Wednesday, November 18, 2009

New! Upcycled Burlap Coffee Cozies by TreeTrekker

Hola! Long time since I've blogged, but I have been hard at work creating eco-friendly merchandise for all you coffee lovers out there! I finally started my very own Etsy store, http://www.etsy.com/shop/TreeTrekker, where I will be featuring all my new merchandise! Currently I am selling my Upcycled Burlap Coffee Cozies and will be adding new merchandise soon, like; candles, candle holders, wrist warmers, ear candles, aprons & bags of many sorts! Of course all of these items will be handmade with love by myself and the TreeTrekker team.
Upcycled Burlap Coffee Cozies are a great gift for the holiday's, and perfect for stocking stuffers. I got the idea for making these from a friend who brought me a cozy from a trip! I started thinking of ways to make these original and kitchy. One of my favorite materials to work with is felt, as it can come in many colors, can be used for anything, and is almost art in itself. I also wanted to make sure that most of my materials were upcycled (Def.: Re-using products and materials to create something new!) so I decided, what better way than using burlap coffee sacks!

My favorite feature is, you will never be surprised by drinking your friends tea instead of your coffee again! Always know which cup is yours with your own personalized Upcycled Burlap Coffee Cozy.
Made to order, each Cozy is constructed of upcycled burlap and felt. Upcycled Burlap Coffee Cozies are double layered so you will never burn your hands.

So go ahead! Check out my new Etsy store featuring some of the new items that I've created.

Made with:
100% Upcycled Burlap Coffee Bags
Felt
Buttons
Hemp string
Love

Monday, July 20, 2009

Living Green > Getting started: The Top Ten #8

8) Water

Filtering your tap water to remove chlorine and fluoride provides pure, clean, great-tasting drinking water at a fraction of the cost or environmental impact of expensive and wasteful bottled water that costs more per gallon than gasoline. The payback on a $60 water filter takes only a few weeks for most households. As an added benefit, there is no plastic bottle to leach harmful phthalates (which act as estrogen in the body) into your water. Drinking pure water from your home or office filtration system keeps toxins, especially heavy metals, out of your system and keeps billion of plastic bottles out of our landfills.

I know that most people in America (and around the globe for that matter), drink out of water bottles. But most people don't realize the harm water bottle plants cause to our environment and our economy. Water bottle plants go to a certain location where they believe the water source is great, like a spring, or a lake. It is from here that they extract the water from said water source, and pump it into their factory. Inside the factory, the water is treated and processed with chemicals to "kill the germs". But in the process of adding all these chemicals, they actually make the water more un-pure. Laboratory tests conducted for EWG at one of the country’s leading water quality laboratories found that 10 popular brands of bottled water, purchased from grocery stores and other retailers in 9 states and the District of Columbia, contained 38 chemical pollutants altogether, with an average of 8 contaminants in each brand! Some chemicals commonly found in bottled water are: toxic byproducts of chlorination, disinfection byproducts called trihalomethanes, bromodichloromethane, and many more; all of which are known to cause cancer!

Now that's not even the craziest part.....the bottled water industry is not required to disclose the results of any contaminant testing that it conducts. Instead, the industry hides behind the claim that bottled water is held to the same safety standards as tap water. When in fact, this is not the case, as it is quiet clearly processed in a plant.

So aside from the health factors involved in buying bottled water, what about the environmental issues surrounding it? Michigan has some of the cleanest and purest water, flowing through trickling streams to meet up with it's beautiful and vast lakes. In the late 1990's, Nestle was permitted to build a plant in Michigan by Gov. John Engler. The contract was full of tax breaks and included a minimal licensing fee of $100/ year. Before the necessary permits were attained, Nestle started building the plant. When Nestle started pumping the water, they did so in mass quantities claiming that they were not draining the resources. The average amount of water being pumped by Nestle out of this one pump, is 100-300 gallons per minute!! The amount of damage that this can do to the surround forests and farmlands is immense. Almost immediately after Nestle began pumping, Farmers were noticing that their wells were running low, almost dry! The local Michigans took Nestle to court, and after a long, hard battle, they eventually lost the case. Now all this happened because our mass population thinks it's safer to drink bottled water, than it is to refill one everyday out of the tap.

There is also the cost of bottling water, compared to filtering your water from home. In fact, bottling wa
ter costs 240 to 10,000 times more than tap water. For the price of one bottle of Evian, a single person can receive 1,000 gallons of tap water. Now that is a lot of water to be wasting because we believe the myth that bottled water is safer. The movie FLOW talks about our water shortage and who is controlling it. As we can all imagine, there are people all over the world who cannot receive or pay for clean water. Those are the people who are paying the highest price for water: Their lives. And it really seems like there must be a way to provide good clean water for these people, so why don't they have it? Well, as we learned in FLOW, there are 3 major companies that own the water; Vivendi, Suez and Thames; Which in turn are owned by non-other than our World Bank. Find this a little strange? You're not the only one! Unfortunately, what this means to our brothers and sisters who are dying for lack of water in Africa, is that they either pay the high price for treated water through these three companies, or they drink from the river, which is obviously contaminated with toxins.

What can we do to stop this cruel, unfair privitization of water? Well a couple of things; first and foremost, don't buy bottled water!; secondly, look into smaller programs of filtering and treating water like the ultraviolet water purifier. This purifier is used in many third world countries, such as India, as an inexpensive way to filter their water, therefore saving themselves from being under the evil power of the World Bank.

So please folks, everytime you think about buying a bottle of water fromo 7-Eleven, think twice, or maybe 3 times, about the real cost of that bottle of water.
Water privitization
The real cost of bottled water
Bottled water reports
Michigan/Nestle struggle

Friday, July 17, 2009

Living Green > Getting Started: The Top Ten #7


7) Cleaning Green


Cleaning with green, natural products is so important, for many reasons. For one, I personally don't want those chemicals (like bleach, and sodium lauryl sulfate) getting into my body. For two, everything that we clean with, ends up in our water systems, affecting so many aspects of life.

All those household chemicals that you have to lock up from children, you lock up because they are hazardous to your health. If you wouldn't want your child getting into it, then you probably shouldn't be cleaning with it either! If you clean your floors with a cleaner containing sodium lauryl sulfate, and then your baby crawls across it, you are putting your child at risk for serious health problems and skin irritations.
When you use a cleaner in your tub, toilet, sinks, laundry, even your floors, it eventually will make it's way back to our water system. When it goes down the drain, it goes to the water filtration system, and then right back into the water system that you use to shower with and brush your teeth. Now you wouldn't want to be soaking those chemicals up into your pores that you used to unclog your drain, would you? I know I don't! Also think about how that same water supply will makes its way into our streams and oceans. So many of our plant and animal life has disappeared from our eco-systems because of chemicals.

Collectively, we dump 32 million lbs. of toxic chemistry down our drains each day, just from household cleaning chemicals. That doesn't count what goes into our indoor air. Switching to green alternatives keeps those chemicals out of our bodies and out of our water supply.

So go through your cabinets and check the labeling. A good rule of thumb that I like to go by is, if you can't pronounce it, don't use or eat it!

Some natural cleaners I enjoy are:
Ms. Meyers
Seventh Generation
Dr. Bronners
Green Works

What you can do:
Some natural alternatives to chemical household cleaners are:

BAKING SODA (sodium bicarbonate): An all-purpose, non-toxic cleaner. Cleans, deodorizes, removes stains and softens fabrics.

BORAX (sodium borate): A natural mineral that kills mold and bacteria. An alternative to bleach, it deodorizes, removes stains and boosts the cleaning power of soap. Please note safety precautions at the bottom of this page.

CASTILE and VEGETABLE OIL BASED SOAPS: Cleans everything

CORNSTARCH: Starches clothes, absorbs oil and grease

HERBS and ESSENTIAL OILS: For disinfecting and fragrance

LEMON JUICE: Cuts through grease and removes perspiration and other stains from clothing.A bleach alternative.

SALT (sodium chloride): An abrasive

NON-FLUORIDE TOOTHPASTE: A mild abrasive

VINEGAR (acetic acid): Cuts grease, removes stains and is an excellent water softener.

WASHING SODA (sodium carbonate): Cleans clothes, softens water, cuts grease and disinfects. Increases the cleaning power of soap.

ISOPROPYL RUBBING ALCOHOL: is an alternative to harsh cleaners with bleach.

Homemade cleaning recipes
Sodium Lauryl Sulfate Info

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Living Green > Getting Started: The Top Ten #6

6) Natural Lawn Care

Don't you just love summertime's, laying on your lawn, flowing your fingers through the grass?

I bet you would think differently if you knew what you were really laying on.

The average suburban lawn uses six times the hazardous chemicals per acre than conventional farming. Is this really safe? Or necessary? What about your children and pets who play on that lawn, how much of those chemicals are going into their bodies?

If just 10% of us switched to natural lawn care, over half a billion lbs. of synthetic fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides would prevented from entering the environment...and our bodies! When you use pesticides, fertilizers, and herbicides on your lawns and gardens, you cannot segregate what they kill from what you really want them to kill.

Some of the best fertilizer you could have is compost. While you mow your lawn, mulch! Leave the mulched clippings on your lawn and reduce the need for lawn fertilizer by 30% as well as help your lawn trap carbon. If you don't want to mulch, keep the clippings for compost. You can buy or make a fairly inexpensive, yet effective, composter that can sit in the corner or your lawn, or by your recycle bins. Keep all your scraps of food, and lawn trimmings to create beautiful compost that will fertilize your lawn naturally (and your plants will LOVE it). One of the benefits to using organic fertilizers is reducing the amount of toxic chemicals in our water systems, which in turn reduces the amount of toxic chemicals in our bodies.

Most people who have a garden struggle, at one time or another with unwanted insects. Take example from Mother Nature, use checks and balances! Instead of jumping to the easiest thing, sythentic pesticides, research the pest, and try to find it's natural enemy (a beneficial insects) to introduce into your garden instead. This is the most effective, and natural way to remove unwanted insects from your yard. In nature’s cycle we have predators and prey. Those nasty bugs that are making prey out of your prize roses are also a tasty snack to other insects. Introducing these beneficial insects into your garden can help control unwanted pests.

One very beneficial insect to introduce into your garden is the light green lacewing fly. Lacewings should be purchased as eggs which you spread around your garden plants. As soon as the eggs hatch the hungry larvae will eat caterpillars, moth eggs, aphids, mealy bugs and almost anything else that gets in its way.

Another beneficial insect is the praying mantis. Purchase praying mantis’s as eggs and place in your garden. When the praying mantis hatches he will eat beetles, flies, aphids, and many other insects. Your kids will love this one too, they are fun to have around, not to mention beautiful!
What you can do - 6 steps to a more natural lawn:

1) Switch to natural lawn care
2) Compost!
3) Use natural pesticides, like bugs!
4) Water less frequently and deeper
5) Mow higher
6) Choose the right grass for your region

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Living Green > Getting Started: The Top Ten #5

5) Switching to Natural Personal Care

Using natural personal care has a double benefit-keeping toxic chemicals off your body and then keeping them out of the environment after they wash off your body. Remember, if you wouldn't eat it, don't put it on your body. You already know that anything you put on your skin, from soap to shampoo, moisturizers to hair dye, deodorant to sunscreen, will be absorbed. Chemicals in these products will be absorbed as well, and they can cause serious health problems. Read labels carefully and be aware that certain types of products tend to be worse than others.

Also remember that when you shower, your pores are absorbing things from the water as well, so anything that you wouldn't want your body to absorb, don't put back into the water. This goes from make-up, toothpaste, lotions, shampoo, conditioner; to dish soap, laundry detergent, car cleaning products, pet products, and even prescription drugs.

What you can do - 6 steps for sustainable personal care:

1) Choose natural, organic-fiber clothing
2) Don't compromise with your children's clothing
3) Find a greener dry cleaner
4) Buy safe personal care products
5) Filter your shower and bath water
6) Choose natural feminine hygiene

Some personal care items that I recommend are:
Jason Organics
Kiss My Face
Seventh Generation
Origins
Ms. Meyers

Monday, July 13, 2009

Living Green > Getting Started: The Top Ten #4

"There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed."
Mohandas K. Gandhi
4) Denying Disposables

If we all just used a glass instead of a water bottle and a coffee mug instead of Styrofoam cup, we would save 244 billion bottles and cups made from petrochemical-based plastics from entering the U.S. waste stream each year. Purchase durable, long-lasting products that can be reused or refilled in order to decrease waste. Consider using a refillable razor, rechargeable batteries, and reusable containers to hold your lunch.

According to the Earth Policy Institute, the global consumption of bottled water reached 154 billion liters (41 billion gallons) in 2004, up 57 percent from the 98 billion liters consumed five years earlier. Even in areas where tap water is safe to drink, demand for bottled water is increasing—producing unnecessary garbage and consuming vast quantities of energy. Although in the industrial world bottled water is often no healthier than tap water, it can cost up to 10,000 times more. At as much as $2.50 per liter ($10 per gallon), bottled water costs more than gasoline.

Not only are people using more disposable water bottles, but companies are using more and more packaging on their products. Take for instance, if you were to buy an mp3 player, or a toy; there is the outer layer of hard casing plastic; then the individual parts are wrapped in a softer plastic; sitting on top of a piece of cardboard (for marketing and branding purposes) with an average of 2-4 paper manuals and booklets. Now that is just WAY too much packaging for one mp3 player. Or what about when you order something from amazon, and it comes in yet ANOTHER layer or packaging, the shipping box!
Now, it's not solely about over-production of disposable items, it's also about the transportation involved and the environmental damage that comes from that. When you get something shipped in an over sized box from Amazon, that box takes up more space in the shipping truck, causing more, and more trips to transport over-packaged goods.

So look around your kitchen, garage and bathroom, just to see how much disposable packaging has made it's way into your house. Then think about all the beautiful, and easy, ways you can either reduce your hand in that disposable waste, and/or reuse it in a creative way (donations to schools for craft projects are always good)!

Re-using cereal boxes
Re-usable products
Green household items

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Living Green > Getting Started: The Top Ten #3

3) Recycling

The average person in the U.S. produces 1,609 lbs. of waste each year. Recycling can cut that waste stream by up to 75%. If each of us just recycled paper, glass, and metal, we would save 162 million tons of material from entering American Landfills each year.

A perfect example of why we all need to pay attention to our behaviors, and recycle, is the Great Pacific Garbage Dump. Around 100 million tons of plastic are produced each year, of which about 10 % ends up in the sea. The currents in the ocean have created 5 known Gyre's; The North Atlantic, South Atlantic, North Pacific, South Pacific, and Indian Ocean gyres. As you can very well imagine, this is causes many problems, mainly for our ocean life. The Eastern Pacific Garbage patch has the highest concentration of plastic matter. This is troublesome, because plastic does not biodegrade, it instead, disintigrates, causing it to break into smaller and smaller pieces, therefor becoming more digestable for more animals. I'm sure you have all seen dead birds on the beaches, possibly some caugh in a soda holder. But have you seen a turtle caught in a plastic band, forming his shell into the shape of an hour glass. These horrors are a direct result of us not taking care of our planet, and dumping instead of recycling.
We all need to be paying more attention to our actions. Please recycle everything you possibly can. If you need help figuring out what is recyclable and what is not, contact your local recycling plant, and they will provide you with a list.

Wikipedia - Garbage Dump
Wikipedia - Recycling
GreenPeace - Garbage Dump

Friday, July 10, 2009

Living Green > Getting Started: The Top Ten #2


"Climate change is for real. We have just a small window of opportunity and it is closing rather rapidly. There is not a moment to lose."

- Dr. Rajendra Pachauri

2) Going Carbon Zero
A carbon footprint is a measure of the impact our activities have on the environment, and in particular climate change. It relates to the amount of greenhouse gases produced in our day-to-day lives through burning fossil fuels for electricity, heating and transportation etc.

The carbon footprint is a measurement of all greenhouse gases we individually produce and has units of tonnes (or kg) of carbon dioxide equivalent.Carbon dioxide emissions globally are causing the Earth’s climate to change and warm, which will have catastrophic results if we do not act to reduce them. The effects of climate change can be seen now. Temperatures are already increasing, glaciers are receding at unprecedented speeds, whole chunks of the Antarctic ice shelf are breaking off, warmer seasons are becoming longer, and storms are becoming more severe and causing more and more damage.

Your "Carbon Footprint" measures the carbon dumped into the atmosphere and ocean from your existence. For about $99 per year through non-profit Carbon Fund Org.
, you can offset your entire carbon footprint (The amount of this key greenhouse gas produced through your life's activities) with that organization's contributions to renewable power, energy efficiency, and reforestation projects.

What You Can Do: 5 Steps to Reducing your Carbon Footprint

1) Buy organic and local: There's a better chance that organic food was grown in an eco-friendly manner. Locally grown food is good as it didn't travel too far

2) Pay attention to packaging: Go to stores that require minimal packaging. You can buy loose tomatoes rather than boxed or plastic-wrapped ones. Take reusable bags to the grocery store

3) Ditch bottled water: Bottled water has a huge carbon footprint. Buy a reusable water bottle or canteen

4) Energy-proof your home: Make sure all windows close properly and that the attic is insulated. Keep heating and cooling systems properly maintained, and switch to reusable filters when possible. Switch from incandescent to CFL bulbs, which use 75% lesser energy and last longer.

5) Bike or take the bus! Driving a car daily is probably one of the biggest contributors world wide for high carbon emissions. As often as possible, leave your car at home!

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Living Green > Getting Started: The Top Ten #1


"The nation that destroys its soil destroys itself." - President Franklin D. Roosevelt


1) Eating Organic "Let food be your medicine." - Hippocrates

For each 1% increase in organic food consumption in the U.S. alone, pesticide and herbicide use is reduced by over 10 million pounds per year. Typical foods are grown in soils that have been chemically fertilized and sprayed with multiple herbicides (chemicals that kill unwanted plants) and pesticides (chemicals that kill insects), then processed with high heat and preservative chemicals to extend shelf life and added sugars to improve taste, and packaged in disposable plastic containers for your convenience. For example, the typical bag of potato chips you buy at the supermarket has been subjected to over 50 chemicals from seed to shelf and can contain over 75 times the "safe" levels of cancer-causing acrylamide established by the state of California.

What you Can Do - 7 steps to Sustainable Eating

1) Buy organic whenever possible 5) Reduce sugar and sodas

2) Be careful of fish 6) Cut fried and processed foods

3) Eat low on the food chain 7) Change your cup

4) Filter your water