2006-12-01

Cutting Back on the Holidays

Tips from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Newsletter for reducing the amount of waste we generate during the holiday season.
  • When shopping, bring your own reusable tote bag rather than accepting a separate bag for each purchase.
  • Choose products that are minimally packaged.
  • Give experiences, not stuff.
  • Give of yourself.
  • Give a gift that keeps giving.
  • Donate old things to charity.
  • Recycle cardboard and boxes.
  • Don't use wrapping paper.
And many more. Including, of course:
Compost your kitchen food scraps from holiday dinners and parties. Remember, in yard waste composting, compost fruit and vegetable wastes not meat or grease. [In other words, no animal products.]

Some communities recycle Christmas trees, chipping and mulching them for compost or landscaping materials. Trees must be free of tinsel, decorations, nails, tacks or any other foreign materials. Check with your town office to see if a tree recycling programs exists in your area. You can use branches as mulch under acid-loving bushes and shrubs, such as rhododendrons or evergreens.
New York City has a city-wide Christmas tree recycling program. Trees are usually picked up the first couple of weekends in January.

Festival of the Trees #6

Festival of the Trees #6 is up over on Arboreality. It's a huge edition, with links to many of my favorite gardening and nature bloggers.

If you're visiting this blog for the first time, welcome! Here are some recent tree-related photo posts:

2006-11-29

That's right, blame the pear trees

Booming commercial construction is sparking demand for ornamental trees, leading to a 44 percent increase in the price of a pear tree, which helped push the price for buying all the items in the "The Twelve Days of Christmas," up 3.1 percent in 2006, according to a recent study.

The satirical study, put out every year by PNC Wealth Management [Warning: Link has irritating music!], said rising labor costs led to an increase in the price of skilled labor, including the nine ladies dancing, 10 lords-a-leaping, 11 pipers piping, and 12 drummers drumming.

- 'Twelve days of Christmas' gets pricier, CNN

For Internet-savvy True Loves, PNC Wealth Management calculates the cost of The Twelve Days gifts purchased on the Web. This year, the trends identified in the traditional index are repeated in the Internet version, with overall growth of 3.4 percent, compared to 3.1 in the traditional index. Wages are up, with the Drummers earning almost 100 percent more when purchased on the Internet in 2006 compared with an Internet purchase in 2005. And, as with the traditional Christmas Price Index, bird prices are even or, in some cases, down a bit from 2005 levels. In general, Internet prices are higher than their non-Internet counterparts because of shipping costs.

- The True Cost of the 12 Days of Christmas...

2006-11-27

Prospect Park Lights: Park Circle

DSC_4275Today was opening day of Prospect Park in Lights, an installation of over a half-million LED lights at four entrances to Prospect Park. Park Circle is one of the four. It's the southwest entrance of the park, at the intersection of Coney Island Avenue and Parkside Avenue. The statues at the entrance are "The Horse Tamers."

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See the lights at The Pergola.

Prospect Park Lights: The Pergola

DSC_4213Today was opening day of Prospect Park in Lights, an installation of over a half-million LED lights at four entrances to Prospect Park. The Pergola is one of the four. It's the southeast entrance of the park, at the intersection of Ocean Avenue and Parkside Avenue.
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See the lights at Park Circle.

2006-11-26

The Daffodil Project: Grief & Gardening #5

DSC_4132Today I planted bulbs in the front yard, including daffodils I received through the Beverly Square West Neighborhood Association, which were donated through The Daffodil Project. With this act, our front yard becomes part of a living memorial to those murdered on September 11, 2001.
The Daffodil Project was originally created to commemorate September 11. ...
The Daffodil Project is made possible in part by the generosity of a Dutch bulb supplier, Hans van Waardenburg of B&K Flowerbulbs, who has pledged to donate 500,000 daffodil bulbs to the project each year as long as there are volunteers willing to plant them. More than 20,000 volunteers have responded to his challenge so far. And thanks to their efforts, nearly 3 million yellow daffodils bloomed in over 1,300 individual sites across the five boroughs in the spring of 2006.
- The Daffodil Project, New Yorkers for Parks
... This act of immense generosity has been coupled with that of Joseph Temeczko, a Minnesotan handyman who willed his entire life-savings of $1.4 million to New York City, $300K of which will pay for the shipping of these precious bulbs for the following 5 years. Temeczko, who is said to have been a Nazi prison camp survivor, entered the U.S. through Ellis Island and lived for a time in New York City where he worked at the Statue of Liberty. Following September 11th, 2001, he redirected his estate "to honor those who perished in the disaster." An avid gardener, himself, he loved to share his garden's harvest with others, and passed away only a month later while working in his own garden.
- My Community Hero: The Daffodil Project, Claudia Herrera Hudson
This Daffodil Project is distinct in that it involves no particular site. All public parks and community gardens are potential sites for the Daffodil Project. After 9/11, New Yorkers turned to their parks as a common ground where they could congregate, debate, memorialize, grieve, and find spiritual and physical renewal. The Daffodil Project is a lasting tribute to the people that died and the heroes that were born that day, it is a symbol of remembrance and rebirth in the heart of what is common ground for all of the citizens of New York: their public parks.
- The Daffodil Project, The Living Memorials Project

Here are some more photos of me in the act this afternoon, graciously taken by my neighbor, Jeff Tolbert. (Since this is my photographic debut on my own blog, I decided not to upload the flattering butt-crack photos.)
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Related Posts

The Daffodil Project

Links

Plans for bequest made by Joseph Temeczko, Press Release, Parks, February 12, 2003

Fall Color along Buckingham Road in Prospect Park South

More fall color from Prospect Park South, this time from Buckingham Road. The planted median which runs down the middle of both this streets and Albemarle Road comprise part of Flatbush Malls, which is managed by the NYC Department of Parks & Recreation.
143 Buckingham Road
Each photo in this post links to its photo page in Flickr, where you can view it at several different resolutions.

The photos are organized so you can take your own walking tour. In the Flickr set, the photos are ordered by descending street address; the street addresses increase going south from Church Avenue to Albemarle Road. All the photos are also geotagged on Flickr, so you can see where each photo was taken. Look for the "map" link on the individual photo pages.

143 Buckingham Road131 Buckingham Road131 Buckingham Road100 Buckingham Road100 Buckingham Road

Architectural Detail, 131 Buckingham Road131 Buckingham RoadOak Tree, Flatbush Malls, Buckingham RoadBuckingham Road and Flatbush Malls

Related content

Buckingham Road, Prospect Park South (Flickr set)

2006-11-25

My Anti-Wish List: The RolyPig Composter

Or the piggy-roll composter, or the roll-the-piggy composter, or ...

You can watch the video.

Guess where you "feed" it your kitchen scraps. And from where you extract the compost.

I really don't want one. Really.

And no, I don't know why it's green.

via Scientific American.