Showing posts with label green. Show all posts
Showing posts with label green. Show all posts

Saturday, June 8, 2013

The greening of Gavin

 

One of my regular read blogs "The greening of Gavin", has just put up a freebie. Gavin who writes the posts is giving away his ebook, "the greening of Gavin, my first year of living sustainably".

I've just finished the book and it was an enjoyable read. (Though I confess, I'm not sure it should have ever been up for sale). I suppose both Gavin and myself are on a similar journey. While Gavin had an "epiphany" after watching a movie. I've alway been moving in a sustainable direction, yet my motivation has a strong spiritual grounding. Basically it's Gods creation which is good to very good and we should be looking after it.

I suspect this is part of Gavins "epiphany" but maybe not acknowledged or understood.

So yes the things Gavin has done is similar to myself. The car, the garden, chooks, solar. Something's he does heaps better than me, but I've got a few thing up on him.

It's worth a download

2.5/5 with a good editor 3.5/5

 

Monday, December 31, 2012

2013 a few goals....

There are a few things which I'm going to change this year..

*Green Stuff

  • One month of not buying anything new. Yep op-shops here we come.
  • Eat 1-2 things out of the garden for one of the meals of the day.
The garden has been a bit of a hit and miss so far. At times we produce huge amount of one type of produce and we end up not eating any of it. One of the problems is we often eat what we feel like. Not what is in season. Hopefully trying to eat something out the backyard will make a difference.

  • 2-3 new Pekin's/Silkies Chooks
We have had our three little chooks for a while now, they have been faithfully doing pecking buts, giving us fertiliser and eggs, but at times we are caught out with eggs so a couple more will be great.

  • Start making soap
Christina likes her nice organic, etc, etc soap. The health food shop is her usual port of call but its $$$. I've been reading the 'Greening of Gavin', and doesn't look out of our ability.

Quit facebook and twitter.

This is a tough one. But there are a few things that really bug me about both.

  • The advertising is really starting to ramp up.
  • I'm not sure the bites of information are really that healthy. For me it's distracting. It takes me away from the now. It affect how I interact with others, and how focused I am at a task. I suppose, I want to be fully in the moment, not have an urge to check my phone for a feed.
So I've decided to keep the accounts, Facebook as an address book and to communicate with people who aren't around its good. Twitter at times is handy especially in times like fires or local emergency services. So, they are on my desktop but the apps and bookmarks are deleted on my iPad and mobile.

I'm still going to keep the RSS feed of blogs, stuff that interests me, theology, bikes, gardening. Actual articles instead of bites.

read 52 book

I think with the above gone, my old devouring of books will return. 2012 I was probably half that.

Watch 52 movies

Keep blogging...
I still enjoy putting some of my thoughts out there engaging with books.

...write a Spiritual diary

This is a bit of a maybe. I've been listening to 'The spirit of things on the ABC'. There have been a few 'Spiritual diaries' I like the often rawness, the prayers, the growth...

 

Monday, December 21, 2009

Copenhagen, a Christian response

Its been a bit disappointing to me to see that there has not been much of a buzz around the Christian literature that I read, no real mention of the environmental efforts at Copenhagen. Or any Christian lobbying regarding the issues.

Politically it was also pretty disappointing.

I think our government went in really wanting to make a change but that didn't happen.
The Australian opposition just looked on trying to score political points with 'I told you so' attitude. Especially after the leadership spill.
The Australian Greens just winged saying it was not enough and a failure.

I can always remember at school during a religious education the discussion came up, 'How will the earth end? The teacher was pointing towards some sort of Spiritual Armageddon. One smart lad said the world would end with a nuclear war... I thought this was the most insightful (It was still during the cold war). But I realize now it will most probably be due to our environmental negligence.


On December 18 after a day of frantic negotiations between heads of state, it was announced that a "meaningful agreement" had been reached between the United States, China, India, South Africa, and Brazil.[77] The use of "meaningful" was viewed as being political spin by an editorial in The Guardian.[78] An unnamed US government official was reported as stating that the deal was a "historic step forward" but was not enough to prevent dangerous climate change in the future. However, the BBC's environment correspondent stated: "While the White House was announcing the agreement, many other – perhaps most other – delegations had not even seen it. A comment from a UK official suggested the text was not yet final and the Bolivian delegation has already complained about the way it was reached – 'anti-democratic, anti-transparent and unacceptable'. With no firm target for limiting the global temperature rise, no commitment to a legal treaty and no target year for peaking emissions, countries most vulnerable to climate impacts have not got the deal they wanted."[79]

Early on Saturday 19 December, delegates approved a motion to "take note of the Copenhagen Accord[80] of December 18, 2009". However it was reported that it was not yet clear whether the motion was unanimous, or what its legal implications are. The UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon welcomed the US-backed climate deal as an "essential beginning". It was unclear whether all 192 countries in attendance would also adopt the deal. The so-called Copenhagen Accord recognises the scientific case for keeping temperature rises below 2°C, but does not contain commitments for reduced emissions that would be necessary to achieve that aim. One part of the agreement pledges US$ 30 billion to the developing world over the next three years, rising to US$ 100 billion per year by 2020, to help poor countries adapt to climate change. Earlier proposals, that would have aimed to limit temperature rises to 1.5°C and cut CO2 emissions by 80% by 2050 were dropped. An agreement was also reached that would set up a deal to reduce deforestation in return for cash from developed countries.[81] The agreement made was non-binding but U.S. President Obama said that countries could show the world their achievements. He said that if they had waited for a binding agreement, no progress would have been made.[82]