Showing posts with label Funny. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Funny. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Hug It: Dana's Top Five

1. Leverage your impact with CarrotMob.com and their new ways of activism. In the first ever Carrotmob event, a liquor store agreed to invest in upgrades that made their store more energy-efficient. In exchange, hundreds of Carrotmobbers showed up at once to support the winning liquor store.

2. Win a Green Home from HGTV. Enter until June 5, 2009.

3. Research Shows Dancing Improves Health for Seniors.

4. For the birds. Check the Audubon's Climate Change Quiz and see if you can beat my score: 7 out of 8.

5. MACA urges O'Bama's to use pesticides in their organic garden because, among other reasons, "Americans don't have time to grow their own food."


This blog is for bottom-up dispensers of cool who enjoy eco-travel deals and healthy living. We feel that "the small, the slow, the local, and the personal" will build the new economy. Your comments will help enrich this information for all of us. Please share your tips and experience.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Going For the Green: Thoughts on Guilt and Greenwashing


"These days, it seems just about every business is finding a way to go green, making it that much harder for well-intentioned consumers to distinguish companies with green products and services." --Entrpreneur Magazine

Green guilt, extreme green, green washing—the over-exposure to green messages leaves me feeling eco-fatigued. Businesses greenwashing in hopes of getting attention has created a backlash of cynicism against the green trend. What's an easy going green gal to do?

I confess, I'm not a purist, I find it to be rigid and confusing. Twenty percent of going green requires expensive, complicated, difficult choices about which most people disagree. I focus on the 80% that has clear impacts instead of giving up because of the debatable and often painful 20%.

The way I see it, lots of people doing 80% makes a bigger difference than a few zealots doing 100%. I set a rational, reasonable example that people can follow, rather than condemn those who are unable or unwilling to adopt a perfectionist’s all-or-nothing approach.

Is that a cop-out? Is that nurturing? Economists say it is the law of diminishing return. The last 20% isn't worth the trouble it takes to go after.

Having said all that, I lose respect for businesses that claim to be green for common sense things like recycling. I find lodgings that claim to be green because they ask guests to use less water or because they switched to flourescent light bulbs laughable.

I give my business to those who assert their green-ness in writing. Certification from third parties that verify eco-friendly practices also offer credibility and I have a few for my business just for that reason. But the field of listings is so crowded, most consumers can't tell one from the other. What it seems we can tell is that it takes a variety of efforts to support local residents and protect the environment and no light coat of green can cover up for lack of substance.

Friday, June 27, 2008

Florida Nature Vacations? Oxymoron or Best Kept Secret?



You've heard the jokes about Florida, "Why is it so hard to find a dentist in Florida? Because everyone just mails in their teeth."

Or as my Delray Beach friend, Buz likes to say, "It's not all the old people, it's their parents." And then there's the one that gets applied to the entire Gulf Coast, "It's not the heat, it's the stupidity."

I confess, in the past I have not been a fan of the Sunshine State. Growing up, my father called it, "God's Waiting Room," and insisted no respectable intellectual would set foot in the state. The rest of my family hated the heat and the tourist traps. But I was born in Fort Lauderdale and once I got past the population density and BLING of places like,"Boca Dunes Phase II," I discovered a natural wonderland that isn't crawling with tourists or 90210 Wannabe's--it is in northeast Florida. For nature and romance, nothing beats St. Augustine.

Ten reasons to Vacation in St. Augustine, FL:

1. The Old Florida Lifestyle. Easily found and has not been boxed like a commodity the way Cajun and so many other cultures have been commercialized. Details? Check out Minorcans, especially their food and plants on your walking tours. You can also email me and I'll send you a map and itinerary for a self-guided culinary tour.

2. Charm. The oldest US city settled by Europeans reminds me of a tiny Spanish village washed up on a golden beach. No cars, just a walkable town with authentic history and architectural interest.

3. It's not as hot as the NE. It's cooler than most places in the NE and Southern US in summer. You won't miss the sweltering heat and air pollution from areas near Wash., DC, south Florida, or Georgia. Breezes from the ocean keep it cool, low population density and abundance of parks, preserves, and green space keep the air clean. Details? Compare the zip codes for air quality.

4. You don't even have to leave your vacation spot to get uplifted. Sunrise from the balcony of the Riverview a vacation rental, is amazing. You can watch the yachts and dolphins cruise the Intracoastal. When you book your vacation spot, be sure to SKIP the big box condos on the beach and get an updated vacation rental in a quiet location.

5. Learn about the birds and bees. In just six days I saw swallow-tailed kites, broad-tailed hawks, a ruby throated hummingbird, eight kinds of terns, three adolescent, pileated woodpeckers, red-headed and red-bellied woodpeckers, marsh wrens, wood thrushes, wading birds, a Chuck-Will's-widow, and a nighthawk.

6. You're 16 minutes from one of the best beaches in the world, Crescent Beach boasts an inlet and a beach wide enough to walk or bike for miles.

7. St. Augustine Beach boasts an undeveloped beach, Anastasia Park. Even if you don't like beaches, the natural wonder, history and sheer beauty might give you the inspiration to take a long walk or just nap on the sand.

8. Alligator Farm Park offers thrills and education. The nesting birds in the rookery make the trip worthwhile for even the most anti-zoo family members. Wild birds flock there to nest in the safety of the gator pens, no predators climb the trees to eat those eggs, not with the gators at the bottom of the trees.

9. Guana River State Park. Hiking trails to historic Indian ruins, canoeing, and fishing. A 2,400 acre coastal park at the tip of 12,000 acres of conservation and recreational areas. Shell mounds, over 226 species of birds, bobcats, sea turtles and other endangered animals make this a world-class nature preserve.

10. More Beautiful Parks. Princess Park for horseback riding, Old Florida flavor, boating, and beautiful flowers. Moses Creek for eagles nests, letterboxing and kayak or canoeing. Crystal River, Manatee Springs, Cedar Key, the list goes on...