
|
|
| Last Updated on Sunday, 08 November 2009 04:40 |