Archive for the ‘composting’ Category

U.N. checks out urban agriculture in Brooklyn!

Friday, May 9th, 2008

Bed-Stuy Blog reports that an Urban Farm Tour of community gardens in Brooklyn will be on the itinerary of visitors from the United Nations:

For two weeks in May, delegates from across the world will be visiting NYC as part of the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development. This is the first year of a two-year cycle in which the United Nations sets its policies on sustainable development. Agriculture is one of the major themes before the Commission.

New York City is a model for innovative urban food systems and agriculture projects, and the City Farms Tour will highlight several sites in Brooklyn, including sites in [Bed-Stuy]. We invite you to come out and be part of this exciting moment, when community-based food projects in your district are receiving international attention.

Hattie Carthan Community Garden
Hattie Carthan Community Garden (photo from BedStuy Blog)

The Tour will be held on May 10th (tomorrow!) and is open to the public. The announcement above is from the folks at Hattie Carthan Community Garden, which is part of the Magnolia Tree Earth Center, a cultural and environmental institution founded in 1972 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Other gardens featured on the tour are the Hollenback Community Garden in Clinton Hill, Bed-Stuy Farm/Brooklyn Rescue Mission, and East New York Farms. Cooking, vermicomposting, and urban beekeeping workshops will be held along with tours of the sites.

“Greening Flatbush”!

Tuesday, February 26th, 2008


Rebecca’s container gardening demonstration

Last Sunday’s event, “Greening Flatbush: Garden Where You Are” was a huge success! The Sustainable Flatbush Gardening Committee assembled a stellar program of speakers and demonstrations on topics including Container Gardening, Urban Composting, Street Trees, Permaculture and more.

 

Mela and Sandra talk trees
Mela and Sandra talk trees

Carla knows her compost
Karla advocates for worm composting

We can’t wait for spring to get our hands dirty and start planting up the neighborhood!

Greening Flatbush: Garden Where You Are

Wednesday, February 13th, 2008

The Sustainable Flatbush Gardening Commitee is spearheading this great free community event:

On Sunday, February 24, residents and other members of the greater Flatbush community can learn what they can do to beautify and improve the environment of their neighborhood.

“Greening Flatbush: Garden Where You Are” is an afternoon of short lectures, demonstrations, and workshops on topics ranging from planting and caring for street trees to composting with worms in your kitchen.

“Garden is a verb,” says Chris Kreussling, co-chair of the Gardening Committee of Sustainable Flatbush, which is sponsoring the event. “It’s not just a place you visit. It’s something you do.”

“Hearing about what others are already doing can inspire people to work with their neighbors to takeaction,” says Kreussling, who also authors a local gardening blog, Flatbush Gardener. “We want to build community through gardening.”

Greening Flatbush is Sunday, February 24, from 1:30 to 4:30pm at the Flatbush Branch of the Brooklyn Public Library at 22 Linden Boulevard.

The event is free, but space is limited. To register, or if you have questions about this event, please email greeningflatbush[at]gmail.com.

For directions, see the Flatbush branch web page on the Brooklyn Public Library Web site.


greeningflatbushlogo.jpg

Have I mentioned that our Gardening Committee is amazing? Check out their mission statement:

We envision a clean, green, and beautiful cityscape for and by the inhabitants of Flatbush.
Our purpose is to empower our community through shared gardening and pro-environment projects.
To achieve this, we will:

  • Educate our community to create green, life-promoting spaces indoors and outdoors;
  • Support other groups and individuals in their environmentally sound gardening projects;
  • Inspire and challenge all members of our community to sustain and respect public gardening and environmental initiatives;
  • Green and beautify our neighborhood one flower, one plant, one tree at a time.

Anyone interested in becoming an active member of this committee can request to join their listserv here. Go Gardeners!!

Support GreenMap!

Monday, January 14th, 2008

Green Map logo

Our friends at Green Map System are involved in a fundraising challenge:

America’s Giving Challenge will award $50,000 prizes to the eight non-profits that receive the greatest number of unique $10 donations this month. Each donation must come from a different person and a different credit card to count. Anyone in the world can contribute, and all donations must be made at Green Map’s specific Challenge webpage. It’s tax-deductible, too! All donations of $10 (by 3PM, EST on January 31) or more will be used toward the great Green Maps, mapmaking resources, multi-lingual websites, tours and events that Green Map System creates to engage communities worldwide to chart a sustainable future.

Support locally-led Green Mapmaking projects that connect, engage and empower communities across the US and worldwide as they promote green living, nature, social and cultural resources and eco-education for all. Think Global, Map Local!

Over 300 GreenMaps have been published to date, promoting sustainable communities by connecting both residents and tourists to environmental resources all over the world (including Energy, Composting and Youth-oriented editions of New York City’s Green Apple Map series). Green Map Project is currently active in 400 cities, villages and neighborhoods in 50 countries! If you have ten bucks to spare, these are good people to support.

Weekend of Recycling in Brooklyn

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

Last weekend was a big one for Reuse and Recycling here in Brooklyn!

2008’s first Saturday Greenmarket in Grand Army Plaza began a series of textile recycling events called “Second Chance Saturdays” (acceptable donations include used clothing, shoes, boots, hats, jackets, towels, bedding, and linens). These collections will continue at the Greenmarket every Saturday until March 29th; details from Council on the Environment are here .

“We are thrilled to be expanding this very successful clothing collection program to Brooklyn,” said David Hurd, OROE (Office of Recycling Outreach and Education) Director. “Some 193,000 tons of clothing and textiles that could be recycled end up in the landfill each year. By bringing these materials to the Greenmarket on your way to shop, New Yorkers help save these valuable commodities.”

Textile Recycling at Bkln Greenmarket
Greenmarket Textile Recycling photo by Gowanus Lounge

Saturday and Sunday were Mulchfest days at Prospect Park and many other locations, where Brooklynites brought their Christmas trees to get chipped into mulch for gardens. I was fortunate enough to ride by on my bike and savor the lovely evergreen scent while enjoying a cup of hot chocolate, served up by our own Gardening Committee co-chair, Flatbush Gardener (aka Santa), who covers the event here. Apparently this is the first year the city has had two drop-off locations in Prospect Park (previously the only one has been at the Prospect Park West and Third Street entrance); the new Park Circle location, which is much more accessible for residents of Flatbush, Kensington, and other neighborhoods south of the park, collected 784 trees. This success speaks to the importance of providing convenient locations for recycling opportunities, particularly in New York City, where many people don’t own cars but are very creative at coming up with short-distance transport options.

Prospect Park Mulchfest 2008
Mulchfest photo by Flatbush Gardener

E-Waste Recycling by BikeBack in the neighborhood, Sustainable Flatbush held our own Post-Holiday Electronics Recycling Event . As with the Christmas tree drop-off, we feel that providing a convenient location is key to local participation. 50+ visitors and three cargo vans filled with “electrojunk” (a new term coined by 3R Committee chair Mark Levy, host of the event) seem to prove our point. We delivered our goods to Lower East Side Ecology Center’s massive year-end e-waste collection at Union Square. Look for a repeat of this event every few months, due to popular demand.

Printer Recycling photo by Flatbush Gardener

Town Hall Meeting November 12th!

Friday, November 2nd, 2007

s_f_logosm.jpg


Sustainable Flatbush is about to enter an exciting new phase of our activities in the neighborhood, and we’d love for YOU to be involved! Please join us:

WHAT: Sustainable Flatbush Town Hall Meeting
WHEN: Monday, November 12th at 7pm
WHERE: 462 Marlborough Road (between Ditmas and Dorchester)

Longtime Flatbush resident Mark Levy has come onboard, bringing his history of commitment to the neighborhood and experience as a community organizer and environmental educator. He has also kindly offered to host this meeting at his home. Thanks Mark!

We will form committees geared toward specific activities and service projects, establish leadership roles, and set some new goals for 2008. To give you an idea of what’s in store, here are some of the proposed committees:

• RECYCLING/WASTE REDUCTION
Focusing on recycling education and promotion, as well as other methods of reducing waste in our homes and businesses, from composting to blocking unwanted fliers.

• SUSTAINABLE GARDENING
Sharing knowledge and resources on sustainable approaches to all forms of urban gardening, from yard landscaping to street tree pits to organic farming. We will also be actively involved in the new neighborhood community garden.

• TRANSPORTATION/LIVABLE STREETS
Working with Transportation Alternatives and other Livable Streets advocates, we will bring a local perspective to the citywide discussion of such issues as traffic calming, congestion pricing, public transportation improvements, and infrastructure for pedestrians and cyclists.

• ENERGY EFFICIENCY/ALTERNATIVE ENERGY AND FUELS
Let’s talk about how to save money by using less energy in our homes and businesses, and how to incorporate alternative energy sources such as biofuels and solar power into the landscape.

• LOCAL BUSINESS OUTREACH
Helping neighborhood businesses to adopt sustainability practices that improve their “Triple Bottom Line”: People, Planet, and Profit.

• LOCAL SCHOOLS OUTREACH
Implementing environmental education and practices in our local schools.

Hope to see you there!

Say No to Excessive Packaging!

Wednesday, October 24th, 2007

One big source of trash for those of us who shop online and mail order is excessive packing materials. Some companies are worse offenders than others, and hopefully this instance cited on Organic Picks is not the norm:

2007_10_15_amazon_packaging.jpg
photo: Organic Picks

Yes, the small Pyrex bowl on the left is the purchased item!

As the post points out, we concerned consumers can have an impact on the companies we shop with by praising those with eco-conscious packaging and objecting to practices like the above. This in turn raises the issue of excessive packaging, period. How many times have you been tempted to use a hacksaw to open one of those ridiculous plastic clamshell bubbles in order to free the small item (usually electronics) contained within? Ever wondered why so many food products are packaged in both a plastic bag AND a box (most cereal, for example)? Even those who conscientiously harvest and recycle all the cardboard from these conveyances will be faced with a pile of plastic that can only go in the trash — where it will remain for generations.

Though you wouldn’t know it from a typical shopping experience today, sustainable packaging design is being explored and embraced by many companies. It is currently a work-in-progress with much “greenwashing” in evidence (a “compostable” plastic container that gets thrown in the trash is arguably no different from any other plastic container, as it will not break down in a landfill… only if it is actually composted). But many companies have already voluntarily reduced their packaging and seen dramatic reductions in their shipping and storage costs. Fast Company’s recent article, 50 Ways to Green Your Business cites some dramatic examples:

1 At $100 a ton, feeding a landfill is pricey. But in the past two years, General Mills (NYSE:GIS) has turned its solid waste into profits. Take its oat hulls, a Cheerios by-product. The company used to pay to have them hauled off, but realized they could be burned as fuel. Now customers compete to buy the stuff. In 2006, General Mills recycled 86% of its solid waste, earning more from that than it spent on disposal.

8 Hamburger Helper helps your hamburger … save the planet? This year, General Mills redesigned the packaging of Mom’s old standby, shaving off 20% of the paperboard box without shrinking its tasty contents. The astounding result: 500 fewer distribution trucks on the road each year.

10 Taking the packaging revolution a step further, the liquid-laundry-detergent industry, goaded by Wal-Mart, has cut the size of its bottles by 50% or more by concentrating the liquid to two and sometimes three degrees of magnitude. Unilever’s triple-concentrated All Small & Mighty detergent has saved 1.3 million gallons of diesel fuel, 10 million pounds of plastic resin, and 80 million square feet of cardboard since 2005. This fall, Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG) is converting its entire collection of liquids to double concentration.

(The rest of their list is pretty interesting too.)

As consumers, the more we educate ourselves about the consequences of excessive packaging and use our wallets to vote for alternatives, the more manufacturers will be compelled to respond with real solutions. And if the solutions also benefit those companies, well, isn’t that how things should be?

That’s What I’m Talking About…

Tuesday, October 16th, 2007

According to this NY Times article, Seattle is leading the nation when it comes to recycling. It is among a growing number of cities, particularly on the West Coast, who do curbside collection of food scraps mixed with yard waste; this mixture is delivered to a high-tech composting facility, Cedar Grove Organics, and two months later the results will be sold at garden supply stores by the bag.

“This is the cool side of trash,” Cedar Grove’s founder, Steve Banchero, said of the process, which is on recycling’s cutting edge.

The company, the major composter in this area, will soon have much more trash coming its way because Seattle is making food waste yet another mandatory recycling ingredient in its already long list.

“The food-waste issue is the new frontier for recycling advocates,” said Kate Krebs, the executive director of the National Recycling Coalition. “It’s the next big chunk.”

Seattle now recycles 44 percent of its trash, compared with the national average of around 30 percent, which makes it a major player in big-city waste recovery. Its goal, city waste management officials said, is to reach 60 percent by 2012 and 72 percent by 2025.

Obviously, a key element for the success of recycling programs is the creation and nurturing of markets for recycled materials:

Waste paper is now commanding about $90 a ton throughout the United States, which makes it possible to turn a profit by loading it onto ships instead of dumping it into landfills.

Not to sell it “would be like burying money,” said Chaz Miller of the Environmental Industry Associations, which represents the private waste service industry. Because of that, collecting paper for recycling is at an all-time high.

God forbid anyone should accuse us New Yorkers of “burying money”… but according to my source at the Department of Sanitation, New York City is only recycling a fraction of the paper we could be. Here are the “mixed paper” items that New Yorkers can recycle:

  • white, colored, and glossy paper (staples OK)
  • mail and envelopes (window envelopes OK)
  • wrapping paper (remove ribbon and tape)
  • smooth cardboard (food boxes — remove inside & outside plastic wrappers — shoe boxes, tubes from paper towel and toilet paper rolls, cardboard from product packaging)
  • paper bags
  • cardboard egg cartons and trays
  • newspapers, magazines, and catalogs
  • phone books, softcover books (paperbacks, comic books, etc.; no spiral bindings)
  • corrugated cardboard (flattened boxes)

But when will WE be able to recycle OUR food scraps? I’m getting really tired of the West Coast kicking our a** when it comes to sustainability!

Taking Out the Trash

Friday, October 12th, 2007

Trash is no trivial issue. Last month I attended a conference at Baruch College called A Panel On Long-Term, Sustainable Solutions For Managing New York’s Refuse, sponsored by State Senator Liz Kreuger; this discussion explored many angles of the Reduce, Reuse, Recycle mantra. One that came up repeatedly was the importance of composting — and we are talking Large Scale Composting, at the municipal level. Without getting too technical here, let’s just say that landfills are so tightly compacted that even materials capable of biodegrading are unable to do so, because there is no air circulation. Thus landfills do not get smaller, they only get bigger. People do not like to live near them, as they tend to do bad things like leaching toxins into the water supply and creating a constant stench. If a city’s mayor wanted to ingratiate himself to a community located near a landfill, one way to do it might be to close the landfill and spend billions of dollars sending the city’s trash away in fume-belching diesel trucks to… oh, who knows, somewhere else. Some of you may recognize this as what became New York City’s waste management policy in the Giuliani era. In the context of this blog (no politics, I promised!) I will simply state the obvious: this policy is unsustainable from both an environmental and a financial point of view.

Fortunately, members of the Baruch panel and many other great minds are joining forces to create a 21st Century approach to waste management. Unbeknownst to most of us, a cabal of folks has been working for years behind the scenes in New York City to implement a concept known as Zero Waste: “a combination of waste prevention, reuse, recycling and composting”. “Reaching For Zero: The Citizens Plan for Zero Waste” has existed since 2004 (one of its authors, Barbara Warren of Sustainable South Bronx, was on the Baruch panel), apparently languishing for lack of a receptive audience with the appropriate policymakers. It seems that whatever governmental epiphany brought us PlaNYC has also brought us much closer to making Zero Waste a topic for mainstream discussion in 2007.

Zero Waste is already the policy in many cities, particularly those cute ones on the West Coast that we all know about. (While visiting my parents in Berkeley, CA, I personally witnessed the delivery to their doorstep of a small green plastic bucket accompanied by a two-pound bag of garden compost. The city is now doing curbside pickup of kitchen scraps, in addition to yard waste.) But trust me, Zero Waste is making its way to big bad NYC. It has to. The cost of trucking our trash out of state is only increasing, and the day will come when our garbage gets rejected to go search for another landfill, likely even further away. That means the day will also come when all of our restaurants, schools, hospitals, etc. will not only sell their used cooking oil to biodiesel manufacturers, they will also separate their food waste and it will be carted off, preferably by rail, to a massive compost pile, preferably within 100 miles of the city. Unlike landfills, compost piles DO shrink, because the stuff can actually decompose. (There is a company called Greenway Environmental in Newburgh, NY that composts all the food waste from Vassar College, and that pile has been the same size for about 10 years.) If viable large-scale composting sites can be established in New York state, we will not find ourselves constantly having to “go west” in search of ever-larger potential landfill sites. These composting facilities would also generate new companies and jobs, desperately needed in many upstate communities that are struggling economically in the post-industrial era. Along the same lines, manufacturing of new products from recycled materials such as paper, metal, glass and plastic would put a cash value on items that now too often end up in the trash, while creating more jobs and new businesses. See the logic? Trash becomes something valuable. It’s the essence of permaculture: turning a liability into an asset.

I am convinced that it won’t be long before apartment buildings such as mine will pay carting fees based on how much garbage they produce. And when that day comes, the work we have done to improve our recycling compliance will pay off in spades. Hopefully before that day comes we will create our own composting site where residents can bring their food scraps and staff can bring yard waste such as leaves and clippings, and the compost will be used to feed our currently undernourished gardens and tree pits. Savvy landlords and co-op owners will recognize the dollar-and-cents value of creating systems for their buildings to reduce, reuse, and recycle. With the requisite carrot-and-stick incentives in place, sustainability will make financial sense.

Okay, great. But until there is curbside pickup of kitchen waste in Brooklyn, how can I compost my own food scraps in an apartment with no outdoor space?

Sustainability Begins at Home

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

“What I Did On My Summer Vacation” really was life-changing. It was exhilarating to face the physical challenges of long-distance cycling, camping, and eating vegan food (hehehe!) each day. It was inspiring to see concrete examples of sustainable living, and this made me more determined to move my own life in this direction, here at home.

In my case, home is Brooklyn. Not an organic farm. Not an intentional eco-community. Not a cute little city on the West Coast where people brake for bicycles. A co-op apartment building in New York City — perhaps the world’s best example of an UN-intentional community! Seeing sustainability concepts, such as permaculture, in action is sometimes both inspiring and frustrating for me as a person with no intentions of forsaking city life to go plant squash and tend chickens. Which sustainability models make sense in an urban setting? What can I do in my own life, my own home? Well here’s a big one to start with: make less garbage.