Earth Day Every Day





A few simple ways that you can teach your children to make a difference






Earth Day is the day set aside with the idea that we each need to give thought to what we can do  to help preserve our planet, so that future generations can enjoy the beauty of life. 

Try incorporating these small changes into your family's daily life:
  • Buy food grown locally.
  • Walk or ride your bike, carpool or use public transportation whenever possible.
  • Combine errands.  Make shopping lists to cut down on trips to the store, and save time too!
  •  Put your litter, including gum and cigarette butts in your pocket until you find a trash can.  Talk with your children about how litter can cause injury and death to wildlife.
  • Carry a plastic bag when you walk, for litter collection.
  • Leave your picnic spot cleaner than you found it.  Feed the birds and provide nesting spots. (If you have an outdoor cat, put a bell on it!) 
  • Bring your own bags to the grocery store.
  • Turn the water off while you brush your teeth.
  • Spend less time in the shower.
  • Check for drafts and places where heat escapes, dripping faucets, etc.  Have the gas and electric company come and do an energy audit.
  • Get a water filter for the kitchen faucet and stop buying bottled water.
  • Replace regular incandescent light bulbs with compact fluorescent light bulbs.*                                                  
  • Talk with your children about things they can do to protect their planet.
  • Make a habit of turning off lights behind you, and teach your children to do the same.. Experiment:  Walk around the house and add up the wattage of lights left on unnecessarily!
  • Play outside, explore, to save electricity.
  • Make recycling a family project.
  • Make the switch to “green cleaners”.
  • Periodically turn of lights and appliances for one hour as dusk falls (See Earth Hour) 
  • Put together an addition to your craft box consisting of recyclable materials.
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 * If every American household replaced just one light bulb with an ENERGY STAR qualified bulb, we would save enough energy to light more than 3 million homes for a year, more than $600 million in energy costs, and prevent greenhouse gasses equivalent to the emissions of more than 800,000 cars.
•    ENERGY STAR qualified bulbs use about 75% less energy than standard incandescent bulbs and last up to 10 times longer.
•    Save about $30 or more in electricity costs over each bulb's lifetime.
•    Produce about 75% less heat so they are safer to operate and can cut energy costs associated with home cooling.
•    Are available in different sizes and shapes to fit in almost any 
                        fixture, for indoors and outdoors. (for more information, go to energystar.gov)
           
The Art of Recycling   

      It is important to teach your budding artist the necessity of using materials carefully so as not to create more waste than necessary. This is done by teaching the child to not only be frugal when using supplies (e.g., cutting a small piece of paper from the corner of a larger piece, using only the amount of paint or glue necessary), but to get into the habit of recycling for art.  Once you get into a creative frame of mind, you can see the possibilities everywhere!  Use egg cartons, margarine tubs, yogurt containers, jewelry gift boxes, and any other recyclables that fit the bill. 
     Help children collect, sort and store a wonderful stash of art supplies without spending a fortune!  At the same time you will be helping your child to learn that s/he can truly have an impact on the environment!




  • newspaper; magazines and catalogs;
  • milk cartons (building blocks);  egg cartons; 
  • aluminum foil (washed and dried); pie tins; Styrofoam trays (produce only)
  • cellophane "windows" on pasta boxes; cereal boxes (great book covers!);
  •  plastic bottles and containers of all sorts except those containing hazardous       materials;
  • cardboard boxes; cardboard scraps; cardboard tubes  
  • plastic lids of all sizes; buttons (counting games); spools
  • pasta; dried beans, peas, rice (mosaics, musical instruments); crepe paper   
  • egg shells, washed (mosaics, flower pots)
  • sea glass, seashells
  • used wrapping paper; greeting cards (gift tags, collage place mats); wallpaper;  
  • paper bags; onion bags; straws; dryer lint
  • necklaces; old jewelry; beads; combs;
  • lost socks, mittens, and gloves
  • clothes pins; popsicle sticks; wood scraps; sawdust
  • packing popcorn;  cotton balls; scraps             
  • fabric; scrap fabric; string; yarn; lace; ribbons  
  • sponges, toothbrushes for painting 
  • used streamers   
  • dried flowers and grasses; feathers; pinecones; pebbles and stones;                                          
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Catalog Choice is an easy, free service that allows you to decline unsolicited catalogs, reducing the number of catalogs in your mailbox and the number of trees that get sent to the paper mill.  Simplify your life and save natural resources.  The web site can be found at www.catalogchoice.org.

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                                       Group Projects and Activities
                         to Commemorate Earth Day


*  Using the aforementioned children’s books for inspiration, create your own children’s story or book illustrating the importance of caring for our planet.

*  Work with Primary or Elementary School students in developing a story into a play.  Possibilities include previously listed children’s books.

*  Organize a community clean-up along Canaseraga Creek, Williams Park, Babcock Park, Stonybrook.  Culminate by sowing flower seed (as in Miss Rumphius, by Barbara Clooney) around the perimeters of parks and along shores.

*  Publicize the clean-up by sponsoring a poster contest.

*  Hold a bottle drive for contribution to an organization dedicated to environmental conservation.  Pick your organization and educate the community.

*  Publish a newspaper or put up a web site, regarding what your group is doing for environmental conservation.  Include simple things we can each do to save the earth, a list of environmental organizations and how to contact them, stories, words of wisdom...

*  Have a talent show with an Earth Day theme.  Do a song, skit, commercial, story...

*  Plant a wildlife garden.  Use flowers and bushes that attract birds and butterflies! 
* Get your community on the Earth Hour bandwagon!

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Earth Friendly Gardening: Mrs. Anzalone's Class Digs In

In commemoration of Earth Day 2000, Mrs. Anzalone's 4th grade class decided to make their world a  more beautiful place by creating a butterfly garden in the courtyard at E.B.H. Elementary School.  I had the privilege of assisting in this endeavor.  Following are some excerpts from the newsletter we compiled at that time.  I couldn't have said it better myself!

The Compost Heap
      by Kyle Hoag and Ben Witte

    The compost heap is lots of things that decompose and turn into fertilizer.  It is good to use compost because organic material is reused, turns into good fertilizer, is good for gardens, and healthy for the planet.
     Compost is made by putting leaves, grass cuttings, eggshells, coffee grounds, fruit and vegetable scraps outside.  You need to layer compost, then dirt, then compost, then dirt and so on.  Mix it up sometimes so the rain and air can work to decompose it.  When the garden is started, put a little compost into the dirt.  It will be nutritious and help the soil.

Here are some things that are good to put into the compost pile:
grass clippings, leaves
vegetable scraps, fruit peels
fireplace ashes, sawdust
newspapers (torn into tiny pieces)
weeds pulled from the garden
twigs
coffee grounds
dryer lint
peanut shells

Do not use: pet droppings, meat scraps, colored newspapers, raw eggs, bones, butter or margarine, or other things that stink as they rot. *

*Source: 
Green Thumbs: A Kid's Activity Guide to Indoor and Outdoor Gardening by Laurie Carlson

Attracting Butterflies
  • Butterflies are always searching for sweet nectar from their favorite flowers.  They are attracted to flowers by both color and sent.  Here's what will bring the most butterflies to your garden:
  • flowers with one solid color rather than mixed colors
  • flower colors in this order: purple, yellow, blue, pink and white
  • single flowers rather than double (frilly) flowers
  • flowers with a strong sweet smell to attract butterflies from far away
  • flowers planted in masses or grouped together so butterflies will notice them when they are flying overhead
  • nectar flowers that bloom at different times to feed butterflies that arrive in your garden at different times of the year*
*Source: Jumbo Book of Gardening   by Karyn Morse


The Hummingbird Garden
     by Sam Bovard and Noah Mark

     The ruby-throated hummingbird can be found near woods edges, streams, parks and gardens.  It likes to eat flower nectar, insects, spiders, tree sap and sugar water at feeders.  It likes to make its nest on the small limb of a tree, 10-20 feet high
       If you want to attract hummingbirds, you want a nice sunny spot with lots of nectar plants with trumpet or tube shaped flowers that are bright red, orange and yellow.  Perennial and annual flowers have lots of nectar so they can drink it from late spring to early fall.  


Homemade Bug Spray and Other Cool Stuff

Soap Spray
You can make a  spray to use on plants that are infested with insects such as aphids or mealy bugs by mixing ½ cup of soap flakes with 3 gallons of water.  Mix the soap flakes and water in a bucket until they are dissolved.  Pour it into a clean plastic spray bottle and spray it right on to the plants.

Garlic Spray
If Soapy Spray doesn’t get rid of the pests, here's a recipe for cooking up a stronger mixture:  Crush several cloves of garlic with a garlic press, or smash it with the side of a knife.  Add it to one quart of water and boil it for about five minutes.  Let it cool and strain out the garlic bits.  Pour the liquid into a clean spray   
                                     bottle.  Spray on plants to keep insects away; it also controls fungus.

Slug Trap
Slugs love to nibble the leaves of garden plants.  Since they usually come out at night it can be very difficult to stop them.  Stop those pesky pests by setting a delicious trap for them.  Mix 1 tsp dry yeast, 1 Tbsp sugar, and 1 cup water in a shallow pan, one that slugs can climb into (e.g., a clean tuna can or foil pie plate).  Set the pan out in the early evening.  Slugs will come to it within minutes, fall in and drown.

Pest Strips
Cut strips from the sides of a plastic (milk) jug.  Cover the strip with petroleum jelly and hang it up; or attach the strip to a paint stick with hot glue.  Push it into the ground next to the plants that are being eaten by flying insects (e.g., whiteflies).*

 *Source:  Green Thumbs: A Kid's Activity Guide to Indoor and Outdoor Gardening by Laurie Carlson

Note:  There are numerous insects that are beneficial  to the garden, making a tasty meal of those pesky plant eaters.  For more information, check out these web sites!
http://insects.about.com/od/insectpests/p/attbeneficials.htm
http://insects.about.com/od/insectpests/p/recipes-attract-good-bugs.htm
http://insects.about.com/od/insectpests/tp/top10beneficialinsects.htm


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Cutting Down on Toxic Household Products

      It's time to clean up the cleaners!  Any cleaning substance you use ends up in  the air, the water, or the soil and ultimately inside your body—so you may want to minimize  your use of toxic products in your home.  Need more convincing?  Read on.
     Some companies have formulated a different cleaner for every room of the house.  To hear them talk, you'd think there are a thousand variations of dirt in your home...
     What's the bottom line?  If you want to save a ton of cash, return to simpler times when dirt was dirt, and cleaners cleaned it up, for most of your cleaning jobs the home made cleaners suggested in this 2torial will serve your needs-- you'll have a safer home, a cleaner environment, and save money to boot!…

For complete article, see www.tutorials.com/08/0858/08581.asp

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Earth Hour- Last Saturday in March, 8:30-9:30pm
  
     Earth Hour is a global event that occurs on the last Saturday of March. The idea is that the people of the world join to take notice of the environmental danger our planet is in by asking households, businesses, and communities to turn off their lights and non-essential electrical appliances for one hour in the evening.
     Earth Hour was originally promoted by World Wildlife Fund Australia and the Sydney Morning Herald in 2007. The strong backing from the City of Sydney helped to make Earth Hour 2008 an international event.
     In 2008 24 global cities participated. In 2009 hundreds of millions of people in over 4000 cities and towns and in 88 countries world wide turned off their lights! In fact, entire cities (Cape Town, Chicago, Copenhagen, Dubai, Hong Kong, Istanbul, Las Vegas, Lisbon, London, Los Angeles, Manila, Mexico City, Moscow, Nashville, Oslo, Rome, San Francisco, Singapore, Sydney, Toronto and Warsaw) went dark!
     Please encourage friends, family and members of this community to participate in
Earth Hour on the last Saturday of March from 8:30 - 9:30pm.

For more information, go to EarthHour.org.
Check out these video clips:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjWD8pbK5t8http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FclcMfzjwug&feature  



A Few Great Books Worth Reading with Your Children

Celebrating Earth Day, Janet McDonnell.

Dear Children of the Earth, Schim Schimmel.

The Great Kapok Tree, Lynne Cherry.

Where Once There was a Wood, Denise Flemming.

The Lorax, Dr. Seus.

Ben's Dream, Chris VanAllsburg.

The Little House, Virginia Lee Burton.

Miss Rumphius, Barbara Clooney.

Recycle: A Handbook for Kids, Gail Gibbons.

The Young Naturalist: An Usbourne Guide.

50 Simple Things Kids Can do to Save the Earth, The EarthWorks Group.






A Few Organizations Worth Looking Into 

Nature Conservancy:
4245 North Fairfax Drive, Suite 100,Arlington, VA 22203-1606
(703) 841-5300
www.nature.org

Working to preserve plants, animals and natural communities that represent the diversity of life on Earth by protecting the lands and waters they need to survive.  Oversees management on preserves, fosters fire ecology research, and promotes the judicious use of prescribed fire to meet biodiversity conservation needs through publications, information exchange, and fire policy reviews.


National Wildlife Federation
11100 Wildlife Center Drive
Reston, VA 20190-5362
1-800-822-9919 www.nwf.org 

The mission of the National Wildlife Federation is to educate, inspire and assist individuals and organizations of diverse cultures to conserve wildlife and other natural resources and to protect the Earth's environment in order to achieve a peaceful, equitable and sustainable future. National Wildlife Federation's main goal is to raise awareness and involve people of all ages in their fight to conserve and protect the environment.

National Parks Conservation Association
777 6th Street, NW, Suite 700
Washington, DC 20001-3723 
phone: 800-628-7275e-mail: npca@npca.org

Mobilizing citizens and joining with communities, businesses, landowners, and activists to protect park resources by battling abuse and neglect, educating the public, promoting local restoration, and fostering better management in parks nationwide.  In Congress, promoting parks legislation and lobbying for public funding to meet growing needs.  In the courts, establishing legal safeguards that will protect our national parks for years to come.

N.Y.S. Department of Environmental Conservation
www.dec.state.ny.us

"conserve, improve, and protect its natural resources and environment, and control water, land and air pollution, in order to enhance the health, safety and welfare of the people of the state and their overall economic and social well being... Inform the public about environmental conservation principles and encourage their participation in environmental affairs.

National Audubon Society
700 Broadway; New York, NY 10003 212 979 3000
www.audubon.org.

The mission of the National Audubon Society is to conserve and restore natural ecosystems, focusing on birds and other wildlife for the benefit of humanity and the earth's biological diversity.


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