Sunday, December 18, 2011

Fruit Tree "Resolutions" for 2012

Happy New Years Growing!

I am proud to present the first fruit trees I will purchase this winter!

Fruit Trees - LSU Gold Fig, Eversweet Pomegranate, Kishu Mandarin
These fruit trees with begin in large containers! 

Pomegranate (Eversweet)
Tangerines (Kishu Mandarin)
Figs (LSU Gold)

For the new year, I will start a garden that will contain fruit trees, vegetables, herbs, and medicinal plants

I will also add indoor air cleaning plants along with a mini seedling green house.

My gardening purchase list is getting long so I plan to convince relatives to forgo holiday gifts, and support my needs for containers, planters, organic compost, seeds, potted plants, and even a fruit tree! 


Since I want to stay organic, I will look for companion plants to grow along with my purchases.   Wish me the best!  I am determined to make my family Gardening Santas!


And this is just the beginning...Container & vertical gardening now.....raised beds and bio-intensive later...hydroponics or aquaponics, maybe....permaculture for generations. 

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Consumerism & Enviroment Review: The Story Of Stuff (UPDATE)

THE STORY OF BROKE




THE STORY OF STUFF

I became familiar with The Story Of Stuff movies through my quest to find a solution to my cosmetic and beauty product woes.  I've added the new movie The Story of Broke with a quick overview from 2007 of consumption patterns and systems that affects our lifestyle, economics, and environment.  

Monday, November 7, 2011

Food Deserts: The Cornerstore Curse

A Snapshot of a Food Desert In Inner City Houston

I'm overjoyed about Michelle Obama's nationwide mission to end "food deserts" in urban communities.   Food deserts are communities that lack accessible low-cost nutritious foods.  You'll find a variety of corner stores (liquor stores) that specializes in alcoholic beverages and junk food: such as  expired foods, canned goods, salted corn and potato chips, hard candies such as jolly ranchers and a Mexican salt/chili candies such as pica.


In addition to inner city corner stores, larger grocery chains or independent stores hardly fill the gap for healthy fresh food.   I don't believe an inundation of them is the only solution.  


Fresh food availability should also include, your home garden,  farmer's markets, co-opsCSA's and community centers with programs aimed at getting the youth and elderly to buy local, grow their own food, and cook new cuisines.  I believe a form of home economics,  and sustainable agriculture should return back to schools and community centers.


Once the art of cooking is mastered with healthy, efficient, and, sustainable meals, (such as freezing, canning, storing, and growing), I believe the desire for quality food will exceed the need for fast food.  That's how a slow food movement can grow, through better tasting, healthier, quick foods.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Make Organic Food Choices With Acronyms For Fruit and Vegetables

Dirty Dozen of Fruit & Veggies


Annually, the  Environment Working Group releases a list called the Dirty Dozen, which displays fruits and vegetables with high pesticide content.  This information gives you the option to purchase organic replacements or grow  fruit and "veggies"  at home. 

2011 Dirty Dozen Fruits and Vegetables

Dirty Dozen Honorable Mention


Following the Dirty Dozen list of fruits and vegetables can became complicated with a busy life.  To solve them problem, add acronyms to your "dirty list."  PLACCKS & PIBBS  are used for the 2011 list  fruits and vegetables.  


Acronym List for Grocery Shopping


NOTE: Because I rarely shop for nectarines, I left them out of my acronyms, even though it was #6 on the high pesticide list.   In the future, I  will plan a garden to grow the items on the Dirty Dozen list.






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Friday, October 7, 2011

Green Reading List

Green Reading List For The Fall





My green reading list is important because most of these books require application and action.  I will spend the rest of the year reading environmental books from various areas of the green movement, and follow-up with a future review or demonstration.  In addition, I will do further study on natural cosmetics; and gardening (container and raised-bed).  


CATEGORIES
  • Going Green / Green Living
  • Food
  • History
  • Green and Sustainable Building
  • Business
  • Urban Farms and Gardening




Picture Yourself Going Green
Erinn Morgan
This book is broken down into an eight week  "going green" program with areas ranging from cosmeticsenergyclothingfood,  petstransportation, and more.


Freedom Colonies: Independent Black Texas in the Time of Jim Crow
Jack and Doris Smothers
I always wanted to learn about black Texas homesteads, which were quite different from the culture of sharecropping post-slavery.  Having a great-great grandfather who owned one of these homesteads, I'm embarrassed to say I knew little about his life.


The New Rules of Green Marketing
Jacquelyn Ottman
I'm only reading this for career reasons. I expected to learn about marketing tactics and a lot of new terms, but I'm getting a compassionate and well-rounded view of responsible green marketing.  This isn't a greenwashing manual! 


Vegan Soul Kitchen
Bryan Terry
 Web worker and author, Anne Zelenka, suggested vegan and vegetarian meals when traveling in her book Connect!   She mentioned how these meals were more flavorful, and I agree!  I plan to go vegan for a season, but I want to try new recipes.  Why not start with soul food!  I expect to get a twist on my grandmother's recipes from Vegan Soul Kitchen with an amazing flavor. I will document meals I cook from this book!


The Complete Idiot's Guide to Green Building and Remodeling
John Barrows
This is another career book for me.  The title sounds intimidating, but I find it to be as much a "green your home"  as  a "building and remodeling book."  I can't wait to review and share what I've learned.  Hopefully, I can give multiple demonstrations.


Farm City: The Education of an Urban Farmer
Novella Carpenter
I recently finished this book.  Novella Carpenter gave us a window seat into her urban farm experience in Oakland.  There's no way you can read this book and not get inspired to start gardening or urban farming. Expect a review soon!




Hip-Hop & The Green Movement

GREEN FOR ALL

Green For All  just released another video that merges the hip-hop community and the green movement.  The mission for Green For All is to "build an inclusive green economy strong enough to lift people out of poverty."  

I speak frequently about the disconnection between the green movement and different economic classes.  I believe Green For All's mission spans beyond class and reaches out to the youth.  By merging with youth-oriented entertainment communities such as hip-hop, I expect to see more awareness with this age group.


According to the book, The New Rules of  Green Marketingcomputer savvy millennials are very responsive to the green movement; and more likely to relate global warming to human activities and purchase green and organic products.    I truly hope to see entertainment, corporate, and non-profit organizations channel their efforts into "greening" urban communities! 

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Recycle & Reuse: The Jelly Jar's Versatility



Glass Jars: Eco-Friendly & Reusable



The jelly jar has been a sustainable, reliable, keepsake in my life.  I still have childhood memories of nearly frost-bitten fingers from ice cold beverages served in reused jelly or preserve jars. Sadly, plastic became the be-all-store-all utility replacement for it.


Recently, the tides have changed.  The jelly jar has risen again for reusable items after studies linked BPA (bisphenol-A) to health threats in infants, children, and pregnant women.


I listed various ways to use your old jelly jars below!
  1. Jelly...of course! Don't forget jams, preserves, marmalade, and peanut butter and other nut butters.
  2. Bug & Slug catcher:  While gardening,  add a little beer in jar; dig a hole; and catch all of your plant-eating slugs. 
  3. Beverages: Lemonade and kool-aid with fruit slices are popular summer drinks for children.
  4. Candles
  5. Candy: Gum balls, gummy bears and jelly beans were the best!
  6. Insect catcher: Do you remember poking ventilation holes on the top of your jar when you caught a lizard, grasshopper, or firefly?
  7. Beauty storage: Glass jars are great for  body scrubs or bath salts.
  8. Penny Jar or change jar:   Who needs a piggy bank when you can see your coins!
  9. Arts and crafts: Do you remember adding glitter or paint to one of your jars?
  10. Honey:  I'll never forget watching the image of Pooh Bear on TV as a child with a jar of fresh honey.
  11. Container gardening and growing seedlings
  12. Terrarium, a mini indoor garden.
  13. Vase or flower holder
  14. Oils, ointments, or recycled oil storage:  Do you remember old bacon grease being stored in jelly jars?
  15. Tip soliciting jar
  16. Raffle jar
  17. Time capsule container





Thursday, September 29, 2011

My First Green Living Experience


Gardening Nostalgia

I come from a long line of "country folk" who were cattlemen and black farmers. My grandparents gave us a healthy balance in the city with edible and ornamental gardening. I remember living in the heart of the city, having access to fig, persimmon, and kumquat trees. Occasionally, we'd see a cowboy once or twice a year from our neighbors who came from Texas homesteads.

We'd walk around our neighborhood looking for pecans to pick. I remember climbing my neighbor's shrub to steal pomegrantes. Thursdays were fruit truck days for the elders in our neighborhood.   I never knew my maternal grandfather---who grew tomatoes, okra, watermelon, greens, and other foods in the city---but my grandmother continued his tradition. She took me to local nurseries to find new trees and roses for her home.

My first green "experience" was exposure to growing  fruits and vegetables, and beautifying our property with plants and trees. Once I hit my teenage years, I only remember my grandmother's trees and plants. There were no fruit trucks at all. The growing latino community brought in lemon trees and chickens, but this was no longer accepted by the current residents. I don't remember having dangerously hot summers as a child nor having gripes about the utility bill then, like now.  But, we did worry about lead safety issues.

As an adult, I can't believe how ashamed I was of my "country roots."  Most of the people in my old neighborhood had roots in rural Texas, Louisiana, or Oklahoma. But, we didn't want to "look country."   I hated the "gossip-ridden" small town feel of my old neighborhood, but now I regret the lack of community and pride in our "family name."

Now, I long for that type of self-sufficiency.  No! I don't want to raise cattle.  And, yes! I am living in a fantasy! The uncertainty of the bad economy makes me long for hard work and simplicity over the complexities of debts, class, bureaucracy, and no community.

I'll strike a balance.

As a city dweller, I'll make do with urban life and green living.  I have no other choice.

I started with what I know best: cosmetics and hair products.

I can't wait to master food and ornamental gardening!

--Ann

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Green Housing Communities

Greening Building

As a prospective green building professional, I'm overjoyed when I see the private sector, non-profits, local, state, and federal governments agree that the future of community and neighborhood development is in green building.

Recently, I've seen a growth in green senior housing communities---some are partially funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment act.  I hope this spreads to affordable green housing.

Today is the ribbon cutting opening for Cypresswood Estates, which are LEED certified.  I hope to see more apartment and neighborhood development in cities with large African-American communities.






Press Release

http://cypresswoodestates.com/


Monday, September 26, 2011

The Chew is a hit! Meet Chocolate Mint - Carla Hall


After clocking thousands of hours on the Food Channel, I had my doubts about another cooking show, especially on major network television .   I was also a bitter All My Children fan, who resisted change.  But, after watching The Chew, I was impressed by the possibilities it presented for overworked and financially stretched families in need of healthy, home-cooked meals.

My aim to incorporate healthy quick meals into my life has been a bumpy ride.  I felt the need to master  frugal shopping and preparing complex meals.  It was too time-consuming and too systematic to find local farmer's markets or sales cycles in grocery stores.  The Chew fills a niche of bringing realistic, healthy, cheaper meals to my life until I master edible gardening and all of my other plans.

Carla Hall's Fried Apple Pancake Rings


I've fallen in love with chocolate mint chef, Carla Hall, who presented her family's recipe of granny smith apple pancake rings, which were topped with condensed cider as syrup!  The recipe follows two simple steps of dipping sliced apples into pancake mix and frying.  There's no need for planning or creativity, and it's a healthy snack for kids!  Also, the meal is one dollar per serving!  That's the way healthy eating should be!

Urban Farming in West Oakland; Ludacris on Planet Green

Oakland Urban Farming

The more I research about African-Americans in the recent green movement, I find many resources on the city of Oakland.  As a Texan, I'm aware of southern migrants to Oakland and California, but I was not familiar with their experiences after leaving their rural roots for West Coast cities.

I stumbled upon a short documentary on the City Farm News site called Cultivating Community : Urban Farming in West Oakland.  It's an inspiring short story of West Oakland's history and its non-profit, City Slicker Farms, who spearheaded the urban farm movement there.


More Oakland: I will follow up with a book review of  Farm City by Novella Carpenter, who documents her urban farming experience in Oakland's neighborhood, Ghost Town.

Please view the Cultivating Community short documentary below:




Battleground Earth on Planet Green with Ludacris


A rapper and a rocker campaigning and competing for the environment sounds strange, doesn't it?  Well, it's a reality!

Ludacris and Tommy Lee participated across the U.S. on a road tour full of green competitions and challenges.

If you missed Battleground Earth's season  please check your local listing on Planet Green.

View the bio of chocolate mint, Ludacris here.