Posts Tagged ‘articles’

It’s Time to Learn From Frogs

Monday, July 6th, 2009

It’s Time to Learn From Frogs

By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

Published: June 27, 2009

Some of the first eerie signs of a potential health catastrophe came as bizarre deformities in water animals, often in their sexual organs.

 

Frogs, salamanders and other amphibians began to sprout extra legs. In heavily polluted Lake Apopka, one of the largest lakes in Florida, male alligators developed stunted genitals.

In the Potomac watershed near Washington, male smallmouth bass have rapidly transformed into “intersex fish” that display female characteristics. This was discovered only in 2003, but the latest survey found that more than 80 percent of the male smallmouth bass in the Potomac are producing eggs.

Now scientists are connecting the dots with evidence of increasing abnormalities among humans, particularly large increases in numbers of genital deformities among newborn boys. For example, up to 7 percent of boys are now born with undescended testicles, although this often self-corrects over time. And up to 1 percent of boys in the United States are now born with hypospadias, in which the urethra exits the penis improperly, such as at the base rather than the tip.

Apprehension is growing among many scientists that the cause of all this may be a class of chemicals called endocrine disruptors. They are very widely used in agriculture, industry and consumer products. Some also enter the water supply when estrogens in human urine — compounded when a woman is on the pill — pass through sewage systems and then through water treatment plants.

These endocrine disruptors have complex effects on the human body, particularly during fetal development of males.

“A lot of these compounds act as weak estrogen, so that’s why developing males — whether smallmouth bass or humans — tend to be more sensitive,” said Robert Lawrence, a professor of environmental health sciences at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “It’s scary, very scary.”

The scientific case is still far from proven, as chemical companies emphasize, and the uncertainties for humans are vast. But there is accumulating evidence that male sperm count is dropping and that genital abnormalities in newborn boys are increasing. Some studies show correlations between these abnormalities and mothers who have greater exposure to these chemicals during pregnancy, through everything from hair spray to the water they drink.

Endocrine disruptors also affect females. It is now well established that DES, a synthetic estrogen given to many pregnant women from the 1930s to the 1970s to prevent miscarriages, caused abnormalities in the children. They seemed fine at birth, but girls born to those women have been more likely to develop misshaped sexual organs and cancer.

There is also some evidence from both humans and monkeys that endometriosis, a gynecological disorder, is linked to exposure to endocrine disruptors. Researchers also suspect that the disruptors can cause early puberty in girls.

A rush of new research has also tied endocrine disruptors to obesity, insulin resistance and diabetes, in both animals and humans. For example, mice exposed in utero even to low doses of endocrine disruptors appear normal at first but develop excess abdominal body fat as adults.

Among some scientists, there is real apprehension at the new findings — nothing is more terrifying than reading The Journal of Pediatric Urology — but there hasn’t been much public notice or government action.

This month, the Endocrine Society, an organization of scientists specializing in this field, issued a landmark 50-page statement. It should be a wake-up call.

“We present the evidence that endocrine disruptors have effects on male and female reproduction, breast development and cancer, prostate cancer, neuroendocrinology, thyroid, metabolism and obesity, and cardiovascular endocrinology,” the society declared.

“The rise in the incidence in obesity,” it added, “matches the rise in the use and distribution of industrial chemicals that may be playing a role in generation of obesity.”

The Environmental Protection Agency is moving toward screening endocrine disrupting chemicals, but at a glacial pace. For now, these chemicals continue to be widely used in agricultural pesticides and industrial compounds. Everybody is exposed.

“We should be concerned,” said Dr. Ted Schettler of the Science and Environmental Health Network. “This can influence brain development, sperm counts or susceptibility to cancer, even where the animal at birth seems perfectly normal.”

The most notorious example of water pollution occurred in 1969, when the Cuyahoga River in Ohio caught fire and helped shock America into adopting the Clean Water Act. Since then, complacency has taken hold.

Those deformed frogs and intersex fish — not to mention the growing number of deformities in newborn boys — should jolt us once again.

I invite you to comment on this column on my blog, On the Ground. Please also join me on Facebook, watch my YouTube videos and follow me on Twitter.

Summer Hair

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

I started looking at the web the other day for ideas and suggestions for summer tips for hair to share with our customers.  I was hoping for some ideas to make you look and feel to look good while still be eco-friendly this long hot summer.  I used all the big search engines to look for the best information from google, Yahoo and even the “new” bing search engines.  My search started with the keywords  “Summer Hair” which brought me some really cheeky stuff.   

Here are just a few:

      “Simple Summer Hairstyles”

      “5 Hairstyles to help beat the heat”

      “Show the heat who is boss”

      “Hot and Sexy Hair for the summer”

      “Weather the summer”

These were all great ideas but somehow they did not fit our eco-chic consumers.

I actually found lyrics to something called “summer hair=forever young” whatever that is about.  To make the search more relevant to our consumers I searched for “green hair tips” and there was not the depth of information I wanted and you needed so we kept searching.  Basically they mostly said do not shower which is not very eco-chic or even eco-savvy!  We still feel you can look good and smell good and still be eco-friendly. Unfortunately not everyone standing next to me in my local natural food store feels the same way.  It is becoming even more important that as it is heating up in Portland and the rain finally stopped we came up with solutions for eco-friendly ideas. It is going to be in the high 90’s this week so we have to out our ideas as quick as possible to avoid to much BHD ( bad hair days ) and BO in the stores.  So here is our list of our top 5 summer sensational suggestions for style and eco-living:

       Number 5  –  Shower with a friend to save water.  Saves time and water.

       Number 4  –  Towel dry you hair do not blow dry. Air dry on a hot summer day or run naked in the parking lot.

       Number 3   —   Keep your hair and your showers short.  High  ‘N’ Tight on the hair and in the showers.

       Number 2   —    Shower with a friend you don’t want to see naked to shorten the duration of the shower.

       Number 1  –  Shower with cold water to promote shrinkage  and minimize body mass coverage.

I hope that some of these ideas help, but at the end of the day please just take a shower.

We have 86,573 bottles of our Hair + Body Wash and Re-Conditioner in the warehouse and available for you if you need some. We think it may be hot enough for you to think two bottles.

Mike

Making Choices

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

We all have to make difficult choices with conflicting points of view or bodies of evidence.  No decision in my business life has been more challenging than when it came down to the time to decide what material we were going to use for our packaging. We believed our packaging had to be as green as our formulas and yet be able to share our message to consumers on our brand image. We had to consider the environment, safety and our position as a company that cares about the planet, nature, and you. We know our brand is Eco-Nature Care and we had to make sure the packaging also spoke the brand image.

We looked at glass. It offered the natural qualities that we wanted, was easy to recycle, easy to mold, and it was inexpensive. It all came down to three major issues. First, we were concerned about the carbon footprint of shipping the heavy glass bottled products from the manufacturer to the stores. Secondly, we were concerned about the consumer safety —  slippery glass bottles in the shower or bathtub sound like a bad idea. And finally, another heath related concern for  us was the use of silica in making glass.  While natural, silica has been linked to lung cancer in both the mining and manufacturing phases.

The health effects of silica have been documented:

Silicosis is the disease most associated with crystalline silica exposure; it is incurable but preventable. This debilitating and often fatal lung disease persists worldwide despite long-standing knowledge of its cause and methods for controlling it.

http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/docs/2002-129/pdfs/02-129pre.pdf

 

We eliminated glass because of safety.

We also considered plastic for our packaging.  Plastic was the most inexpensive and lightweight material. It was durable, pliable and can be formed into any shape, size or color you want.  The downside was that it is derived from petroleum and can be challenging to recycle depending on your community and the different types of plastic.

At the end of the day, we decided we needed something easy to recycle in every community.  There are also concerns on types of plastics and the health effect here as well.  Here in Oregon, we are generally concerned that there is too much plastic is making it into our oceans.

Finally, we considered aluminum.  Aluminum was our most expensive alternative and offered us the least flexibility in shapes.  We liked the attributes of being easy to recycle, the lower cost of shipping aluminum versus glass and that fact that aluminum can be recycled indefinitely were some major reasons for us to consider the use of this material. While there are concerns that aluminum is linked to diseases we have looked at the leaching of aluminum into our products. To avoid the possibility of leaching we are using the same barrier as soda cans.

While I know there is never a perfect solution and as my father use to say: that is why there are 31 flavors of ice cream…. Because you cannot please everyone.” We elected to satisfy our beliefs.  We know that there will be people who disagree and we respect their opinions. We have made our decisions NOT based on costs but what we believe are better for the planet, nature and you.  We have also made a hard stand on not using mixed materials in our products to avoid difficulty in recycling; you will not see any pumps on our products. One type of material makes recycling easier and aluminum is the number one most recycled material.

The argument will go on for another century on what is best … I only know that we made our decision based on the best information available at the time, our aspirations as a brand, and our family’s integrity. For more information check out http://www.recycling-revolution.com/recycling-facts.html

 

Mike

President/Founder Eco-Nature Care

www.econaturecare.com

Recycled Art Made From Trash

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

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One of my fascinations is with artists who can make sculptures out of recycled materials. Check out the article “Innovative Recycled Art Made From Trash” (http://weburbanist.com/2008/06/04/recycled-art-from-trash/) at WebUrbanist.com

“The cliche is that ‘one man’s trash is another man’s treasure’ but the author of that phrase probably never realized how strangely true it could turn out to be. In today’s world of weird and amazing art some of the most compelling and creative works have been born out of the simplest and most abundant of materials: garbage. These seven trash-obsessed artists may have had a similar starting point but have managed to create an inspiring variety of art from abandoned refuse.” -WebUrbanist
trash-art-people
Enjoy!
Mike

“Times are good for Goodwill”

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

A couple weeks ago the Oregonian had an article called “Times are good for Goodwill” by Vivian McInerny about the recent increase in donations and sales at thrift/resale stores. It is worth noting that both sales AND donations are up from last year. The cool thing about stores like Goodwill and Value Village (my personal favorite) is that they benefit local charities. Donations are tax deductible and in some cases, the thrift store will give you a discount off of your next purchase. A bag full of usable but unwanted (by you) goods (Do I really need to hang on to those jeans that I haven’t been able to wear since high school? Probably not…) yields a 20% off coupon at Value Village. 

The article additionally highlights the eco-friendly appeal of resale products. 

Buying used means keeping things out of landfills. Because donated items are usually resold within a few miles of where they were collected, they leave a lighter carbon footprint than items trucked cross-country or shipped around the globe.

Read the full article at http://www.oregonlive.com/living/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/living/1242078912301930.xml&coll=7

Got a favorite thrift store find? Let us know by commenting!

 

Marissa


Voluntary Simplicity

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Spring cleaning this last weekend made me realize how much I consumed and how often I went overboard in buying unwanted and unneeded items. When my dad passed away, I helped clean up the house to sell. To my surprise, we found hundreds of shoes and purses in my mother’s closet still with price tags on them. My mom smiled and said:  ”I am a compulsive shopper”. In the basement we found food supplies that could feed a family for years. While I am not making excuses for my parents, their generation lived through the Great Depression, World War II rationing, and prepared  for the threat of a nuclear attack. Remember “duck and cover”?


While I drive a hybrid, occasionally compost, use cloth shopping bags and consider myself someone who cares about the planet, I saw my shortcomings last weekend while cleaning my closet.


I am preparing to downsize again or “right size” my life,  first starting with clothes, toys and unnecessary stuff that for some reason I want to hold onto like a security blanket.  Last year, we sold my toy car collection and that was the first layer on pealing back the onion and it really hurt.


This last weekend I made the big leap and decided to simplify my wardrobe by eliminating more from my life. I remember a trip I took to England. Walking in a small village north of London, I was impressed by the simplicity of their houses and minimal furniture.


I am now sure that money does not give you happiness but they were long intertwined in my life — I lived my life counting marbles.


When we started on the journey with Eco-Nature Care, we wanted  to reduce packaging and ingredients using easy-to-recycle packaging with no BS. I do not remember if that was the primary objective then that it has become today.

 

We feel you can simplify your life and still look and feel good. I hope when it’s your time to shed some “stuff” or reduce unneeded possessions you will  find a home for them to be reused, recycled, and shared.

 

Check out this article from Wikipedia on “Simple Living”:

Simple living (voluntary simplicity) is a lifestyle characterized by minimizing the ‘more-is-better’ pursuit of wealth and consumption. Adherents may choose simple living for a variety of personal reasons, such as spiritualityhealth, increase in ‘quality time‘ for family and friendsstress reduction, personal taste or frugality. E.F. Schumacker put it best by saying, “Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius – and a lot of courage – to move in the opposite direction.”

Others cite socio-political goals aligned with the anti-consumerist movement, including conservationsocial justice and sustainable development. According to Duane Elgin, “we can describe voluntary simplicity as a manner of living that is outwardly more simple and inwardly more rich, a way of being in which our most authentic and alive self is brought into direct and conscious contact with living.”[1]

Simple living as a concept is distinguished from those living in forced poverty, as it is a voluntary lifestyle choice. Although asceticism generally promotes living simply and refraining from luxury and indulgence, not all proponents of voluntary simplicity are ascetics.

 

See the full article at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_living

 

Mike


“A Day in the Life of a Recycled Can”

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

can

I found a cool blurb about “A Day in the Life of a Recycled Can” at ThinkGreen.com and I thought that you might be interested. Our aluminum bottles and caps are just like thick beverage (soda, beer, even what some of you call “pop”) cans. The following is an excerpt from their website:

 

Aluminum Cans

On average, Americans drink one beverage from an aluminum can every day. But we recycle just over 50% of the cans we use.

Aluminum-can manufacturers have recently upped the ante and are setting out to recycle 75% of the cans by 2012.

Since the cans are 100% recyclable, we could drastically reduce the energy needed to produce brand new cans simply by recycling our empties.

An aluminum can is able to be returned to the shelf, as a new can, as quickly as 60 days after it’s put into your recycling container.

Coast-to-coast, there are about 10,000 locations that buy aluminum, making it easy for Americans to redeem their used beverage cans for cash. In fact, recycling aluminum cans is a $1 billion/year industry in this country.

Recycling one aluminum can saves enough energy to run a television for three hours or to burn a 100-watt light bulb for four hours.

A Day in the Life of a Recycled Can

Customer takes can to a recycling center or puts it into a recycling bin.

The can is transported to a processing facility.

A giant magnet lifts out cans that are made of metals such steel. Since aluminum cans aren’t magnetic, they drop down to a conveyor belt and are gathered.

The aluminum is shredded, washed and turned into aluminum chips.

The chips are melted in a large furnace.

The melted aluminum is poured into molds called “ingots.”

The ingots are taken to a factory where they’re melted into rolls of thin, flat sheets.

From the sheets, manufacturers make new products, including new beverage cans, pie pans, license plate frames, and aluminum foil.

Beverage companies fill the cans and deliver them to grocery stores for customers to purchase.

Customers take used cans to a recycling center and the process starts all over again.

 

Yay aluminum! Read more at: http://www.thinkgreen.com/recycle-what-detail?sec=metals&prod=aluminum-cans

 

Marissa

Y no pump?

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

By using single material packaging we make recycling easy. Packaging with various components made from different materials (Like PET bottles with polypropylene closures, tubes, and pumps that have spring mechanisms inside the tubes) makes recycling difficult. According to Wikipdedia’s blurb on plastics:

“recycling plastics has proven difficult. The biggest problem with plastic recycling is that it is difficult to automate the sorting of plastic waste, and so it is labor intensive. Typically, workers sort the plastic by looking at the resin identification code, though common containers like soda bottles can be sorted from memory. Other recyclable materials, such as metals, are easier to process mechanically.” Click here to read the rest of the article.

 

The simplified one-material, renewable aluminum packaging of Eco-Nature Care™ facilitates easier recycling and minimizes waste.

We hope that you will make the small sacrifice of being without a pump in the spirit of “less is more”!

 

Mike and Marissa

 

Y do we list allergens in our essential oils?

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Y do we list allergens in our essential oils? Because we know they are there and we feel obligated to raise the awareness of those who have allergies.

I (Marissa) am allergic to cashews. They make me puffy, itchy, red, and nauseous. While puffy pouty lips can be sexy, having an Angelia Jolie pucker on only one side of my mouth is anything but. There have been times that I’ve had trail mix or baked goods that might list “nuts” as one of the ingredients.  I am fine with almonds, walnuts, and even the common allergen peanuts, so in whole, I am not allergic to “nuts” but instead am allergic to a specific nut.  This does not mean that nuts or even cashews are bad but cashews are bad for me. Along these lines, we want you to understand that essential oils are not bad but not all of them are right for everyone.

Here is a link with some of the most recent research regarding essential oils: Cosmetics By Design

“Cosmetics Compact brings you highlights of the sites’ top science. This week, essential oils are in the spotlight as a Swedish researcher suggests they can become allergenic compounds on contact with air or skin enzymes.”

While we have already started to receive some negative feedback on our post we feel it is our obligation to share with consumers the potential allergens in essential oils. This is no different than sharing gluten, peanuts, or any other allergens in your product. We also continue to use pure essential oils as our natural fragrances. We are not telling people to not use essential oils — we use essential oils — and they are not bad. We just want to be upfront and sensitive for people with allergies.

 

As Sy Simms would say:  ”an educated consumer is our best customer”.


-Marissa and Mike

“The hoax of global warming,” celeb trends, and “Generation Green”

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

A couple weeks ago I was a guest of a guest at a dinner party and I was appalled to hear a high school girl go on about “the hoax of global warming” and how “there’s no environmental crisis.” This is not something that I would expect from a “gen Y” Oregonian. We’re pretty green here and ours is the generation that has to deal with this planetary mess. 

 

Even if you can somehow shrug off the insurmountable evidence supporting global warming and/or climate change, other more tangible effects (things like the Great Pacific Garbage Patch that is twice the size of Texas and floating in the middle of the ocean) of eco-nonchalance should give you pause and realize that we need to take care of the earth and not just because being green is trendy and certain starlets are doing it. (“Green is totally the new black!”) 


Our local newspaper, the Oregonian, had a really interesting article by a guest columnist this past Sunday called “For young people, eco-awareness can’t be optional” that addresses this issue in a compelling and entirely accessible way. The writer, Lillian R. Mongeau (editor of the Millennial Voices blog), targets fellow members of gen Y, or “Millennials” by discussing “green—washing,” “Pleasantville,” and natural disasters. She ends by stating that:


“One thing is sure, it’s no longer enough to tell each other that we ought to do better. At this point, we must do better. Our survival on this quickly warming and ever dirtier planet depends on it.” Check out the full article here.

 

To learn more about the Great Pacific Garbage Patch (or if you don’t believe me), go here. Also, I don’t really have anything against eco-friendly stars but celeb-worship is a pretty lame reason to do anything. When it comes to eco-awareness, I guess it’s better to do it for lame reasons than not at all. 

 

Tell me what you think. Comment below. 

 

-Marissa