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Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Our Yearly Excursion

20 Jun

Every year without fail, for the past six years, my husband and I drive to the Okanagan in the early summer. It’s our annual wine buying trip and we look forward to meeting up with friends and family (who drive over the mountains from Calgary), to relaxing and enjoying the sunny weather.

Equally importantly, we go to stock up our wine cellar. To search out the new wineries. To sample new reds, new whites. To check in on the renters in our house. We love the Okanagan so much we bought a house in Peachland which in coming years will serve as our family’s recreation property. Eventually we might even retire to our house in the valley.

 
 

Icky Green Bins and Your Health

06 May

Familyhealth_v3 Many communities in Toronto and the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) have finally begun to adopt the green composting bin initiative which has been great for decreasing the amount of food waste which has needlessly been shipped off to the landfill sites.

As wonderful and easy as the program is, I have to tell you. I have beef with it.

Green-binThe Green Bin Program is designed to collect organic household waste and turn it into compost to be resold. Basically, the program requires that anything biodegrade-able be placed in the specified bin which is then put out a the road weekly for collection. Acceptable items for the bin include things like: table scraps (meats, bones, cheeses as well – which are items typically discouraged from being added to your backyard composter), popcorn bags, paper towel, coffee cups, filters and grounds, tea bags, and more.

Sounds fabulous doesn’t it? Well, it is!! The amount of landfill garbage for collection day is decreased considerably to the point where they only pick up every other week in our area, while green bin collection is once a week.

But those food stuffs? They sit out for an entire week before pick up. Not unlike before when they rotted in the regular garbage bags, I know; but In the summer months the bin can become a breeding ground for some SERIOUS illness. Every site that I’ve been to has down played this fact saying that these bins are perfectly safe and not unlike your regular garbage.

I agree with that. Regular garbage is disgusting as well.

It’s really important people remember to wash their hands after touching the bins and always before preparing food.

WASH YOUR HANDS. That’s it? That’s all the protection advice that’s offered? Every site says that the bins are completely sanitary and not unlike regular garbage. I just can’t see how it’s the same. It’s a bin FULL of decomposing, rotting food which can lead to illnesses like E. coli, salmonella and listeria.

I suspect that the communities are down playing the dangers of the bins in order to encourage their use, but I worry that their nonchalant attitude towards them causes people to be careless about their use. Some cleaning services have cropped up around the GTA offering to sanitize the green bins for a fee for which they have been accused of fear mongering to drum up business. My personal opinion is the companies are simply offering a service to those realists, like myself, which feel that the bins are not as sanitary as city councils claim them to be.

I am a green bin user and will continue to be, but I am VERY careful about letting the children touch the bin and HAND WASHING constantly after coming in contact with the bin. I wash our kitchen bin weekly and will more than likely pressure wash the other bin now that it’s warmer out. Maybe even have a company come and sanitize it a couple times over the summer.

Also? Only now are they rolling out the program in condominiums, apartment and townhouse complexes. It’s still in the testing phase for these high occupancy housing areas, which, I’m sorry but is completely ludicrous. Of all the areas which need a program like this, it’s these homes.

So ya, overall I think it’s a fabulous idea but as with all new inicitives, there bumps to be worked out.

Are you using a green bin program in your area? What have you done to protect you and your family from their digustingness?

 
 

Stand Up Proud with Your Boobs Held High!

17 Sep

Familyhealth_v3Being a nursing mother is one of the most challenging things I’ve done.
Scratch that. It IS the most challenging thing I’ve done.

Oh, sure! Really hard! I bet you’re thinking.

But if you’ve ever been in a situation where you’re surrounding by
prying, judgmental eyes because you’re child is throwing a tantrum, then you have a minute idea. Compound that by having to raise your shirt, position
your body and baby hoping to avoid exposure of your truly offensive
breasts (sarcasm, yes) because someone may be offended by boobs. You’d think that lady had just shoved a fish under her blanket.

Catherine is my idol in more ways then one. Not only is she an amazing woman, but she’s well spoken, caring, and when she’s challenged? She’s a force to be reckon with. Even when she’s lacking the strength and compassion for a fight while there are far more pressing issues happening in her life she has a way of making me want to fight along side her.

Just over a week ago, Catherine was on a WestJet return flight from Kelowna, British Columbia to Toronto, Ontario. Already overcome by emotion from her extremely heart-wrenching trip, she was approached by a WestJet flight attendant requesting in not-so-many-words that, instead of taking comfort in nursing her infant son, she should be considerate to other passengers and cover up.

[To give the attendant some credit, she did come with blanket in hand. *sigh*]

Catherine and I are polar opposites when it comes to breastfeeding. She, the strong, confident one. Me? Not so much.

I would do just about anything to have the confidence that she has. To be able to pull my boobie out in public: anywhere, anytime, and not have the nervous sweats, heart palpitations and anxiety that someone were to approach me and say something.

Had it been me in Catherine’s situation? I would have broken down, inconsolable and crushed, never to nurse in public again. On that flight? I would have more then likely tried to lock myself in the itty bitty bathroom.

How is that right, or fair?

I question if those vehemently opposed to nursing in public think
about the feelings of the person they are condemning, because forbid they
be offended – what gives them the right to offend someone else? Spewing
their hate on a mother who is just feeding her child? When did that become acceptable?

The
thought of being confronted while in such a vulnerable state consumes
me while I attempt to feed my child. So much so that we very rarely
have had a successful nursing session in a public place – even in a
washroom stall for that matter, because dammit, I’m sitting in a public
washroom feeding my child who has every right to be sitting in a
comfortable, CLEAN location to eat.

I let this hatred, lack of education and unacceptable attitude of
those who feel that breastfeeding is an indecent act control the
comfort of myself and my child; for that I am ashamed. How dare they
make me feel this way. How dare they take this away from me.

But Catherine? My hero. My breastfeeding comrade. My mom in a shiny big busted bustier. She’s not letting this go.

She’s fighting the fight for the rights of breastfeeding mothers.

She is standing up for our rights as set forth by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

She is standing up for mothers, like myself, who would otherwise
slink away from the hatred and uneducated attacks of those against
breastfeeding in public.

Here’s CBC’s coverage of the story (Catherine! Nursing! Boob on display! ON TV!):

 
 

Ontario Pesticide Ban for ‘09

22 Apr

Happy Earth Day!

Last summer I was disappointed to find that our next-door neighbour had hired a non-organic company to take care of their lawn. Graham and I would sit out back, drinking our coffee in the morning, and then suddenly the powerful, sickening smell of the pesticide/herbicide cocktail (good enough for pest control) would waft into our yard. Annoyed, disgusted, we’d head back indoors to finish our coffee.

I put a little sign in our garden in the hopes it would start a dialogue between us and our neighbour, but it didn’t seem to phase them at all, which I just can’t understand because he grows FOOD in their yard.

 
 

Februarys Challenge: Eliminate Plastic Bags

04 Feb

“If you don’t mind, I’ll just take that by itself, without a bag.”

I don’t want to take a plastic bag home with me…another plastic bag to shove in the front hall closet, so I tell mostly teenage cashiers that if they don’t mind, I’d prefer not to take one of their bags home with me.  I know that it’s ridiculous to put it this way, and eventually I’ll get better at telling them, “I don’t want a plastic bag, thank you.” I’ll state it, just like that, instead of saying it in an apologetic tone.

Does this sound familiar to you at all?

I’m working on it…

Someday I won’t feel like I’m imposing on a store just because I
want to break the grand shopping tradition of toting arm loads of
plastic bags home.  I really do want to get more assertive when it
comes to dealing with retailers.  After all, it’s their job to please
their customers, not the other way around.

According to Greenloop,
“Each year over 1 million birds and sea mammals die from plastic
ingestion or entanglement.  Fifteen million trees are cut down every
year to make paper bags in this country.  Less than 1% of plastic
shopping bags get recycled.  12 Million barrels of oil are used
annually to produce plastic bags in the US.”

Over the last couple of years, it’s been getting easier and easier
to be a consumer who shops without the use of plastic bags.  In our
front hall closet we have a big pile of cotton and canvas shopping
bags, and on a good day, I remember to bring them with me.  (The trick
seems to be leaving some cloth bags or a basket in the trunk of the
car.)  I even bought reusable mesh shopping bags, which I love because
it means I don’t even have to use those thin, clear plastic bags when I
buy produce.

No more plastic bags!

February’s Challenge

This month, BlogHers ACT Canada’s mission is to eliminate the use of
plastic shopping bags.  We don’t just want to cut back on using them,
we want to get rid of them completely. If China can do it, so can you!  Getting rid of the bags you have lying around in your home is the first step.

We’ve got prizes!

We realize that this is an uphill battle.  Maybe your family has a
mountain of plastic bags stashed somewhere at home.  If this is the
case, how creative can you get with them?  Can you find an alternative
use for those evil plastic bags? Gather all of the plastic bags from
around your home and do something with them.  Make a tote bag.  Make a hat.
Anything.  Then, take a photo of your creation and blog about it. Or,
take a photo that shows how you deal with those plastic shopping bags
in another way, like recycling them.  Don’t forget to comment back here
by February 15th, when a random draw of participants will determine the

five winners of these EcoMomsAct prizes: three winners will receive a Greenloop reusable shopping bag, one winner a Skeeda reusable bag, and another winner will receive a set of reusable mesh produce BYO Bags.  Prizes are all courtesy of the lovely ladies at Green Mom Finds.  Good luck!