The Plum Carrot


Getting Ready for the Holidays: Eco Wrappings, Bows and Such
December 10, 2008, 1:39 am
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Excessive wrapping paper is, sadly, an obvious given for the holidays, causing accumulated, piled-high piles of once-used wasted paper headed for the landfill. And even if the paper is recycled, massive amounts of power went into producing the paper! Those “Cut a Tree for One-Time Use Wrapping Paper” companies must be rolling their fat bellies in dough–gourmet cookie cough they bought with their stash of dough sitting in the bank which is sadly being submerged in rising sea levels because there weren’t enough trees to suck out the carbon dioxide in the air.

So, what to do?

Actually, forgoing a material gift or giving a living gift (like a tree or a pot of herbs) is a great idea–gets you and your special one more sentimental.

But, since wrapping is fun, more ideas follow.

Saving wrapping paper for a second, third, or fourth use is actually a great solution–it’s a recycling center in your own home. Use there papers to wrap more gifts, make cards, decorate lockers, wrap fragile ornaments, shaya! Be creative.

I’ve compiled a list of other ways to make your gifts this holiday season a wonderful, dazzling sight for the eye–and a way to make your present more personal and useful and a gift to the environment as well!

Pictures and directions will follow shortly; will just simply list ideas so far.

Towels for wrapping/ encasing/ concealing
Brown bag/ cloth
Eco Bows
Cranberries {&/or other fruits}
Accompaniments



Pointless hitting of keboard to get blog format pretty.
November 29, 2008, 7:26 am
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Please excuse this pointless post.

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QO 9HKTGJMLM D



Today is…Buy Nothing Day!!!
November 29, 2008, 6:49 am
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Hello, all.  Thanks to “The Friend Who Gave Me a French-Canadian Black Friday REvolt Pic” I have learned of a revolutionary website, www.adbusters.org.  Check it out.  It’s where I just found out that Black Friday is also Buy Nothing Day (BND).  It’s a great site that really focuses on getting people to take affirmative, changing action against the crazily consumerist way of life of our society.

Really, have you ever given a thought as to how a capitalist economy, that promotes an inefficient and wasteful process of the production and purchase of resources and things that end up in junk piles and cause bad health {ahem, cancer} , could EVER maintain power, wealth, or health, let alone a good spirit and mind?  

Seriously, (this is my opinion), capitalism has even commercialized CHRISTMAS, a religious holiday about the birth of Jesus Christ, so that people who are not religious have been tought that Christmas is a day to BUY things and to get whatever they want.  More on this later…

 I honestly think that people have not used this system wisely and it has put many things in bad shape–it’s really pulled out the greed in people and has made us blind to taking care of the planet and the people, ALL the people, that live with it.

So the next time ou want to “shop till ya drop,” think about the people around the entire world you’re affecting, the morals you’re promoting, and the planet you’re living {on}–sorry, the sentence isn’t parallel with that “on” in there. 

With this said, visit adbusters.com.  Educate and enlighten yourself about the world we’re living in and come up with some of your own solutions to our problems–a definitely awesome tactic towards getting the this world on its feet and into a true tip-top shape. 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
So about the consumerist Christmas I was talking about earlier in this post:

Christmas was always a joyous time; I always got that ‘Christmas feeling” I was so happy to have.  The it sort of died out 6 years ago.  And I kept trying to get it back,and finally, this year, I asked myself,  What really is the point of Christmas?  I was surprised to find out that it was and still remains a MAJOR, culturally and religiously significant holiday in places like the Philippines and Engalnd places where the true meaning still lives on. 

I was thinking the meaning had been erased by all this buying and giving of  stuff, that the meaning of Chrismas had been snuffed out and the feeling irretrievable.  No doubt it has, but with a growing audience who is aware of the issues of a naterialistic holiday, I think we can start making Christmas real again.

I’ll be making an image soon to post on your blogs or websites or e-mails that will hopefully get the real meaning of Christmas across.



Getting Ready for the Holidays: Post#1
November 22, 2008, 8:39 am
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For green decorating purposes here’s a link to Care 2′s Green Living newsletter. (I’ve visited a LOT of sites where the info is so hard to find and read, but this site gives everything pretty straightforward. I’ll post more in-depth articles as well, but see this for a start.)

http://www.care2.com/greenliving/thanksgiving-decorating-with-nature.htm

For inspiration for a vegetarian holiday feast:

http://www.care2.com/greenliving/a-green-thanksgiving.html

Care2 is an awesome site to join and sponsors a whole slew of notable causes. It even has a click to donate program, including clicks for the rain forest, wetlands, ocean, animals, and human rights.



The Holidays: An Overview
November 22, 2008, 8:21 am
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Alas, the holidays have arrived! A time of good cheer, merriment, and decorations and gift-giving. Lots of decorations and gift-giving. And Black Friday and holiday sales too. Don’t forget Black Friday and the holiday sales.

First up: Black Friday + Sales

My friend just showed me an advertisement in French about Black Friday today (I’ll see if I can get the link and post it), emphatically saying something like, “Support the rebellion. Don’t participate in Black Friday!”

The picture was a cartoon man sitting on a pile of wasted junk.
Sad thing is, the picture is very real and very true.

The holidays, a time for festivities and merriment, have evolved into a decorating and purchasing bonanza, and the world’s ever-increasing capitalist way of business has worked very efficienly to fuel this purchasing craze.

So very many stores have the predicament of ending the year in the black and must do so by increasing purchases. How? By posting ginormous sales just so they can hopefully make money and get rid of their stuff. And it works! People buy things that they don’t need just because it’s so cheap. It’s the stimulation of that survival-of-the-fittest-gene, necessary when we were in a period when whoever gathered the most hay for warmth survived bitter-cold night. Same thing applies here…kind of. The person who buys the most sweaters and iPhones on Black Friday will indubitably have the upper-hand in suriving a freezing night… during the middle of their summer in sunny Florida… in the middle of the forest… where there is no reception…. And then all this stuff will just make their way to the garage and sit there for the next 20 years until the next summer trip into the Florida forest that will require 23 sweaters of assorted sizes and several outdated iPhones. See what I mean?

I’m not saying it’s bad to look for a bargain, but purchasing multitudes of stuff because it’s cheap just sets the world back– we continue to promote greed and maintain this wasteful system of using tantamount amounts of natural resources to stock up on products which almost always have to be purged through end-of-year dirt-cheap sales in hopes of profit and then end up sitting, useless, in garages and dumpsters. This system does not promote a fair economy, society, or environment.

Next up: De(orating and Gift-GiVing

Now let’s tie in this purchasing craze into the decorations and gift-giving that are so ubiquitious with the holidays (did I use that word correctly?).

It’s Thanksgiving and you just have to dress your house up for the holiday. You’ve just spotted that wonderfully-colored artificial garland on sale that would look great hanging over your doorway. Since they’re on sale, grab some extra! We’ll find a use for it somewhere. And oh! those flavor-scented candles on sale–4 for $2; what a steal! Let’s grab 12 of those! Some plastic squashes and pumpkins were also discounted in the craft store this Saturday, and they’d look great strewn all over the table, right around the turkey. As a bonus, your thrifty self excidedly thinks, they won’t rot away; you can keep these here squashes year after year.

See, the convneience, visual appeal (smell-sual appeal, in the case of candles-haha), and very importantly, the cost of things deeply affect what, why and how much we purchase.

In the self interest of making our own holiday great and in the whirlwind of rushing and trying to be economical, we often get obsessed and really wacky with how much we can get for our buck and pile stuff on. We neglect to think of the effect our purchase has on society and the environment. What happens if those non-rottable palstic squashes crack and you throw them away and they roll out of the dump truck into the ocean to Indonesia and leach their poisons in such an already impoverished place. Kind of far-feched, but the effects of simply binge- buying and wasting are very much the same, only closer to home.

Gift-giving has also morphed into a very similar process.

The holidays have turned into a purchasing fest when giving gifts with meaning has sadly, lost its meaning. Let’s load our houses and children and relatives and friends with temporary toys or things that have no use because, well, it’s a time to give stuff. Industries have noticed and now monopolize this time of the year with millions of items in catalogs and lots of promotions.

So people buy and buy to give and give without thought about the recipient or the environment.

And what about all that wrapping paper?

My point is, the holidays have become a time of crazed buying-the same friend that showed me the French cartoon said her brother bought all these tools at a Black Friday sale and still hasn’t used them all-and is a time when companies now dish out tons of stuff to be sold for profit. Plastic trinkets dot catalogs. It’s become wasteful and takes a big toll on the environment.

So here’s what: I think that the holidays should be great–for everybody and everything, especially the environment. We should work to incorporate consciousness–for society and those in need and the planet–into this time of cheer and giving. Let’s work towards not getting so materialistic and getting a bit less wasteful. Let’s decorate and give with a world-wide, planet-wide view.

I’ll be following this post up with ways to get your green on this season–it’ll be great. In fact, this will be my first holiday that I really try to make green. I hope this will motivate you to really get involved in making this planet a better place to spend the holidays.

Let’s work towards bringing back the real meaning of this season. And let’s make it green!!!



Getting Ready for the Holidays
November 17, 2008, 5:37 am
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Hey all, I’m going to start this blog off with getting ready for the holidays. Thanksgiving’s up first–it’s right around the corner and getting ready is really exciting. I’ll be posting stuff about food and decorating naturally and awesomely. It’s going to be great–visit soon for future posts!



The Plum Carrot
November 9, 2008, 8:25 pm
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theplumcarrotlogo_5final



Welcome!
November 9, 2008, 5:15 am
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Welcome to The Plum CArrot, a site where environment is the focus.

In a world consumed in consumerism and in a culture where everyone has been taught more means better; in a time when suits, bags, plates, sporks, hats, and pretty much everything is mass-produced so that there is so much extra that no one will use; in a time where doing good for the planet is commercialized and monopolized and conveyed as expensive, hyped-up, and fancy-shmancy; and in a period when the mantra is “Global warming! The world’s going to fry!” yeah, it’s hard to do good for the planet.

But I really believe that the environment is a great cause–it’s just a concept so misconstrued, misinterpreted, and sterotyped that it’s hard to 1) know what the problem actually is and 2) how to get involved without ditching your house to live with nature in the bushland of Australia.

THat’s why I created The Plum Carrot. I want to show the world that being responsible for our planet Earth and the people who live on it is funtastically feasible. I want to provide awesome ways to get involved. I will lay out my own insight and thoughts about the environmental matters of the world plain and simple. No unrealistic outrageous approaches or hidden corporate motives here, no siree.

At The Plum Carrot, I’ll be posting and sharing a more realistic and fun approach for incorporating Earth consciousness into our lives, as well as my ambitions for the future, stuff that will hopefuly make Earth make sense. Im’a  goin’ ta put some fun umph into this… Yup.

This is The Plum Carrot.




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