Category Archives: contests

Earth Day Contest Winner! (and a few words about reusable shopping bags)

Congratulations to Daisy of Compost Happens! You’ve won the Official Eco Women Canvas Tote Bag!

While drawing the lucky winner, Enviro Girl got to thinking about how much she loves reusable shopping bags.  She quit accepting paper OR plastic years ago, opting to BHOB (that’s “Bring Her Own Bag”).  Reusable shopping bags never, ever break open, spewing groceries all over the driveway or parking lot.  Reusable shopping bags earn Enviro Girl 5 cents’ credit each time she uses them at most stores.  Reusable shopping bags hold 2-3 times as much as paper or plastic shopping bags, which means fewer trips from Momvan to kitchen.  Reusable shopping bags are easier to carry–the handles are generally wider and often long enough to get slung over a shoulder.  Plastic and paper bags can easily get too heavy and uncomfortable to carry–the handles dig into your palm and are too short to hold any other way.

Enviro Girl faithfully repurposes the remaining plastic and paper shopping bags from the Days of Yore when she used them.  (She’s part Dutch, so she never throws away things that might be useful.)  When she makes donations to the local thrift shop or leaves a stack of books and a loaf of banana bread on her neighbor’s back porch, those old bags get a second use.  Plastic bags stashed in overnight bags are a great way to segregate dirty laundry while traveling and keep wet towels and swimsuits from dripping everywhere.  But Enviro Girl finds herself using her reusable totes more and more–they don’t tear or rip!  They hold more volume!

Enviro Girl’s Top 10 Uses for Reusable Bags:

10.  Groceries–duh.  She keeps 4-5 bags in a plastic crate alongside the empty milk bottles beside the door from the house to her garage.  When she goes shopping, she grabs the crate, putting it first in the back of her Momvan, then beneath her shopping car, then onto the check out counter, then back onto the garage shelf when she’s home and her groceries are put away.

9.  Library books–they’re kept dry and the tall stacks don’t slide all over the place when held together in a canvas tote!

8.  Sunday School Supplies–Enviro Girl teaches preschool kids at her church, so she keeps her binder, Bible, story supplies and contact info. in a canvas bag.  Her sons’ Bibles, workbooks and Sunday School projects/papers get stowed in there, too, to get shuffled to and fro every week.

7.  Car Trips–Snacks, magic markers, pads of papers, comic books, audio books–all the goodies for a long car trip are in one spot for easy access in a canvas tote.

6.  Purse–Enviro Girl actually uses a few favorite cloth shopping bags as a purse!  She gets so many complements on this one (second from the left) by Green Girl World:

No one seems to think it’s NOT a purse–but it holds a wallet, calendar, phone, paperback book, mitts for karate class–far more volume than a regular purse!

5.  Swimming–towels, suits, goggles, and sunscreen for a family of 4 can travel to pool or beach without muss or fuss in one reusable shopping bag!

4.  Errands–one day Enviro Girl stashed a soil sample, a prescription pick-up, lightbulbs from the hardware store, letters to post and her sons’ report cards in one bag before making her rounds.  The bag carried necessary paperwork and served honorably as a shopping bag when called upon.

3.  Craft supplies/projects–knitters, scrappers, stampers, beaders, bedazzlers–use one to stash your supplies in a closet for easy access or bring them to a party or workshop.

2.  Gear–whether schlepping camping supplies, sports gear, games or garden tools, a reusable shopping bag can keep your act together.  Last month Enviro Girl visited her sister in the Twin Cities–she brought a swimming bag, a car trip bag, an activities bag and a gifts/miscellaneous bag along–all reusable shopping bags keeping her and her 3 sons organized and efficient all weekend.

1.  Gift Wrap.  That’s right!  Enviro Girl wraps gifts in reusable shopping bags because she thinks they’re so handy.  Tied off with a bow, a reusable shopping bag becomes a pretty and practical way to wrap a present.  A hostess gift of homemade bread and jam, a birthday gift of a good books and tea, a new parent gift of a hot meal looks especially nice when presented in a cute reusable shopping bag!

How I’m Celebrating Earth Day (with a little product placement)

My day will begin with a shower with a bar of Zum soap by Indigo Wild (all natural, aromatherapeutic) and a lather with Avalon Organics shampoo.  I’ll let my wash-and-wear haircut air dry while get dressed and brew a pot of Jim’s Organic Coffee for me and my husband to share.  It’s also Turn Off TV Week, so I’ve taped PBS–they aired Food, INC. and I’ll watch it next week to educate myself further about food production and the agriculture industry.   I glance out the window to gauge the weather and admire the flock of birds at our back yard bird feeder.  A bluebird catches my eye with his bright feathers.

The coffee’s on, my solar-powered radio has me tuned in to commercial-free NPR for news and good stories while I rouse my sons and feed them breakfast cereal, pouring milk out of returnable bottles.  After we eat, they dress and brush their teeth and walk to school.  I pay the electric bill–down 20% from last year at this time, both for the month and overall.  I muse over why our household’s electric consumption went down.  LED Christmas lights?  Refusing the use the clothes dryer?  Unplugging the fridge in the garage?  Installing power strips?  It doesn’t seem like our lifestyle has changed that much in the past year, but a 20% decrease is something to celebrate.

My youngest and I drive into Appleton to pick up the 50 tree seedlings we’ve purchased for this weekend.  We’ve planted trees on our property every spring since we bought it 8 years ago.  This year we’re planting two varieties of spruce trees to provide more  winter windbreaks and more shelter for the birds living near us year-round.  Our county conservation office sells trees every year for about .50 a seedling–what a deal!  On our grand total of 60 acres we’re preserving and restoring all kinds of natural habitats.  In the midst of urban sprawl, our property has become a sort of nature preserve.

Back home, we put the trees in the garage and read a few library books together.  Sharks are the popular topic these days, and that opens up a great discussion about the food chain and how humans are the worst predators of all.  What can we do to help sharks in Wisconsin?  Not much besides making sure we’re eating sustainable seafood.

The woman from the CRP arrives to survey our prairie and cool-season grass plantings.  We’ve got about 13 acres enrolled in the CRP, another 20 in a Managed Forest Program.  We get tax breaks and some incentives to manage a sustainable wetland/prairie/forest habitat.  We’d do it anyway, but it’s nice to have the support.

For lunch my son and I eat natural peanut butter and jelly sandwiches because it’s meatless and a side of carrots and apples.  Meat is so hard on the environment, skipping meat a few times a week is good for our health and the planet.  We do love to eat meat, but we try to be responsible.  The bread bag is empty, so I shake out the crumbs and put it beneath the sink with the other bags slated for recycling.  After I walk him to school, I get the mail.  The catalogs go straight to the recycle bin.  I log on my computer to answer emails, read blog posts, write and check the EcoEtsy Handmade Earth Day Auction.  I’m not buying anything unsustainable to celebrate Earth Day, I’m bidding on donated items that will make great gifts if I win them–the proceeds from this auction will go to the World Wildlife Fund.  After I power down my laptop, I clean a bathroom using Ecover and Bon Ami with an old towel repurposed as a rag.  I empty the compost into the pile outside and admire the tulips now blooming.  At 2:50 I head across the field on foot to retrieve my kids from school.  On the way home, we talk and I bend over to pick up the occasional trash blown onto our property.  We’ve already cleaned the fields and ditches, but there’s no end to the windblown litter.

After homework, playing outside and a pasta dish made with last year’s tomatoes (preserved in the freezer) and a dessert with last year’s strawberries, we drive to karate graduation seven miles away.  I bring along a refillable bottle of tap water in case anyone gets thirty.  Two boys  earn new belt ranks and afterwards we celebrate with ice cream at a local shop on the way home.  We end the day with The Drill (brush teeth, wash hands, change into pajamas), more reading of library books and a prayer before bedtime.   I let the cat in, scratch her back, scoop out the litter box (filled with compostable  Swheat Scoop Cat Litter) and feed her.  The can from her food goes into the recycle bin and I get ready for bed.

My day ends beneath the glow of a bedside lamp while I read.  Reflecting on how I’ve spent Earth Day, I wince at the impact of driving on the environment.  Living in a rural setting gives us no real option, and I do cluster our errands so that I drive as little as possible.  Our consumption is minimal–mostly food.  Aside from the EcoEtsy Earth Day Auction, I bought ice cream cones (consumable) and trees (sustainable).  My energy use included a gas-powered car, a solar-powered radio, electric-powered lights, appliances and laptop.  Nothing went into the trash can except for the plastic lid of an empty glass milk bottle, the litter on our property, and the napkins from our ice cream cones.

Why am I sharing this silly personal account of my day?  It’s to show that sometimes the best way to honor our planet is to tread lightly upon it.  Earth Day isn’t about flying to a nationwide summit, buying greenwashed products (spending money) or adding more work and activities to our already very busy lives.    We can celebrate Earth Day every day with simple actions–choosing to use more sustainable cleaning products and eating more sustainable food resources.  We can unplug by choosing to plant a tree or read a book, fill a bird feeder or play in the yard.  We can take a walk, shop less, ingest less advertising, admire more natural beauty.  Some Eco Warriors are on the front lines, rallying support for bike trails or protecting wildlife habitats.  Maybe that’s your style as an Eco Warrior.  Some of us are behind the scenes, planting gardens and trees, picking up other people’s litter and refilling our reusable water bottles.  Either way, your actions leave an impact and teach the younger generations good (or bad) habits and lifestyle choices.

To celebrate Earth Day and Eco Warriors of all sizes and styles, the Eco Women are giving away one canvas tote.   One way we can all can be green is to quit using plastic shopping bags.  That’s right, give them up cold turkey.  The Eco Women are giving away one of their canvas shopping totes to help one lucky Eco Warrior do just that. Whether your keep it for your own farm market trips or gift it to a friend who needs a little prompting to be greener, you can enter to win the tote by leaving a comment any day this week.   And stay tuned all week as the Eco Women celebrate Earth Day and share tips on how to be green.

Celebrating 2 years of Eco Women: Eat real food in season

The Eco Women are celebrating their second blog anniversary this week!  Check out our daily giveaways and leave comments to win prizes.

One of the greatest gifts you can give yourself is real food.  Food that is in season.  Food that did not travel thousands of miles to get to your table.

The first tomato of the season Recycla's garden, 2009

For example, there is a huge, major, vast difference between a tomato bought at the grocery store in January and one that is picked from a garden in August and then eaten while still warm from the sun.  There is simply no comparison between the two.  One is sublime and the other is mealy and flavorless.

The Eco Women do encourage you to think about your food carefully.  Is that mealy, flavorless tomato really worth it?  Why spend your money on something like that?  Wait until the summer and then eat the real thing — grow it yourself or get it from your local farmers’ market.  In the meantime, if your taste buds are absolutely craving Solanum lycopersicum, get your fix with a great pizza or pasta with marinara sauce.

The Eco Women aren’t saying that you have to go out and plant a quarter acre garden.  They understand that not everyone has the time, space, or inclination to do so.  However, if you can plant something, even if it’s just herbs in your window, then give it a try.  Your taste buds will thank you.

Today, in honor of the Eco Women’s 2nd blog anniversary, we are giving away seeds so that you too can jump into gardening this spring.  This sampler will include vegetable and flower seeds and everything is super easy to grow.  Just leave a comment here to enter!

Tune in every day this week, as the Eco Women give away prizes to celebrate their two year blogiversary.  All giveaways are open until  8 p.m. EST on Friday, March 12.  Winners will be randomly chosen and contacted over the weekend.

Celebrating 2 years of Eco Women: Break the plastic habit.

The Eco Women are celebrating their second blog anniversary this week!  Check out our daily giveaways and leave comments to win prizes.

One of the easiest and simplest ways you can help save Planet Earth is by breaking the plastic habit. Yes, the Eco Women keep harping on this one thing over and over, but it’s important.  If you need convincing, read more about the five enormous garbage patches floating in the world’s oceans.

Here are some sobering statistics:

  • It takes 12 million barrels of oil to make the 100 million plastic bags that Americans use annually.
  • Worldwide, shoppers use 500 billion to 1 trillion plastic bags a year.  (Some countries are better than others — in 2002 Ireland starting heavily taxing the use of plastic bags and the country’s consumption dropped 90%.)
  • Every year, hundreds of marine animals die from ingesting plastic bags they mistakenly thought were food.

Cutting back on plastic might seem difficult, but if you manage to eliminate plastic bags and water bottles from your life, then you’ve made an important first step.  For more ideas on how to cut back on plastic, click here.

And for heaven’s sakes, if you do bring home some plastic, do everything you can to recycle it — plastic bags and bottles take 500+ years to break down in a landfill.

Since today’s theme is about cutting back on plastic, today’s giveaway is one of the Eco Women’s fabulous organic cotton reusable shopping bags.  Recycla uses hers nearly every day — in stores, at the farmers’ market, to carry library books, and more.  To enter, all you have to do is leave a comment here.

Tune in every day this week, as the Eco Women give away prizes to celebrate their two year blogiversary.  All giveaways are open until  8 p.m. EST on Friday, March 12.  Winners will be randomly chosen and contacted over the weekend.

Celebrating 2 Years of Eco Women: Keeping it Clean & Green

One of Enviro Girl’s proudest accomplishments as an Eco Warrior is how she has taken the harsh chemicals out of her household by substituting safer products or by eliminating their use altogether.   To commemorate the 2 year blogiversary of the Eco Women: Protectors of the Planet web site, Enviro Girl is giving away a gift that reflects both her beliefs about healthy housecleaning and her accomplishments in that area.

Enviro Girl has never been a fan of fabric softener or dryer sheets, so one lucky winner will receive 3 wool dryer balls handmade by Enviro Girl.  In her post Dryer Beware! she detailed the benefits of line drying clothes and how wool dryer balls can make clothes dryers run more efficiently. Enviro Girl gave away many wool dryer balls this Christmas and everyone loved them — they reduce drying time and static cling while being safe for the environment and saving money.

She’s also giving away a $20 gift certificate to Mrs. Meyers Clean Day to that same lucky winner so that they can enjoy the aromatherapeutic joy that comes from green cleaning.  In her post “Attacking the Kitchen” she wrote about how a “Green and Clean” house can happen without harsh chemicals that can affect both the air we breathe and our water supply.  She’s a clean freak, so you better believe the products she endorses are up to snuff.  She’s also picky about how things smell, she hates harsh perfumes and fake smells.  Mrs. Meyers Clean Day products are environmentally friendly, effective at making dirty/greasy things clean and smell fabulous.  Whether washing laundry or dishes or scrubbing down a tub, Mrs. Meyers Clean Day has products that can do the job without poisoning the environment.  Enviro Girl particularly loves the dish soap — it’s an indulgence, but worth the extra money because of how wonderful the room smells while the suds are in the sink.   Enviro Girl zealously spreads the word about using safe cleaning products — it’s for everyone’s health, and the planet’s!

Tune in every day this week, as the Eco Women give away prizes to celebrate their two year blogiversary.  All giveaways are open until  8 p.m. EST on Friday, March 12.  Winners will be randomly chosen and contacted over the weekend.

The Eco Women are not employed by the companies mentioned, nor were they compensated in any way.

WINNER: Holiday Giveaway

The winner of the Eco Women’s Holiday Giveaway is:

*drumroll, please…*

Bdaiss of Prairie Trails!

Congratulations!

Thanks to everyone for participating.

Disappointed that you didn’t win?  Click here to buy a tote bag or other Eco Women merchandise.  All net proceeds go to charity.

Holiday Giveaway!

The Eco Women want to share some of their holiday spirit by having a giveaway!

What’s the prize?

It’s this handy dandy organic cotton shopping bag:

All you have to do is leave a comment telling the Eco Women either 1) what new eco action you’ve tried in 2009 or 2) an eco goal you have for 2010.

The contest is open until 6 p.m. EST on Thursday, December 31.  The winner will be notified over the weekend and announced the following Monday.

Good luck!

Winner: Totebag Giveaway

ecowomentoteAfter a completely random drawing of all the comments, the winner of the totebag giveaway is:

Robin of No One Thing

Congratulations Robin!!!

(Please email Recycla directly with your full name and contact info so that she can send the bag to you.)

Bummed that YOU didn’t win?  Click over to the Eco Women’s eco shop and buy a bag for yourself.  Remember, all profits go to charity!

Scattershotting around the eco-universe

RecyclaRecycla reads a lot of eco websites and blogs every week and often saves links that she thinks will be of interest to you.  As she was preparing to work on today’s post, she realized that she had far too many things she wanted you to know about and that she couldn’t decide on just one topic.  So today she’s going to give you a list of links that you should check out:

  • If you are still using conventional toothpaste, antibacterial soaps, and other products, you should read this article about why you should make the switch to eco products.  (Hint:  You should be looking for the word triclosan on labels.  If you see it, run far, far away.)
  • Do you have a son or daughter in high school?  Check out this list of the greenest U.S. colleges.  Maybe the days of choosing a school based on its party potential are over…
  • Want your Eco Warrior ways to rub off on your children, grandchildren, or nieces and nephews?  Check out this article on green parenting tips.  Even thought Recycla’s daughters are pretty savvy Eco Girls, she’s always looking for new ways to inspire them.
  • The Eco Women have talked a lot about composting, but they recognize that it’s not easy for apartment dwellers.  Thus, Recycla was pleased to find this article on composting in a tiny apartment.
  • Finally, has your zucchini taken over your garden yet?  Are you running in fear from the Green Monster?  Here are five delish zucchini recipes to help you deal with your garden’s bounty.  Recycla’s thinking about the cookies…

What about you?  What interesting eco blogs and websites have you seen this week?

Don’t  forget to enter the Eco Women’s totebag giveaway!!!

A new adventure

The Eco Women have embarked on a new adventure.  Do you see the tabs at the top of this blog?  Check out the newest one on the far right — Eco Shop!

Yes, the Eco Woman have a shop with a few organic cotton goodies, featuring their fab new logo:

ECOwomen comp w GLOBE

How cute is that?!

Since the Eco Women have such a great logo, they branched out into merchandise.  Here’s the important part:  The eco merch is NOT intended to line the Eco Women’s pockets with money.  Oh no, the Eco Women are using any profits for the greater good and will be donating earnings to non-profits that actively work to save Planet Earth.

To celebrate the Eco Women’s newest venture, they’re having a giveaway this week.  Check out this cutie eco-patootie:

ecowomentote

Yep, the Eco Women are giving away this great tote bag to one reader of this blog.  Just think about how cute that’s going to look holding your library books or the bounty from your farmers’ market excursions.

All you have to do is leave a comment (one only, please) between now and 5:00 p.m. EST on Friday.  If you’re feeling chatty, tell the Eco Women your favorite eco tip or something you’d like to see on this blog.  On Saturday, Recycla will randomly choose a winner and notify that person over the weekend.

While you’re waiting to hear if you won or not, go check out the eco shop.

Good luck!