Archive for the ‘Organic’ Category

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Obamas plant organic kitchen garden at White House

March 23, 2009

WASHINGTON (CNN) – Want to know where the presidential produce comes from?

Washington's Bancroft Elementary School students help first lady Michelle Obama break ground on the garden.

Washington's Bancroft Elementary School students help first lady Michelle Obama break ground on the garden.

Take a walk past the White House. The answer may be planted right in front of you.

First lady Michelle Obama helped break ground on a new White House organic “kitchen garden” Friday. It will be the first working garden at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. since Eleanor Roosevelt planted a so-called “victory garden” at the height of World War II.

This time, however, the enemy is obesity. The first family is hoping to send a clear message to a fast food-driven nation that often seems to be losing the battle of the bulge.

“We’re just hoping that a lot of families look at us and say this is something that they can do and talk to their own kids about and think a little bit critically about the food choices that they make,” said Marian Robinson, the president’s mother-in-law. Video Watch Michelle Obama tell students about the garden »

The first lady told a group of Washington schoolchildren on hand for the occasion that first daughters Sasha and Malia Obama were usually more willing to try fresh fruits and vegetables because fresh produce generally tastes better.

“What I found with my kids [is that] if they were involved in planting it and picking it, they were much more curious about giving it a try,” she added.

“I’ve been able to have my kids eat so many different things that they would have never touched if we had bought it at a store because they either met the farmers that grew it, or they saw how it was grown,” she said.

“They were curious about it and … usually they liked it.”

The idea of a presidential kitchen garden, used year-round with different seasonal crops, has been strongly promoted by advocates for organic and locally grown food. They argue that the White House garden may help set a positive example for families short on time and money, who are often tempted by cheaper, highly processed food.

The presidential garden will be used, among other things, for growing such staples as butterhead and red leaf lettuce, spinach, broccoli, onions, carrots and peas.
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It will also include a range of herbs, including sage, oregano and rosemary.

The garden is one of several additions to the White House South Lawn. A swing set for the first daughters was recently installed near the Oval Office.

Link to source:

http://edition.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/03/20/white.house.garden/?iref=mpstoryview

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Green School in ABC Australia

March 12, 2009



By Australia Network Jakarta, correspondent Gavin Fang

The past few months have seen the global economic crisis push the issue of climate change into the background.

But for one school in Indonesia, protecting the environment is the very reason it is open.

It’s called Green School, and is an experiment of sorts in training the next generation to be stewards of the planet.

Read more and see the video…. http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/03/11/2512867.htm

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Green School in CNN

January 20, 2009
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Turf War

September 16, 2008

Americans can’t live without their lawns—but how long can they live with them?

by Elizabeth Kolbert

 

In 1841, Andrew Jackson Downing published the first landscape-gardening book aimed at an American audience. At the time, Downing was twenty-five years old and living in Newburgh, New York. He owned a nursery, which he had inherited from his father, and for several years had been publishing loftily titled articles, such as “Remarks on the Duration of the Improved Varieties of New York Fruit Trees,” in horticultural magazines. Downing was dismayed by what he saw as the general slovenliness of rural America, where pigs and poultry were allowed to roam free, “bare and bald” houses were thrown up, and trees were planted haphazardly, if at all. (The first practice, he complained, contributed to the generally “brutal aspect of the streets.”) His “Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening” urged readers to improve themselves by improving their front yards. “In the landscape garden we appeal to that sense of the Beautiful and the Perfect, which is one of the highest attributes of our nature,” it declared.

 

Read more….

 

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Bamboo Future at Green School

June 15, 2008

Future bamboo at GS

Future bamboo at GS

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11th Hour

May 25, 2008

You have to stay awake and watch this, it will change the world.

See trailer.

See interview with Leonardo DiCaprio.

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Gigantis bamboo

April 20, 2008

The biggest bamboo I’ve ever seen.

 

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Turducken

April 10, 2008

A Turducken is a dish consisting of a partially de-boned turkey stuffed with a de-boned duck, which itself is stuffed with a small de-boned chiken.

For recipe click here..

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Chongming

October 20, 2007

China maybe the solution as well as the problem, this is an entirely green island they’re building in Shanghai… more.

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The Humanure Handbook

October 13, 2007

If we mix every pound the human waste with 1,000 pounds of water, we don’t have nearly enough water or facilities to deal with this. We have to change.