Posts Tagged ‘pollution’

What’s going on, on Lake Erie

Friday, May 20th, 2011

We are so luck to have such a wonderful natural resource so close to us.  The Great Lakes are one of the largest natural sources of fresh water in the world.  While so many countries have little or no access to fresh water, it amazes me how much we take this treasure for granted.  Even here at home, in the good old USA, we are limited in our access to fresh water.  We dam rivers to divert water to build orange groves and cities in the middle of the desert.  We have placed such a strain on our natural water supply, that the future for some states in in danger.  Nevada and California even got the shape of their state because territory was added to give access to the Colorado river.  Now we are drawing more water from this dammed river than nature can replenish, and reservoirs are being depleted.

So how do we celebrate the fantastic natural resource that we have and raise awareness about issues surrounding the Great Lakes?

One great event is the Edgewater Beach Clean Up.  The local water advocacy group Drink Local, Drink Tap meets monthly and walks the beach of Edgewater Park and collects garbage that washes up on shore.  They partner with other national organizations sometimes to help promote and extend their efforts.  The next one is coming up on June 4th and will feature free pancakes at the lower pavilion followed by a walk on the beach to clean up trash.  They provide the bags and gloves, you just have to pick up a little trash.  Contact Babette Oestreicher, DLDT Beach Cleanup Manager and RSVP if you can to help them plan the amount of supplies.  Otherwise, just show up.  Pancakes at 9 am, clean up from 10-12, the rest of your day to yourself and you can know that you helped out in this great effort.  Bring the kids and make a day of it!

Another event is the annual Lake Erie Boat Float.  This is their third year of having this event, and it is picking up steam.  They seem to be adding prize categories every year.  So here is the low down:

Plastic (and other) garbage is a big issue when it comes to waterways.  In order to raise awareness about plastics and their impact on the environment, an annual event is held at Edgewater Beach.  This year it is Saturday, September 10, 2011 at the Boat Launch at 10 am Lower Edgewater State Park Beach.  Sponsored by Cleveland Metroparks and Cleveland Museum of Natural History, this annual event features a race of boats made from recycled plastics.  There is no limit to the creativity, but the water crafts have to be made from post consumer materials.  Prizes are awarded for speed, style, best use of materials, and even a kid’s category.  It will be a lot of fun and you have plenty of time to start now and build a really great boat.  Winners get a trophy made from recycled plastic, bragging rights, and the joy of knowing their boat will be recycled by Poly-Flow.  Find all the details and registration forms here.

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The Polluted Pacific…and Atlantic, and Indian….

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

The world’s oceans are in danger. As I sit at my computer today, there are still barrels of oil gushing into the Gulf of Mexico at a rate that would make the Exxon Valdez seem like a puddle under an old Chevy. Why BP is still in charge of this environmental disaster that will affect seafood, fishing, shipping, and many other industries of the still shaky American economy is unfathomable to me. Why this is not the first thing on every news story and email blast is beyond me. Still we sit and hope that it somehow will not affect us personally as we fill our gas guzzling SUV’s and “like” the Boycott BP page on Facebook. Since every potential answer put up by BP has failed, we don’t really have an answer. While at the same time, BP is committed to cleaning up as much of the oil as it can-while trying to salvage it. Help from other countries stand by to try and clean up the ever expanding oil slick, but BP holds them at bay while they try to separate the crude from the water so they can at least sell something from this-I mean, it IS their oil after all, right? They even have refused hair and fur mats to aid in the clean up that cost them nothing to employ. Now the latest: clean up the oil by burning it off. WHAT? If any of you can remember Saddam Husein setting alight the Afghan oil fields as he retreated several decades ago, then you know what we are in for. We are going to trade one pollution for another. But then, there is no global worming or build up of greenhouse gases from emissions anyway, right BP? The entire problem and the lack of anyone in government doing anything substantial just shows how much power and money oil companies (and Haliburton) have over the country.

So, as tar balls and oil slicks roll up on to the beaches and we bury our heads in the sand, the rest of the world’s oceans are suffering from a completely different kind of pollution. I have written before about the Great Pacific Gyre and its swirling plastic that is destroying fish and wildlife and killing great patches of ocean.  Sadly, it is now becoming apparent that this mass is worse.  First off, the Pacific gyre is actually two separate whirlpools in separate parts of the Pacific.  Why would all this plastic end up just in the Pacific?  Good question!  It hasn’t.  Turns out there are gyres in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans as well.  In total, there are estimated to be 5 gyres on the planet.  That is, in fact, the name of a very important site that you should visit called 5 Gyres.  It is a great site that interactively shows the basic locations of the sites and describes the problem and the research.  Everyone should take a minute to check out this site and at least raise your awareness of the issue.  Here is a video to show the growth of the problem, thanks to our disposable lifestyle.

Maximenko’s Plastic Pollution Growth Model from 5 Gyres on Vimeo.

But there is hope.  There is a grassroots movement to clean up plastics from the beaches.  All across America, there are great people organizing beach clean ups and trying to reduce the use of plastics.  One blogger at The Daily Ocean has committed to spend 20 minutes a day over 365 days to pick up trash at her local beach.  She chronicles what she finds and how much she picks up.  In turn she has inspired great clean up events, like Blogger Beach Clean Up Day.  What?  You don’t love anywhere near the beach?  Even the Great Lakes is an issue, but for those of us who want to help the world’s oceans without the work, there is a solution.  Enter United By Blue.  This great company sells organic cotton t-shirts and beautiful jewelry with the noble mission of cleaning up the world’s oceans.  The designs are great ocean inspirations, like the fish pendant and the plastic jellyfish tee that shows how plastics can look like a fish food source.  For every item that you buy. their crew picks up one pound of trash from a local beach.  Now that is a gift that keeps on giving.  Check out the video below and think about the oceans when buying your next gift!

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Don’t pee in public

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Thanks to PlanetSave for finding this video. You can read the thoughts of the creator on the PlanetSave site. I think it is a hilarious way to look at something that drives me crazy! In the summer, when I decide to take in the fresh air by opening both of my office windows, the neighbor takes to idling his motorcycle for time ranges of 15 minutes to a half hour.  Once he turned it on and went inside for close to 45 minutes.  The waste of gas and spewing of pollution aside, the thing is just noisy and noise is still a pollution.  I watched him turn it on for a half an hour, sit on his porch talking to someone and then just turned it off and went inside….What the hell?  Anyway, before I get into a full blown snit here is the video….

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This Saturday is your chance to give it up.

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Most people have stuff laying around that they can’t get rid of. I have had stuff like varnish and some old roof tar that I simply do not know how to get rid of. Hurray! This Saturday (October 10, 2009) is the Household Hazardous Waste Round-Up! If you are looking for a safe way to dispose of things like oil based paints, spray paint, motor oil, pesticides, paint thinner, glues, fluorescent bulbs or some other hazardous waste, come down to the Cuyahoga County Fairgrounds this Saturday and drop it off. Plan ahead, the times are 9am to 4pm. If that is a long way for you, check out the site for the county’s Solid Waste District, or call 216-443-3749 and see if there is a closer locale for you.

What is the big deal, anyway. Why not just toss this stuff in the garbage, buried under other trash? Remember when the river caught on fire? The reason that it did was the chemicals and pollutants that were being dumped into the river. Now, there are plenty of mandates to keep this from happening by industry, so we need to watch our household waste and keep our toxins out of our watershed. Lake Erie, the Cuyahoga River, and all our assorted streams, ponds and waterways are important to the region. They are one thing that makes NE Ohio special and beautiful. Still, every year the run off from our streets and land development add tons of pollution to these water features every year. Do your part. When hazardous household waste is sent to the landfill, it can leach into the water shed. Not only does this pollute our beaches and scenery, it can have a lasting effect on our drinking water. There is an economic impact, too, beyond just that of having to spend the dollars to clean up our mess. If we don’t keep the natural beauty of the area, we will not be able to attract new businesses to the region and make this a profitable and progressive place to be.

In case you can’t make out the details on the flyer, my pal, Beau Danne sent me this reminder email:

Residents of Cuyahoga County can bring oil or solvent-based paints, sealers, primers, varnish, polyurethanes, shellacs, spray paint, automotive fluids, kerosene, gasoline, lighter fluid, pesticides, herbicides, insecticides, paint thinner, mineral spirits, turpentine, caustic household cleaners, adhesives, roof tar, driveway sealer, mercury, fluorescent bulbs, etc. to the Cuyahoga County Fairgrounds in Berea this Saturday 10/10 from 9 to 4. Call your service dept. for additional locations.

No Latex Paint
No Business Waste
No Medical Waste

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