Sensitive Planet

I’m glad to welcome Adi and Sensitive Planet to our green community. They provide fine products that nourish mind, body, spirit and Mother Earth! Here’s some information about Sensitive Planet from Adi and what they have to offer…

Sensitive Planet Inc is a user friendly online store that offers unique yoga, ayurveda, holistic and earth friendly & cruelty free products. Our products utilize the ancient wisdom of the yogis of India to provide exclusive products of higher consciousness, natural remedies, and awareness enhancement and it is for this reason we call ourselves as the enlightening market place.

Our core products are- Scent of Samadhi, a natural herbal uplifting fragrance that had been used by yogis for hundreds of years; Copper Cups, in the traditional mugs called ‘tumblers’ to energize water while drinking; enlightening meditation/yoga music that breaks the kinesiology calibrations scales; sacred jewlery utilizing basic wisdom forms; ayurvedic formulas etc.

We ensure that at each process of the products we deal with, we are contributing to the betterment of humanity in some way- for example- our Scent of Samadhi pouches are made by socially and physically disadvantaged women in South India; and a percentage of our sales supports the global sanctuaries for retired animals project.

Visit their website to learn more about their unique yoga and meditation products! Be Ariven = Be Awake.

Govardhan Gardens

I’d like to welcome Sadhu and his Eco Farm Govardhan Gardens to our eco community. Here’s a brief summary of their vision…

Govardhan Gardens is a popular eco-farm on the west coast of Puerto Rico. It is the home of the most diversified collection of tropical fruit and nut trees in the Caribbean. To help preserve and spread biological and genetic diversity in the tropics, the Garden’s nursery offers seeds of over 100 types of organically grown tropical fruits and nuts which are shipped internationally. Recently, about 40 species of structural, edible and ornamental bamboos have been added to the collection and nursery. Yearly, hundreds of visitors enjoy tours through the property. The farm serves as an educational role model for anyone interested in alternative tropical agriculture. Workshops and seminars about tropical fruit and bamboo are offered locally. The owner, Sadhu Govardhan, helps land owners in the entire Caribbean to develop eco-farms and he regularly holds conferences about sustainability, exotic tropical fruits and the importance of bamboo.

People around the world are participating in sponsoring Govardhan Garden’s tree planting project. For a minimal amount, people can have a special tree planted in their names. Sadhu Govardhan’s recently published “Oro Verde – Securing the Future of our Food” has helped change the view about ecological farming in the tropics and is used by hundreds of students, farmers and agricultural educators. If you ever plan to buy land in the Caribbean, Sadhu can help you with finding, analyzing and developing the land. Farming-related e-mail questions are answered for free.

Visit Sadhu’s website for more information on how you can get involved and if you are in search of any land in that area.

Now is the time for BYOB

It is time for BYOB! Yes, bring your own shopping bag!  As we continue our journey through a busy 2010, it’s crazy to think about how much shopping we historically do here in America and world-wide. Whether it be frequent trips to the grocery store as we keep our kitchen’s stocked for wonderful meals and tasty treats or those sometimes dreaded (yet skillful) “6 bags on each arm” walks through the local mall, it all adds up to so much unnecessary waste.  One of the most blatant examples of this waste is disposable shopping bags.

An estimated 100 billion plastic shopping bags are consumed each year in the USA, according to the Wall-Street Journal.  Most plastic bags end up in landfills and the rest often end up in rivers, ponds, lakes, streams or in the sea, where animals can ingest or become entangled in them.  Considering how many shopping bags are consumed and wasted each year, the time is now to spread the word about the positive benefits of eco-friendly reusable shopping bags.  After all, most of us want to give back to our families, friends and communities as often as possible.

Adopting a BYOB strategy in our individual shopping habits is a simple way to do just that.  If we can raise awareness at this time, the positive impact for the environment is incalculable for 2010 and well into the future.  Several cities have already made gradual but significant progress in promoting the use of eco friendly reusable bags in recent years.  Motivating consumers with plastic and paper bag bans, discounts at the register for reusable bag usage and tax motivations are a few to speak of.

Right here in America, the San Jose City Council recently passed one of the nation’s strictest bans on plastic and paper shopping bags.   This is a big victory for the Bay Area, which has 1 million plastic bags per year accumulating in and along the San Francisco Bay.  San Jose becomes the latest bay area city to enact some type of ban on disposable shopping bags; others include San Francisco and Palo Alto. Tracy Seipel of the San Jose Mercury News reported that it was actually ONE man who really jump-started the ban, another great example of the power of one person.  Here’s a an excerpt:

“While visiting his sister-in-law in Taipei, (Kansen) Chu (elected to San Jose city council in 2007) went grocery shopping and was surprised to get charged for plastic grocery bags. The next day, he brought his own cloth bags back to the store.  “I guess the question,” said Chu, “was, ‘Why not San Jose?’ ” He began a conversation with the city’s environmental services staff, which later moved to council committee discussions.

Save the Bay’s 4th annual report on the most garbage-strewn sites in the region further demonstrates the need for BYOB.  The 50-year-old environmental advocacy group focused on 10 specific bay-area sites where almost 15,000 plastic bags were retrieved in one day last year in their report.   Here’s an excerpt of an article in the San Francisco Chronicle by Kelly Zito.

According to (Save the Bay’s) research, Californians use about 19 billion plastic bags each year, 3.8 million in the Bay Area. The average use time for the bags – made using about 12 million barrels of oil each year in the United States – is about 12 minutes. In addition to the hundreds of years it can take for a plastic bag to decompose in a landfill, the bags also force downtime when fed into traditional recycling equipment. Typically, the bags get wound into conveyor belts or gears and must be cut out by hand.

Ten US cities have banned plastic bags so far, five within the past year. Even Mexico City enacted a ban on plastic shopping bags, which went into effect in August.  The city of 20 million now faces the realities of effective enforcement, which is not easy when the Mexico City Chamber of Commerce estimates there are 35,000 vendors in Mexico City’s downtown area alone.

Bans on plastic bags aren’t the only effective way to reduce harmful waste caused by disposable bags.  PlasTaxes, which tax consumers at the register for using plastic bags when shopping, were first introduced by the Irish.  John Roach of National Geographic reported in 2008 on the worldwide momentum that’s been building since Ireland instituted a PlasTax in 2003.  The Irish showed they could reduce plastic bag consumption by 90% or more.   Momentum is growing across the world, particularly in America.  From Washington, DC to Edmonds, WA to North Pole, AK, communities and governments are spurring an international trend to reduce the harmful environmental effects of disposable shopping bags.  In the great state of Hawaii, the legislature is currently considering a bill to ban single-use plastic bags (SUP), or to establish a small fee to use SUP bags.

Even major retail stores like Target and CVS Pharmacy are taking action by enacting discounts at the register for customers who choose to BYOB or just carry-out their items without a bag.  For the naysayers, it’s convenient to ignore recent momentum in reducing disposable bag waste.  But to some, the wide-spread adoption of eco-friendly reusable bags is inevitable.   Look at the way smoking is becoming taboo in America.  Indoor smoking bans have caught on like wild-fire.  In the same way, who is to say the use of disposable bags won’t become taboo at some point in the (hopefully near) future?  The use of eco-friendly reusable grocery bags is definitely gaining steam.  Our individual choices to bring our reusable bags can go a lot farther than we think.  That’s what BYOB is all about.

Of course, plastic and paper bags should be recycled and it’s important to remember most large retailers including Albertsons and Wal-Mart will recycle plastic bags for you (just need to bring them your accumulated stash).  That being said, a BYOB shopping strategy can make your life so much easier because there is no longer a need to accumulate that cupboard full of plastic bags or figure out what and when to do something about it.  Keeping a few non woven bags in your car or backpack is a good way to ensure you have them when needed. So give back this holiday season by remembering to BYOB!   Whether it be at a convenience store, the mall, or while grocery shopping, we can make a difference for the environment and help raise awareness one transaction at a time.  In the fight to eliminate disposable shopping bag waste, 2010 is our moment.   Have a great rest of the year!

The Hand Weaving Company

I’d like to welcome Ian and the Hand Weaving Company to our eco community. They are based in Mid Wales, United Kingdom and manufacture hand weaving equipment which can be used for recycling plastic bags, old fabrics and yarns, making useful everyday objects. Their products include weaving sticks, peg looms, corkwork bobbins and lucets provide everything the hand weaver could possibly need. All their products are hand crafted in their own workshops.

Many schools and youth groups find our simple weaving equipment a wonderful antidote to the technology which surrounds us today. Our peg looms, weaving sticks and corkwork bobbins are used with great enthusiasm by students of all ages. Our experience tells us that those coping with learning difficulties also benefit considerably.

Research proves that your pulse rate slows and your blood pressure lowers when you weave or knit. This is why many therapy groups, day centres and other similar organisations are frequently amazed and delighted at how rewarding students find their newly acquired skill. A sense of achievement is attained in a very short space of time aiding speedy recovery.

Peg loom weaving is a great tool when it comes to recycling. Use oddments of wool, strips of fabric, unspun fleece, plastic bags – almost anything. It’s only the bounds of your imagination that will stop you!

So now that you know more about them, visit their website to check out their custom hand crafted product lines to utilize in your home, help yourself while helping the planet, a beautiful symbiosis!

Universal Botanicals

Universal Botanicals is the latest green company in our eco community and offers eco conscious green cleaners for your home which are chemical free and safe around children as well as healthy for the environment. Here’s some more about Universal Botanicals green approach and business practices…

Universal Botanicals’ Green Certified Cleaning Products are Chemical Free, Non Toxic, Biodegradable and most importantly, SAFE FOR CHILDREN!  Our Green Cleaners are made from 100% renewable & sustainable resources and are approved for the chemically-sensitive, immuno-compromised, those with asthma & allergies, babies and even your pets!

Universal Botanicals is the first and ONLY company to package its Green Cleaners in BIODEGRADABLE BOTTLES!  Over time, this will exponentially reduce our landfill dilemma and the oceanic plastic pollution mass, providing a safer world for future generations!

Universal Botanicals also features Benefect Botanical Disinfectant, the ONLY Disinfectant to ever have any  type of Green-Certification that is also 100% Chemical Free and Biodegradable.  It is EPA Registered & Approved and has been tested to kill over 99.99% of bacteria (including MRSA, STAPH, STREP, E-coli and much more), viruses (HIV, Influenza etc.) and even mold and mildew.  There’s nothing else like it in the world!

Visit Universal Botanicals today to learn more about how you can utilize green cleaning products in your home to make it safer for your children and pets and healthier for our environment!

Sherry’s Custom Soy Candles

I’d like to welcome Sherry to our eco community who has a fondness for eco friendly soy burning candles with scrumptious aromas and pleasant ambiance for your home.  She opened a small business to spread the word and pass these wonderful candles on to others. Here’s what she has to say about her eco conscious business and lifestyle…

I started hand pouring Soy Candles just this year. I received a great soy candle for Christmas and I was amazed how it burned so evenly and clean. It was so fragrant and was the best candle I have experienced ever! I went to my local craft store and purchased a soy candle kit and experimented on my own.I found out I was quite good at pouring great candles.So I started ordering in bulk and selling my soy candles in the Beauty Shop were I run my own Hairstyling business. They were a big hit and every body loves them! I want to share my great product with you and your family.

I sell all natural products with organic ingredients. I pour all of my candles from all natural pure soybean wax, use recyclable containers and use non-toxic additives. I really believe everyone can make a difference by using just one or two Eco mined products in their homes.

So visit Sherry’s website today to learn more and place your order for these wonderful candles.

Kwik Sweep Recycling

I’d like to welcome Earl at Kwik Sweep, based in London, to our eco community. Pioneers in recycling all types of waste from office clearance, to film/TV production equipment and daily/weekly bag collection service. I am proud that they are a part of our eco friend group and I love their approach to all out recycling efforts. Here’s some more info about Kwik Sweep from Earl…

Kwik Sweep is a Junk removal and Rubbish clearance service covering all of London. We do House / Office /Garden / WEEE (electronical waste) clearances. Why are we different? We are different because our company policy is to divert as much waste/junk from landfill. We do this by working with local charities including Oxfam and Scope, as well as local businesses. We give anyway all unwanted junk, WEEE, paper, books, clothes and much more to theses companies. At the moment 78% of waste we receive does not end up in landfill and is reused or recycled. We all promote the three Rs (Reduce, Reuse and recycle) to all out clients and staff members.

Visit their website to learn more about their innovative approach to lessening the amount of rubble that reaches the landfills and is recycled for reuse. Keep up the fine work!

Dako Solar Power

Peter with Dako Power is our latest Eco friend, providing wholesale solar panel products and is now a recognized  and trusted braind in African and International markets. Here’s some more info from Peter..

Solar panels convert visible sunlight to renewable electrical energy. Solar panels are sometimes also referred to as photovoltaic modules (PV) or solar modules. Dako power has a vested interest in the factory we produce our solar panels hereby providing you with the quality Juta solar panel. Our business is focused on the wholesale supply of solar panels hereby providing you with very competitive solar panel prices. We are also able to provide solar panel volumes that meet market needs. We often customize solar panels for our customers specific needs.

Visit their website to learn more about their Juta solar products and business philosophy.

Sustainable Energies Now

I’d like to welcome Bob at Sustainable Energies Now to our eco community. They specialize in efficient and sustainable  strategies for residential and commercial construction. Here’s what Bob has to say about their approach…

We here at Sustainable Strategies, Inc. are committed to the education, evaluation, conservation and implementation of sustainable strategies for clients in Northwestern Illinois and South/Central Wisconsin. We have extensive experience in “traditional” residential and commercial construction. Taking that experience, we have integrated the technologies of sustainable construction and incorporating the renewable energy generation technologies of wind (building mounted small wind to monopole medium size wind), PV Solar, PV Solar Thermal and Geo-Thermal. Our focus is a client wanting to retrofit existing buildings and/or build a new sustainable building. With our effort targeted in the aforementioned geographic area, we are one step closer to leaving the legacy of a cleaner planet for our children and grandchildren.

Bob mentioned that their website will be done soon, when it is live I will add a link here for all of you to visit and learn more! Stay tuned…

The Sunmotor Solar Shack

I’d like to welcome Eric Jensen to our eco community he’s the founder of Sunmotor International and is a leading innovator on bringing solar energy to desolate areas and also implementation of new drilling technologies. Here’s a Q and A and more information about his approach to solar energy and the new Solar Shack…

Sunmotor is a startup company in central Alberta. Its mission is to develop and commercialize new solar products. We started with a line of DC [direct current] solar pumps developed to water livestock in remote pastures. This has grown into a nice market. Then we discovered that the same pumps can handle contaminated liquids, so they also fit well in environmental cleanup projects, for example the many brine-spill remediation projects underway in the oilpatch. These direct-powered systems are very simple: the solar panels automatically run the pump whenever there is enough sunlight and there’s liquid in the sump.

What is the Sunmotor Solar Shack 120?

This was developed for a remediation project east of Ponoka. Devon Canada wanted a system that continues to pump during cloudy weather. That way, effluent doesn’t accumulate in the sump when there isn’t enough sunlight to power the pump. Stantec Associates, Devon’s consultant, commissioned me to design a system that would supply power on demand. The first unit, which we’ve just finished, will be installed this spring.

What are the advantages of this model?

The Sunmotor Solar Shack 120 delivers 120 volts of alternating current [vac] power, enough to run a higher capacity pump if desired. The solar panels charge a bank of batteries. These large, sealed batteries supply DC power to an inverter, which converts it into AC. We added a thermostat control to shut off the pump when the temperature drops below freezing. If the pump continues to operate when the discharge line is frozen, the batteries could be discharged unnecessarily. The Solar Shack concept can be customized to meet each client’s power requirements, whether for 12 vac, 120 vac, or 240 vac.

As a custom designer, how does Sunmotor handle manufacturing?

It’s been a challenge. I used to subcontract out each component to separate suppliers – quite inefficient, but I had no other option. When I found Strad Structures in Stettler, Alta., I was like a kid in a candy store because it provides a one-location solution for structural, mechanical, and electrical services. Plus their manager, Don Petersen, responds with enthusiasm to whatever wild scheme I dream up, often pointing out how he could build it more efficiently with some minor changes.

Where do you see this technology heading in future?

Our products are well-suited for thousands of remote sites that only require a small amount of power. Sunmotor is now building a unit that integrates solar power with a generator backup. When the batteries need a boost in addition to what the sun delivers, the propane-powered genset will start automatically and run until the batteries are again fully charged. For example, this model could provide power for a camp where the noise of a continually running generator is a real annoyance. I also see interesting possibilities in countries with unreliable electricity supplies, a very widespread problem. A Solar Shack unit could provide a backup power supply that automatically kicks in whenever the power grid goes down.

Visit his website, Sunmotor International, to  learn all about his new technologies and his brilliant aid in bringing solar power to people across the world.