Posts Tagged ‘holiday’

Give More & Use Less: Enter Our Holiday Competition

Monday, December 15th, 2008

Do you believe “giving more” isn’t the same thing as “buying more”? Are you planning to celebrate the holidays in a way that won’t tax your wallet — or the planet? Well, now is your time to shine! Because from now until Monday, January 5, 2009,* Compete to Conserve invites you to enter our first annual holiday competition: “Give More & Use Less.”

Share Your Ideas for a Green Holiday Season

Post photos, videos, or a simple written entry on our official competition page: http://www.competetoconserve.com/competition/view/14/coming-soon-give-more-and-use-less-holiday-competition

One Grand Prize Winner Will Receive Our Ultimate Green Your House Gift Bag, Which Includes:

• One reuseable bag made from recycled materials

Give More & Use Less This Holiday

Share your ideas to win our Ultimate Green Your House Gift Bag (valued at $125).

 

• One Compete to Conserve baseball hat

• One .6-liter reuseable SIGG water bottle

• Six water-saving faucet aerators

• One shower shut-off valve

• One hot-water gauge

• Four 60-watt soft white CFLs

• One 32-ounce bottle of Lucky Earth Waterless Car Wash

• One 16-oune bottle of Mrs. Meyer’s Clean Day Countertop Spray

• One Energizer rechargeable compact battery charger with rechargeable batteries

How Will You Use Less?

There are lots of opportunities to use less during the holiday season, whether it’s hosting a party, giving gifts, decorating, or simply sharing time with family and friends. Tell the Compete to Conserve community what you’re doing, and you can inspire others — as well as win a bounty of green prizes to start your new year right.

* Be sure to post your entry by 11:59 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time to be entered to win our Ultimate Green Your House Gift Bag.

Give More & Use Less Holiday Competition Rules

Monday, December 15th, 2008


This year we challenge you to celebrate the holidays and conserve our planet’s natural resources.  Share with us the creative ways that you will give more and use less this holiday season, in any way, for any holiday. The most inspired submission on “greener” giving will win our Ultimate “Green Your House” gift bag.

Green Your House Gift Bag

Green Your House Gift Bag

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY TO ENTER OR WIN, AND ANY PURCHASE DOES NOT INCREASE YOUR CHANCES OF WINNING. Submitting an entry constitutes your full and unconditional agreement to and acceptance of these Contest Rules and the decisions of Compete to Conserve Dot Com, Inc. (“Compete to Conserve®” or “Compete to Conserve”), which shall be final and binding on all matters relating to this Contest. 

To enter the contest on www.competetoconserve.com (the “Website”), submit an original entry in the form of simple text, or a digital image of the entry in any medium in the form of a .jpg, .gif, .png that does not exceed five (150) kb in size. You can use video format by pasting the video’s embed code into the video entry format box. Multiple entries into the Contest are allowed, however each separate entry requires that you submit a different and original idea as part of that entry into the Contest. Compete to Conserve reserves the right to reprint or republish all entries.  By submitting an entry, you are granting Compete to Conserve the right to reprint or republish that entry, along with your name information contained within the Website, online or in print. See Compete to Conserve’s Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions http://www.competetoconserve.com/page/privacy_policy and http://www.competetoconserve.com/page/terms_of_service for complete details.

This Contest begins December 15, 2008 and ends January 5, 2009 and is open to all legal residents of he United States age 18 and older, except employees, agents, or representatives of Compete to Conserve Dot Com, Inc. and Foundation for Energy Conservation, or any of their parents, subsidiaries, sister companies, or affiliates, or any member of their immediate family.  Prizes are not redeemable for cash and must be accepted as awarded.

Entries must be submitted to the “Give More & Use Less” competition page, http://www.competetoconserve.com/competition/view/14/coming-soon-give-more-and-use-less-holiday-competition , no later than 11:59 p.m. Pacific Standard Time on January 5, 2009 (the “Deadline”).  All entries must be received by the Deadline to be eligible to win a prize.  Entries received by telephone, fax, courier or personal delivery will not be accepted.  Entries that are lost, late, misdirected, garbled, or incompletely received, for any reason, including by reason of hardware, software, browser, or network failure, malfunction, congestion, or incompatibility at the Website or elsewhere, will not be eligible.  Compete to Conserve will not be responsible for any printing or typographical errors in any materials associated with the Contest. Compete to Conserve, in its sole discretion, reserves the right to disqualify any person tampering with the entry process, the operation of the website, or otherwise in violation of the rules.

Compete to Conserve will choose one (1) winner from all entrants who have submitted an entry prior to the Deadline and subject to the terms and conditions contained herein.  The winner shall be chosen by Compete to Conserve’s panel of judges at their sole discretion based upon which entrants display the most (i) original, (ii) authentic and (iii) creative idea expression.  All decisions are final.  Compete to Conserve reserves the right to change the contest rules.  Any entries or submissions which depict or glorify lewd, obscene, vulgar or profane behavior, or which utilize lewd, obscene, vulgar or profane language, either as part of the submission or as the name of the submission, may be disqualified at the sole discretion of Compete to Conserve.

The winner will receive:

1.            One Re-Useable bag made from recycled materials

2.            One Compete to Conserve baseball hat

3.            One .6LT Re-Useable SIGG water bottle

4.            Six Water Saving Faucet Aerators 1 Shower Shut-Off Valve

5.            Hot Water Gauge

6.            60 watt soft white CFL light bulbs

7.            32 FL. OZ. bottle of Lucky Earth Waterless Car Wash.

8.            16 FL. OZ. bottle of Mrs. Meyer’s Clean Day Countertop Spray

9.            One Energizer Rechargeable Compact Battery Charger with re-chargeable batteries.

The approximate retail value of this prize is $125.00.  The winner will be informed via email at the email address submitted by the winner at registration on the Website.  To claim a prize, the winner should follow the instructions contained in the notification.  Compete to Conserve reserves the right to republish the winning entry with the winner’s name and profile image on the Website at any time in any location on the Website.  ALL FEDERAL, STATE AND LOCAL TAXES ASSOCIATED WITH THE RECEIPT OR USE OF ANY PRICES ARE THE SOLE RESPONSIBILITY OF THE WINNER.

All entries must be original and you agree to defend, hold harmless and indemnify Compete to Conserve, its respective parents, affiliates, subsidiaries, divisions, advertising and promotion agencies, or any respective officers, directors, employees, partners or agents from any of these entities, against any and all claims of alleged or actual infringement of any intellectual property rights, proprietary rights, rights of privacy and publicity, moral rights and rights of attribution raised by third parties against Compete to Conserve in connection with your entry. Compete to Conserve, its respective parents, affiliates, subsidiaries, divisions, advertising and promotion agencies, or the respective officers, directors, employees, partners, or agents of the forgoing (collectively, the “Released Parties”) are not responsible for (i) any injury, losses or damages of any kind resulting from participation in this Contest or acceptance, possession or use of the any prize; or (ii) any warranty, representation or guarantee express or implied, in fact or in law, relative to any prize, including but not limited to its quality, mechanical condition or fitness.

If for any reason the Contest is not capable of running as planned, including infection by computer virus, bugs, tampering, unauthorized intervention, force majeure, fraud or technical failures, which corrupt or affect the administration, security, fairness, integrity, or proper conduct of this Contest, Compete to Conserve reserves the right at its sole discretion, to cancel, terminate, modify or suspend the Contest, and judge entries from among all eligible, non-suspect entries received prior to such action. Released Parties assume no responsibility for any error, omission, interruption, deletion, defect, delay in operation or transmission, communications line failure, theft or destruction or unauthorized access to, or alteration of, entries. Released Parties are not responsible for any problems or technical malfunction of any telephone network or lines, computer on-line systems, servers, or providers, computer equipment software, failure of any e-mail or entry to be received by Compete to Conserve on account of technical problems or traffic congestion on the Internet or at any Website, or any combination thereof, including any injury or damage to participant’s or any other person’s computer related to or resulting from participation or downloading any materials in this Contest.

The Contest and these Official Rules will be governed, construed and interpreted under the laws of the United States of America, State of California.  The Contest and all accompanying materials are copyright 2008 Compete to Conserve Dot Com, Inc.  All rights reserved.

 

5 Charities That Make Great Gifts

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

Every year, even in flush economic times, my family says we’ll pull back on holiday spending — there’s nothing we really need. We all like the idea of giving to charity, but it’s still nice to have something to unwrap Christmas morning, especially for the kids. So here’s a list of five conservation-minded charities the staff of Compete to Conserve thinks make great gifts:

© Davide R. Schrichte. All rights reserved. Mother manatee and her calf.

© Davide R. Schrichte. All rights reserved. A manatee nurses her calf.

Save the Manatee Club

For just $25, you can adopt the manatee of your choice and keep tabs on your adoptee throughout the year. An adoption includes:

• A photo of your manatee (we have our manatees’ photos framed on our wall at home)
• Your manatee’s biography
• An adoption certificate
• A membership handbook
• Four newsletters throughout the year with updated reports on your adoptee

The club also sells children’s books and plush manatees that make great gifts for kids. Money raised from the club goes toward protecting endangered manatees and their habitat, much of it in Florida.

Adopt a manatee at: http://www.savethemanatee.org/adoptpag.htm

Penguin Posing

Creative Commons License photo credit: Lord Biro

Defenders of Wildlife

We’ve got a soft spot for penguins, but you can also adopt other animals, including wolves, polar bears, snow leopards, sea turtles, and beluga whales. Most of the adoptions start at $25 and include a small plush toy, photo, and fact sheet.

Money raised goes toward protecting imperiled wildlife and wild lands through education, outreach, and political and legal action.

Adopt the animal of your choice at: https://secure.defenders.org/site/SPageServer?pagename=wagc_homepage#AllAnimals

Surfrider Foundation

Father and son surf lesson in Morro Bay, CA 12 of 12

Creative Commons License photo credit: mikebaird

Who doesn’t love the beach and think our coastal waters should be protected for all to enjoy? Even non-surfers can support the Surfrider Foundation’s mission to educate the public about threats to our coasts and to encourage grassroots activism.

For $44, you can give the gift of a membership to the Surfrider Foundation, which includes:

• An organic Limited Edition Surfrider Foundation t-shirt or all-purpose tote bag
• Six issues of the Making Waves newsletter
• A sticker to show your support

Purchase a membership at: https://www.surfrider.org/membership/gift_membership3.cfm?specialGift=holiday

IMG_0935

Creative Commons License photo credit: nojhan

Heifer International

Heifer International aims to stamp out world hunger through community involvement and sustainable development. Donors may fund a specific project, such as natural resource management in Tanzania, or pay to provide an impoverished family with livestock.

Buy livestock for a family at:
http://www.heifer.org/site/c.edJRKQNiFiG/b.204586/
Fund a project at: http://www.heifer.org/site/?c=edJRKQNiFiG&b=3538797&msource=pcb07

Register for the charities you want to support.

Register for the charities you want to support.

Changing the Present

Think of it as the philanthropist’s gift card. Changing the present allows you to register for charities, in the same way a bride registers for gifts. If you’re serious about not getting gifts this holiday (or Valentine’s Day, birthday, wedding, any event at all), this is a great way to let friends and family get you something you want — and let them get a tax deduction, too.

Register at: http://www.changingthepresent.org/registries

Thankful for CSAs

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

This November, as families across the U.S. prepare for the button-popping holiday known as Thanksgiving, a growing number will give thanks for belonging to a CSA. CSAs, short for community supported agriculture, allow consumers to purchase fresh, in-season produce directly from a farm.

This subscription-based arrangement cuts out the middlemen (distributors and grocery stores) and provides a dependable income for the farmers. In return, consumers receive weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly boxes of fruits and vegetables, usually organic and at a better price than what one would pay for comparable produce at the market.

Thankful for a Variety

Growers can also offer a diverse selection of produce, because subscriptions give them a guaranteed market. While a typical grocery store may offer organic apples and tomatoes, a CSA box could also contain difficult-to-find foods such as organic daikon, tomatillos, and chili peppers.

Thankful for the People Who Grow Our Food

CSA members say they also enjoy developing a personal relationship with the people who grow the food they eat. Most CSAs distribute newsletters or have blog detailing their plantings, harvests, and other interesting news on the farm.

Thankful All Year Long

Some CSAs run spring through fall, offering a bounty of seasonal produce. In California, most of the CSAs operate year-round, though members should prepare to get lots of kale and dark greens through the cooler winter months. Thanksgiving can be a real treat because of the amazing sweet potatoes, butternut and acorn squashes, and colorful potato varietals.

In my experience as a member of the Eatwell Farms CSA, summer was my favorite season because of the berry fruits and unusual variety watermelons. In the winter, I have to confess, many of my dark greens went toward making vegetable stock. Still, I appreciated the variety of local, seasonal vegetables it provided the family. Without it, I may have been tempted to buy more than one box of blueberries imported from Argentina in February.

More resources:

Search for a CSA near you:
http://www.localharvest.org/

Eatwell Farm blog:
http://www.eatwellfarm.typepad.com/

Biodynamic Farming and Gardening Association:
http://www.biodynamics.com/csa.html

Reducing Wrap Rage

Friday, November 14th, 2008
This type of packaging should be outlawed

Creative Commons License photo credit: miss_rogue

Wrap rage, the anger, frustration, and, sometimes, injury that occurs when opening a new package will hit its annual peak this December. Instead of kissing under mistletoe or roasting chestnuts, millions of consumers will instead spend time untwisting sharp, poky twist ties and slicing through airtight plastic clamshell packaging that seems better suited to seal off biological weapons than iPods.

For people trying to conserve resources, wrap rage is particularly vexing because, in the end, they’re left with piles of waste that can be neither reused (how many twist ties can one family really use?) or recycled (just because there’s a recycle symbol on a plastic bag doesn’t mean your local recycling facility will accept it). Paying customers are also annoyed knowing that much of this packaging is produced to deter shoplifters. (It’s also designed to make shipping and stocking more efficient.) Remember the terrible wasteful 6×12-inch cardboard box CDs used come packaged in? Consumers complained enough to rid the industry of the boxes. Now a new generation is aiming to put an end to wrap-rage packaging.

Some, fed up with overconsumption and inspired by the “reduce” movement, say that the best way to avoid wrap rage is to not buy anything–or at least not buy anything overpackaged or sealed in a clamshell. That would mean swearing off all electronics and many toys. So while there are merits to this argument, like other abstinence-only pledges, it may not be realistic. The cultural traditions and comforts of giving and receiving gifts during the holidays run strong.

One happy medium suggestion is to reduce the number of gifts you buy this season. Faced with economic uncertainty, many consumers are already pledging to buy less this year (much to the dismay of retailers). In light of mindful holiday buying, Amazon.com is hoping its “Frustration-Free Packaging Initiative” will lure shoppers fed up with overpackaging.

The Seattle-based online retailer has teamed with toy maker Mattel, electronics manufacturer Transcend, and Microsoft to sell 19 products that use less packaging and are easier to open. Amazon says, for example, the Fisher-Price Imaginext Adventures Pirate Ship “is now delivered in an easy-to-open, recyclable cardboard box. The new packaging eliminates 36 inches of plastic-coated wire ties, 1,576.5 square inches of printed corrugated package inserts and 36.1 square inches of printed folding carton materials. Also eliminated are 175.25 square inches of PVC blisters, 3.5 square inches of ABS molded styrene and two molded plastic fasteners.” Transcend memory cards will be shipped in recyclable cardboard rather than plastic clamshells.

Nineteen is an awfully small number of products to choose from. And it won’t end wrap rage overnight. But it’s a start.

5 Easy Ways to Green Your Halloween

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

1. Compost Your Jack-o-Lantern
You can also save, wash, and roast the pumpkin seeds for a treat.

Halloween is near 1
Creative Commons License photo credit: tanakawho

2. Buy a Second-Hand Costume (and Donate It or Use It Next Year)
You can pick up high quality next-to-new costumes at Goodwill, Salvation Army, and other second-hand stores for less than $5. Sure beats paying $40, and you’ll conserve resources in the process. Don’t let your costumes’ lifecycle end there: pass them to a friend next year or donate to a retail charity and use your donation as a tax deduction.

3. Buy Less Individually Wrapped Candy
Let’s face facts: are you really going to get 400 trick-or-treaters? If you’re buying candy to satisfy your own sweet tooth, skip the small individually wrapped candies and opt for something with less packaging.

4. Turn Out the Lights
It adds ambiance to the night and saves energy, too.

5. Look for Any Opportunity to Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
Be mindful of your consumption during holidays when our desire to celebrate often leads to falling off the conservation bandwagon. Reuse costumes and decorations where you can. Recycle plastic cups, use compostable utensils, or use your regular flatware. Question whether you really need the Halloween merchandise that’s pushed at us each year. And just because something’s small doesn’t mean it can’t make a difference–I’ve even recycled tiny cardboard candy boxes from the kids’ treat bags.

More conservation ideas for Halloween from some of our favorite bloggers:

“Turning Halloween into Zero Waste Hallo-green,” My Zero Waste, October 16, 2008:
http://myzerowaste.com/2008/10/turning-halloween-into-a-zero-waste-hallo-green/

“Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, Oh My!” Low Impact Home, September 30, 2008: http://lowimpacthome.org/2008/09/30/halloween-thanksgiving-christmasoh-my/

Not Too Late to Talk Turkeys

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

Not all turkeys are created equally. And with Thanksgiving just around the corner, more and more retailers are answering the call for alternative holiday bird options. While Butterballs are the standard fare (not to mention perfectly delicious), an increasing number of turkey aficionados are favoring ancestors of the broad-breasted Tom.

Heritage Breeds, like Standard Bronzes, Narragansetts, and Bourbon Reds, are quietly gaining respect and market placement due to their exceptional flavor and biological diversity. According to the Heritage Turkey Foundation, “They are traditional ‘standard’ breeds of turkeys which have not been ‘industrialized’ for efficient factory production at the expense of flavor and the well-being of the turkeys.”

As industrialization took over the turkey industry, these heritage breeds became all but extinct. Meanwhile, the mass production of Broad-breasted whites developed a quick-to-fatten breed that cannot mate on its own, has difficulty walking, and must be slaughtered before it grows too big to carry its own weight.

The American Livestock Breeds Conservancy and Slow Food have been working together to increase awareness and availability of the traditional heritage varieties. As a result, numerous retailers are offering heritage breeds for this holiday season. Since some require “pre-ordering,” you may want to hop on this option sooner rather than later. Or you could be sizing up the Butterball section in the coming weeks.

As one of the few All-American, nationally celebrated holidays, why not take the route of celebrating like our own ancestors—alongside a harvest of organic fall veggies, of course? To find a retailer that sells heritage breed turkeys near you, check out: http://heritageturkeyfoundation.org/

Increased Halloween Spending Means More Trash

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008
Skull F/Suckers
Creative Commons License photo credit: hfb

Given that you can’t enter a store between August and October without seeing an array of fake plastic spiders, severed rubber fingers, sexy angel/devil/cat/nurse leotards, and cheek-pinchingly-cute baby costumes, it’s not surprising that many American consumers believe Halloween is the second biggest retail spending holiday of the year. It is not. The National Retail Federation, an industry trade organization, says:

“Though growing, Halloween remains the sixth-largest spending holiday after: Winter Holidays ($457.4 billion estimated), Valentine’s Day ($13.70 billion), Easter ($12.63 billion), Mother’s Day ($13.80 billion), and Father’s Day ($9.01 billion). Because it is not a gift-giving holiday or an apparel holiday, it ranks lower than other annual holidays in terms of spending.”

The retail industry does not measure holidays in terms of waste, but I think it’s safe to say Halloween can earn a second place title in that category. Overall, consumers are making more purchases (costumes, candy, decorations, food and beverage, etc.) in smaller dollar amounts than they typically make for Mother’s Day (flowers, a gift). Collectively, that adds up to lots more trash.

Have a Heifer-ific Holiday

Friday, September 26th, 2008


She's a natural

Creative Commons License photo credit: thadman

With the “slide” toward the holidays starting pretty much after Halloween, and with the economy as it is, many people are already budgeting or even shopping for the upcoming season. Now, perhaps more than ever, people are looking for gifts worth giving, especially for those “hard to buy for” people.

Add to the lack of ideas the fact that—for many of us—our parents, grandparents, or in-laws have expressed they no longer want “gifts.” They are busy clearing out and downsizing—sometimes even delivering boxes of stuff long since left behind, under the auspices of not being sure if we still want them.

For Christmas a couple of years ago, the in-laws drew the biggest blank for me. I was working steadily down the “list” of family and friends, jotting down gift ideas, and found myself skipping them on each pass. In trying to figure out what to give someone who didn’t want anything, I came across Heifer International. (Care of a flyer that somehow ended up in my mailbox—a rare case of welcomed direct mail.)

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Pagan Pride: Celebrate Harvest Time the Really Old-Fashioned Way

Sunday, September 21st, 2008

Growing up literally half-a-mile from Salem, MA, I had mixed feelings regarding witches and witchcraft. On one hand, I had recurring nightmares of coming home from school and finding the Wicked Witch of the West at my house. (I could sometimes tell she was there because her car was parked out front—don’t ask.) On the other, I could barely contain my excitement when Laurie Cabot, the Official Witch of Salem, visited our elementary school. (It was pretty cool.) 

As a pre-teen I frequently saw Cabot walking toward her shop in Salem or around the Commons. And in high school, I was intrigued by, and notably accepting of, a classmate’s announcement that she planned to join Cabot’s circle.

With this “doctor’s kid” kind of knowledge into one branch of the ancient pagan religions, I should mention how misrepresented they are as a group, particularly in popular media. And yet, I must also confess that movies like The Craft and Practical Magic are hopeless guilty pleasures.

While we continue to be fascinated with them, pagans are trying to reclaim their holidays and traditions, as they live pretty ordinary lives. And this month we can celebrate with them.

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