Earth Day is coming up next Sunday, on April 15, and I plan to celebrate this whole week as Earth Week.
The first Earth Day was in 1970 and it still remains a big event in the environmental movement. Interest and participation in Earth Day has increased and spread around the world, with millions of people taking part.
The first Earth Day was in 1970 and it still remains a big event in the environmental movement. Interest and participation in Earth Day has increased and spread around the world, with millions of people taking part.
I do many things everyday in my life to help the earth: I live in a small house; I walk and bike, and work at home; I buy used stuff and buy locally (to reduce fuel used for transportation); I use the library instead of buying books; I compost, recycle, and grow my own food...
But it’s good to ask myself “What more could I do?”
Yes, it’s often more expensive to be environmentally conscientious, but I know that my purchasing decisions have an impact on ecosystems. The companies that produce and sell products depend on my dollars, so they will listen and react to my behavior. Also, my health and my family’s health is at risk! I need to keep my priorities straight. And I need to stretch my limits to action.
Agenda this week:
1. Earth Week petition walks
2. Clean the neighborhood
3. Reduce my use of plastics
4. Clean up at the river
5. Make Earth Cookies
1. Earth Week petition walks:
I know I will be out walking every morning with my girl Sadie!
Each day on my walk this week I will repeat this prayer of petition:
2. Clean the neighbor-hood:
I also plan to take a garbage bag with me as I walk in the mornings and go down a different alley each day to pick up trash.
2. Clean the neighborhood
3. Reduce my use of plastics
4. Clean up at the river
5. Make Earth Cookies
"Come on, Mom, let's go!" |
I know I will be out walking every morning with my girl Sadie!
Each day on my walk this week I will repeat this prayer of petition:
That the Earth be cared for, I pray.
That we learn to live simply and lightly on the Earth, I pray.
That we stop poisoning the soil and seas, I pray.
That global warming is halted and reversed, I pray.
That protection of the Earth becomes the political priority, I pray.
Amen.
3. Reduce my use of plastics:
Our co-mingled recycling company has recently banned a lot of plastics, which has made me think more about my plastics use.
Earth Day Network, the world’s largest recruiter to the environmental movement, is working to "secure a future free of plastic pollution". They have a large action toolkit you can download, with a ton of information and ideas for reducing your use of plastics. I plan to work my way through it and set myself some goals.
Our co-mingled recycling company has recently banned a lot of plastics, which has made me think more about my plastics use.
Earth Day Network, the world’s largest recruiter to the environmental movement, is working to "secure a future free of plastic pollution". They have a large action toolkit you can download, with a ton of information and ideas for reducing your use of plastics. I plan to work my way through it and set myself some goals.
4. Clean up at the river:
On Saturday I'm taking part in an organized clean up day at our river, with my daughter.
5. Make Earth Cookies:
On Saturday I'm taking part in an organized clean up day at our river, with my daughter.
5. Make Earth Cookies:
I got this idea from the Almost Unschoolers blog. One correction, though: She says the earth is about 70% water, but it's the earth's surface that is 71% water, not the earth itself. That percentage works fine for these cookies which only show the earth's surface anyway!
Ingredients:
1. Preheat oven to 375ºF. In a small bowl, stir together the flour, baking soda, and baking powder. Set aside.
2. In a large bowl, cream together butter and sugar until smooth. Beat in an egg. Gradually blend in the dry ingredients.
3. Divide the dough and color three-quarters of it blue by kneading food color in with your fingers. Color one-eighth green and one-eighth brown with a few teaspoons of baking cocoa.
4. Roll balls of blue dough and add bits of green and brown for the land masses.
5. Place onto lightly oiled cookie sheets and press a little to slightly flatten. Bake 8 to 10 minutes. Let stand on cookie sheet for two minutes before removing to cool on wire racks.
- 2-3/4 c. flour
- 1 tsp. baking soda
- 1/2 tsp. baking powder
- 1-c. butter
- 1-1/2 c. sugar
- 1 egg
- food color
- 3 tsp. baking cocoa
1. Preheat oven to 375ºF. In a small bowl, stir together the flour, baking soda, and baking powder. Set aside.
2. In a large bowl, cream together butter and sugar until smooth. Beat in an egg. Gradually blend in the dry ingredients.
3. Divide the dough and color three-quarters of it blue by kneading food color in with your fingers. Color one-eighth green and one-eighth brown with a few teaspoons of baking cocoa.
4. Roll balls of blue dough and add bits of green and brown for the land masses.
5. Place onto lightly oiled cookie sheets and press a little to slightly flatten. Bake 8 to 10 minutes. Let stand on cookie sheet for two minutes before removing to cool on wire racks.
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