Elephants, poop paper and procrastination

In 2023 I saw this lovely box of note papers in a fair-trade shop in Boulder, CO. It caught my eye as I was looking for a gift for a friend and we share an affinity for hummingbirds.     

    

Then I discovered the product was made using the dung of elephants in Sri Lanka! What a cool concept!

I adore elephants almost as much as hummingbirds (but not as much as I love Red Pandas, neither of which I can have in my backyard). Also, I happen to love Sri Lanka, as I was lucky enough to visit the island in December of 2018. So of course I bought the note paper for my friend, and one for myself.

While in Sri Lanka we experienced two very different elephant encounters.

The first was going to an elephant ‘rescue’ and we were very excited we would get to ride elephants.  It was not quite the experience I had anticipated. It WAS awe inspiring and humbling to be able to get so close to, touch and even ride these beautiful, amazing creatures. Yet, it was also a bit sad because it didn’t seem like the elephants were very happy or treated well. They didn’t seem treated poorly, I didn’t get a sense of abuse or neglect, just a lack of reverence or kindness. Also, riding elephants is a little scary, and not super comfortable to be honest, so lacking any sense the animal enjoyed the interaction it was rather disheartening overall. We agreed we had no interest in doing that ever again.

A few days later we had a jeep ride through an elephant sanctuary. It was a large area of land allowing lots of space for many free elephants to roam and exist in a more natural way, other than jeeps driving through all the time carrying tourists. What a difference! Of course we couldn’t get close to them, our drivers always maintaining a certain distance, but this felt like a much deeper connection of engaging with the gentle giants. It is truly one of my favorite life experiences to date. My awe, joy and respect for elephants can barely be overstated. Seeing them in the environment where they belong, in the social groups they form, going about their own business was seriously breathtaking. One of our guides aptly reminded us that we humans were the visitors in the elephant’s home. 6 years later, I still get goose bumps thinking about their beauty and strength.

Today, while browsing the internet (and probably should have been doing something more productive) I happened across this story from Business Insider about paper being made from elephant poop in Thailand. Provided with the back story I just gave you, I am sure you know it was a must for me to watch! What a fascinating process, and delightful people making this awesome product! 

Well, I it sure took me down a rabbit hole of memories. But it inspired me to write this post and share with you 2 of these companies making elephant poop paper, supporting sustainable practices, employing local workers and making elephants potentially valued in a whole new way! And a lovely fair trade company with loads of great products! I hope there are more out there to be discovered! So, I guess I will consider this a productive procrastination for today.  

Tell me about any fascinating products like this you may know about!

Let’s do ‘Black Friday’ a little differently?

Let’s face it, gift giving is fun. Every year leading up to the gifting season I promise I won’t give in to materialism, but once I see wrapping paper it’s all over for me.

I LOVE wrapping gifts, giving gifts, watching them be opened. It’s basically my favorite part.

I am that person who buys more small items versus one big present just so I can wrap more things to put under the tree or ship or hand out.

So here are some of my solutions to give some balance to my love of sharing presents and my strong desire to lessen my impact on the environment:

  • Shop small and local as much as possible
  • Buy recycled and re purposed whenever possible. Etsy is great!
  • Buy things the recipient will actually use!
  • When shopping online consolidate shipping as much as possible (for example, Amazon lets you choose one day a week for delivery)
  • Support small businesses by getting gift certificates too. Helps get others to discover my favorite small businesses. Then get creative with fun ways to decorate for presentation!
  • Buy hand made over mass produced. And choose items NOT made from plastic when there is an option. Amazon even has a hand made area to shop.
  • Try to make something myself if I have the time and inspiration
  • Think outside the box and look for unique items that support good causes.

Today I’m highlighting my local Habitat for Humanity Re-Store of the Greater Los Angeles area. They are having a Black Friday all November and inspired this post! Repurposed items and supporting a great cause! Consider supporting your local Re-Store this holiday season! (and all the time really).

And if you have one of those people on your list who are truly impossible to buy for because they have everything, I have one last suggestion. Make a donation to a cause in their name. Make it personal of something meaningful to them. And get creative with how you present it if you are like me and love the whole wrapping and unwrapping process!!

Is Silicone the new plastic?

Over the past several years there we have seen a lot of positive movement away from single use plastics, as well as the use of alternate materials instead of plastic.

For example, those disposable plastic zipper bags that are so prevalent in our kitchens. We now have zipper baggies made from silicone we can use to stash our sandwiches and snacks, and these can be washed and use over and over again. Great! Right?

Well, of course it is great they are reusable rather than being added to our landfill after a few hours of containing something. Obviously, any time an item has a longer life span instead of being used once and tossed is a step in the right direction. Seeing silicone so often replacing plastic products I began to wonder how positive is this switch, really? Are we embracing silicone so quickly that it’s eventually going to become the new plastic in terms of waste and disposal issues? This is a subject I want to dig into deeper, and plan to write about this often.

I am passionate about learning more and sharing recycling myths, tips, do’s and don’ts and innovations. We have been given the ‘Reduce, Re-Use, Recycle’ mantra for a long time, and we seem to be in a growth phase of understanding better the reality of what each of those words can mean in our lives.

Back to silicone vs plastic: Here is the admittedly VERY oversimplified break down of what I have learned in quick search.

  • Silicone is durable and often used to make alternatives to single use plastic products.
  • While it is technically a recyclable material, it degrades when processed so it is actually considered down cycling.
  • There are very few facilities reprocess silicone at this time.
  • Silicone’s ability to withstand high heat makes it a great material to use in lots of products, yet not so easy to recycle.
  • Silicone in landfills doesn’t seem to be as toxic as plastic, but it actually takes even longer to break down than plastic does.

I am curious to learn more about this and will share my education with you as I go. For me, I plan to keep thinking about the items I use and what the full life span of the materials are. The process from the raw materials to the end of life, as well as how many lives that material can realistically have, are important to me to consider.

What are your thoughts on silicone and how prevalent it is becoming? I would love to hear from you.

Did you know – The impact your clothing can have on the environment?

According to an article in Business Insider Malaysia from October 2019 “The fashion industry emits more carbon than international flights and maritime shipping combined. Here are the biggest ways it impacts the planet.

The article sited a variety of concerns, some of which I had not previously known about. As always, learning more about how we impact the world around us can be an eye opening experience.

I have been reading about ‘fast fashion’ as a problem for a few years now and try to keep it in mind when purchasing clothing. Luckily for me it’s a bit easier than some, I don’t really like shopping much anyway and have rarely followed designer brands or fashion rules. However, even a mostly jeans and t-shirt, thrift store donating and shopping kind of gal like me can always make improvements, so I try to stay informed.

Here are some things to think about:

  • Clothing production doubled the last decade, yet people are keeping items only half as long.
  • That means more clothing is ending up in landfills, or worse – it is burned.
  • Washing clothing releases microfibers into the oceans. Especially items containing polyester.
  • Polyester is a plastic, producing it releases two to three times more carbon emissions than cotton, and polyester does not break down in the ocean.
  • Cotton is better than polyester on the backend, but it is a very water-intensive plant.
  • It can take 2,000 gallons of water to produce one pair of jeans, 700 gallons for one cotton t-shirt.
  • There is a lot of water used and or polluted in the making of most clothing.
  • Dyeing of fabric is also a major contributor to water pollution.

Sounds a bit daunting and depressing to put it together like that, but my goal here is to inform, expand my own base of knowledge and provide inspiration towards positive change.

So. What can I (you, we, all of us) do?

  • Buy less – don’t be a slave to fashion trends or disposable clothing.
  • Wash less when possible. Do you toss a shirt in the laundry after one day of wearing indoors? I’m not talking about your favorite workout outfit that you sweat all over, but really think about what you can wear multiple times between washes.
  • While we are talking about laundry – consider your cleaners and their packaging. More on that in other posts, I promise.
  • Also use cold water, lower drying temperatures or line drying to extend the life of the fabric.
  • Get to know your fabrics and try to make decisions that are gentler to the environment.
  • Learn more about synthetic fabrics that pollute the oceans to avoid.
  • Seek sources of cotton or other materials that are being utilized in more sustainable ways.
  • Shop at and donate to thrift stores, vintage shops. Find creative ways to keep using older clothing.
  • Learn to sew, mend and repair clothing items that begin to wear out. Let’s bring back the popularity of patches!!
  • Seek out recycled and upcycled fabrics. I have a favorite shopping bag made from an upcycled sari.

Most of all and always:

Research, read, educate yourself, share what you learn with others. Be positive, encouraging and non- judgmental because all efforts help. We have a long road to re conditioning ourselves to think about how we are treating this planet. Together we can make difference.

Making waste worth something

Food waste turned to electricity

I just read this great NPR article on a story featured on PBS News Hour about dairy farmers in MA using food waste from local stores and other waste from their own farms to convert into electricity.

Food waste sent to landfills will create methane gas on it’s own as it breaks down. This is one of the reasons food waste is such a huge problem we need to address.  When you hear people talk about waste, especially food waste, it isn’t just some moral judgement of our excessive lifestyles that we throw too much away. It directly contributes to the degradation of our planets eco system.

This process of using anaerobic digesters uses waste to create methane gas and trap it so it can be used to make electricity. It becomes a closed loop system. The electricity is used to power the machinery creating it, as well as the rest of the farm and much more.

It is not a wholly new concept. There is a reprint of a 1963 Farm Journal story on Mother Earth News about a methane digester.  

And in Europe there are thousands of the anaerobic digesters currently in use. Hopefully, we will see more solutions like this gain more support here in the U.S. 

It is pretty amazing to think of food waste and cows becoming parts of the solution instead of contributions to the problem. 

 

Going beyond Reduce, re-use, recycle

For decades we have been told of the 3 r’s concerning waste. but there is a 4th that is even more important.

First we need to re-think. Put consideration into every purchase and think about the entire life span of that item.

As a person who was always  very committed to recycling it became too easy to think I was doing less harm to the environment than I was. But the creation of plastic in the first place is very harmful, and now it turns out that recycling isn’t quite what many of us thought all these years. Even before China started refusing our refuse the process was not very clean or happening as much as we thought. Sometimes our ‘recycling’ was traveling this world to other countries and simply being burned. But that is not really my point.

Plastic, glass, paper, cardboard, metal, wood, bamboo, vinyl. Think of all the source material whatever you are using comes from, and how it is processed. How does it start, what happens as it becomes the item you use, and what happens to it when you are done using it?

Cork is one of my favorites. Cork is harvested from the bark of the cork oak without harming the tree. It absorbs carbon, it can be recycled into other items and is very low impact to be put to use in the first place.

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Re-thinking what we buy and use is a subject I plan to get into often here. I hope it will lead to conversations, suggestions and additional awareness for us all. I encourage feedback and comments to further the conversation.

 

What to do with extra party food?

I got this cool trick while attending a good friend’s bridal shower a few years ago.

The hostess offered us all to take home food because like any good host there was more than enough. And you know how some groups don’t eat as much? All that lively conversation keeping our mouths occupied. The food was delicious, but we had barely put a dent in it! Everyone’s politely declining until she points out the empty take out containers. Suddenly the idea of taking home leftovers seemed much more acceptable! If my memory is correct, she had like Chinese food boxes. You know the upright white cardboard with little metal handles.

Well I thought it was brilliant so I now keep a giant stack of paper take out containers so my guests can have something to tote home from our many gatherings!

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It’s so nice, especially when you have generous friends like I do who also bring more treats to any gathering. If I don’t send home leftovers after a party I sometimes end up with no room left to store everything. And it really works. People know you mean it when you ask if they would like to take some home if you also have a container for them. No one has to worry about returning a Tupperware and I feel ok about the fact that it’s paper and will break down naturally over time. Yay!

With the holiday party season upon us, I wanted to share this idea. It’s one of my favorite party tips. Take some with you, or have some available if you are hosting Thanksgiving, Friendsgiving, Christmas, Ugly Sweater, New Years or ANY party this holiday season!

Enjoy!

P.S. Please enjoy all celebrations responsibly. Get a Ride if you are going to partake in libations. Keep the fun, fun and make sure everyone is still safely around for the next get together!