August 08, 2008

Ecofabulous is Fabulous

Zem Nadine_MG_0256 Change is in the air.  The fall season is right around the corner (is it too late to plan a vacation?), Paris Hilton is running for president, and I am finally eco-decorating my apartment after living here for a year with virtually no furniture. I will miss the $14 electricity bill and the shock on people’s faces when they walk through the door. Surprise, it’s empty but look at the view!

But the most exciting change is a bright green one.  After years of being an unofficial team, Zem Joaquin and I are becoming an official green team at her Ecofabulous, the treasure chest web site showcasing the best of green and fabulous.  Those editors sparked and led by Zem are tough let me tell you.  Sustainable furniture is ripped apart, green cleaning products are put to the test, eco-shoes are heavily scrutinized, and organic alcohol occassionally must be sampled.  If your product isn’t fabulous and fully eco, you have about as much chance of getting profiled as an Escalade.

At Ecofabulous, my position is VP of Special Projects, which means I am covering a wide range of mysterious and not so mysterious initiatives including events, greening, journalism, cleantech, and the search for alien life. I am happy to be teaming up with my eco partner in crime, with whom I have already accomplished so much.  And let's give credit where credit is due. Without Zem, I'd still be wearing clodhopper shoes from Ann Taylor. 

What is to become of Heart of Green?  It is still me at my core. I will continue updating the site with planet-chic events, amazing causes and charities, side adventures in eco-fashion, and posts on subjects I feel are being underrepresented out there.  Get ready for some outrageous topics coming up.  Green is a journey and a more thrilling and possible one every day.  So net net, Heart of Green will be a personal blog, and Ecofabulous will be a professional moniker.  For the latest in desirable eco-beauty, eco-fashion, green design, healthy homes, and sustainable lifestyles, hop on over to the newly-relaunched www.ecofabulous.com  It’s a fabulous place to see and be seen, green.

June 17, 2008

944 Launches in San Francisco

944_Green_Issue Welcome to San Francisco, 944 Magazine.  944 is one of the fastest growing lifestyle publications in the nation featuring local and national content. And it is beautiful.

944 began in Phoenix six years ago and now has custom books in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Phoenix, Miami, San Diego, Las Vegas, and Orange County. Clearly, they have an affinity for sunny places. They must think San Francisco is sunny because we are in California. 

I know you are dying to know, like I was, what do the digits 944 stand for?  In addition to a nice Porsche, 944 is the address of the building where the magazine first got its start.  We are literal in the Bay Area and have to get to the bottom of things.

Flipping through the pages of 944’s inaugural San Francisco June issue, we see fashion, music, food and wine, art, design, eco-friendly resorts, celebrities, the social scene, and more. 944 seems to be filling a different niche than my other still-beloved SF magazines including 7x7 and San Francisco magazine. 944 is edgy, elegant, and inclusive. By covering all corners of San Francisco, it has the power to bring the city together.

Here are a few exciting things about 944.  It is complimentary at select high-end spots across the city including hotels, boutiques, salons, and restaurants. It is printed on Forest Stewardship Council (FSC-certified) sustainable paper with 10% recycled content every month, not just in April.  Kudos to 944 for being one of the first magazines in the country to take this important eco-friendly step. It also has an incredibly short lead time (2 days before printing) so the content is up-to-the-minute and true to month.  For example, the Black & White Ball photos from May 31 made it into the June issue. Amazing!

I am thrilled to be a contributing eco-editor for 944 San Francisco. My column is called the Green Spot, which somehow got shortened to g-spot in the first issue. I can’t imagine how.

This Thursday night June 19, 944 will celebrate its official Launch Party at the Bently Reserve in collaboration with Martel and Nabiel and Vintage 415 with performances by the Macy Gray, the Fugees, E! Entertainment Host Catt Sadler, Chris Clouse, DJ Vice, and DJ Solomon. Now that is a line-up, and thank goodness I don't have any 8:00 am meetings on Friday.  www.944.com/sanfrancisco/

In my new role as 944's Eco Editor, I was thrilled to be able to share a few tips for Eco-friendly Gift Ideas on ABC-7's View from the Bay show.  Video


April 22, 2008

Happy Earth Holiday

Daffod_2 Happy Earth Day everyone!  I don’t know about you, but I think we should make Earth Day into an Earth Holiday.

Let’s all get out of the office for some air and celebrate this beautiful blue planet we call home. Earth is our only address for now, and let’s cherish it and strive to leave it better off than we found it. This is becoming easier and more possible every day with the exciting wave of eco-innovation occurring in every sector. Bring on the hip eco-fashion, cool clean cars, high performance healthy products, and of course, the rocking green parties.

Green and blue are ultimately about life, distinguishing between what is life-enhancing and what is life-destroying. A green life can be filled with an abundance of fresh flavors, vibrant colors, clean air, clean water, variety, and pleasure just like in nature. And it can be free of pesticides, untested toxins, pollution, and short-sighted thinking.

Our collective goals are renewable energy independence from fossil fuels, high-style regenerative waste-free design, no more toxins, the slowdown of global warming, and the preservation of open space, forests, oceans, rivers, native seeds, endangered animal species, and all life on Earth. This is the dream. This is within our power.

We can rejoice in the incredible green renaissance experienced over the last year by enjoying some local organic foods, biodynamic wines, and a walk on the beach or through some spectacular trees and spring wildflowers. Thank you for going on this journey with me at Heart of Green. I couldn't do it without you. While acknowledging the work we still have to do (and we are not stopping), let’s take a moment to celebrate Earth Holiday and our fabulous planet. Let the one-day vacation begin!

Heart of Green's How To Go Green Guide

April 22, 2007

How To Go Green

Kerm_3 "It's easy being green", we often hear these days.

This message is normally accompanied by a picture of our old friend Kermit the Frog, who of course is famous for singing the song "It's not easy being green."

So who is right?  Is it easy being green, or not?

Well, I submit that sometimes it is easy being green, and sometimes it is pretty darn hard. Let's just admit it.

Easy = turn off lights when you're not using them. Hard = live in a purely green home or find a dream eco-chic wedding dress, so far.

The hard part is not our fault, nor is it cast in stone. Our modern society was set up in a non-green way initially. The Industrial Revolution was built on coal, cheap oil, chemicals, non-natural industrial simplification, short-term economics, long-distance transportation, and a cradle-to-grave production and consumption mentality. Natural and ecological resources were assumed to be infinite or ignored or viewed as things to be conquered by man.

I should know, I studied industrial engineering and business at top schools, and we were told to maximize output and profit. Yikes. There wasn't a sustainable environmental cycle or an externality in sight. As a result of the industrial revolution, we are now facing peak oil and global warming, both of which could fundamentally change life as we know it today.

The good news is that a revolution got us into this predicament. And the emerging Green Revolution can save us and the planet for future generations. Everyday it is becoming easier to be eco-conscious, and not have to give up the style and lifestyle we desire.

In honor of Earth Day, here is the Heart of Green’s How To Go Green Guide. It is broken down into 2 categories. Easier and Eco-Challenging. Let’s get real. Sometimes we might relate more to Kermit The Frog and need to start small. Other times we might be ready to take on a major Eco-Challenge and become a Jolly Green Giant. Note that we are calling the first category Easier, not Easy. And we aren't starting with light bulbs.

Eco Footprint

Easier: Go to www.myfootprint.org and take the quiz. It is fun, really! I'll tell you my number of planets if you tell me yours.

Eco-Challenge: Take the challenge and run a carbon calculator. This will shed light on the carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from driving, flying, energy use, and eating. Real men and women eat organic quiche and calculate their carbon footprint.

Eating & Drinking

Easier:  Eat organic. Ask for sustainable seafood. Shop at local farmer’s markets and greener grocery stores like Whole Foods. Eat real foods to get nutrients in their entirety as nature intended.

Eco-Challenge:  Buy only local. Ask for Fair Trade coffee, tea, and chocolate. Eat only grass-fed beef or go vegetarian more often. Challenge the restaurants you frequent to serve organic and sustainable cuisine. Sip an organic wine or try the new Square One organic vodka. Avoid all processed foods. Avoid coca-cola, diet soft drinks and nutrasweet at all costs. Coke can clean the rust off of engines and leaches calcium out of your bones, seriously. Aspartame is a neurotoxin. Read the groundbreaking book "An Omnivore's Dilemma "and be wowed.

Paper & Wood

Easier: Use recycled paper for printing and copying. Use recycled tissue and paper towels. Look for high post-consumer content. Switch to electronic billing and invitations. Let’s save those embattled forests before they are gone for good. Trees absorb carbon dioxide, generate rain clouds, and keep the planet cool. Old growth is out. Forest-friendly is in.

Eco-Challenge:  Buy wood from sustainable forests (FSC-certified). Seek out reclaimed wood and the amazingly renewable wonder-grass bamboo. Buy antiques. Avoid all furniture and wood from endangered forests. Ask where wood and paper come from in stores, and you will raise some eyebrows. Watch out for exciting new tree-free paper options coming soon from New Leaf Paper.

Junk Mail

Easier:  Save all the catalogs you get for 1-2 months and then go on a catalog list purge. Focus especially on catalogs not being printed on recycled paper. Call every number and ask to be taken off the list. Secret tip: then ask to be removed from the “sell my name to others” list. Apparently each catalog company has 2 boxes and you have to ask to be removed from each one. Sneaky.

Eco-Challenge:  Sick of the endless stream of credit card and insurance offers in the mail? Me too. Go to the OptOutPreScreen web site and remove your name for 5 years or forever. This is the official site of the consumer credit reporting companies Equifax, Experian, Innovis, and TransUnion who sell our names. Nice, thanks.

Clothes

Easier:  Buy organic cotton t-shirts and jeans. Find hidden vintage treasures.

Eco-Challenge:  Sport the latest in eco-chic fashion and wear clothes made out of luxurious soft bamboo, organic wool, recycled cashmere, lyocell, tencil, hemp-silk, and reincarnated materials. Or tape leaves to your body.

Packaging

Easier:  Use old newspaper for padding. Buy recycled paper envelopes. Avoid Styrofoam at all costs. Try the biodegradable peanuts for stuffing. Break down cardboard boxes and recycle them.

Eco-Challenge:  Ask people who send you things to be more planet-friendly in their packaging. Buy local so that there is no mailing or packaging!

Recycling & Composting

Easier:  Recycle all the paper, plastic bottles, glass bottles, cans, milk cartons, yogurt cups and more that you can. Pick up random bottles on the street or at the beach and recycle them for good karma.

Eco-Challenge:  Compost your food scraps in a green bin or in your own compost pile if you have a backyard and so desire. Bring batteries to a local battery recycling station. Recycle e-waste at local events or drop-off centers. Donate old items to charity. Try to limit what you throw away and give your junk a new life!

Parties

Easier:  Serve goodies in ceramics, silverware, and glassware so that there is nothing to throw out at the end! Give messy guests linen or recycled paper napkins. Display organic flowers from Organic Bouquet that are free of pesticides. Hire an eco-friendly event planner like Sillapere, Organic Events, or Vibrant Events.

Eco-Challenge:  Amaze your guests with your greenness and use the new biodegradable compostable plates, cups and cutlery made from corn, sugarcane or even potatoes. Compost them when you’re done. Or eat them. Just kidding. Great sources are GreenHome, GreenWare, GreenIsGreen, and Excellent Packaging. Or really get the party started with Bambu.

Bags

Easier:  Bring your own bag to the store - a canvas bag or otherwise. Make sure you get your bag credit, very important, those 5 and 10 cents add up! Flash your bag around to the people behind you who didn’t bring a bag and hope that they notice.

Eco-Challenge:  Take an oath of no new bags in your life. Use compostable BioBags instead of dreaded plastic ones. Check out the super eco-chic Ecoist purses.

Cleaning Products

Easier:  Get those germs with green, natural, eco-friendly, people-friendly cleaning products. Throw all of that bleach and 409 away - it is poisonous to you and the environment. Chlorine contains toxic dioxins which are harmful to our immune and reproductive systems and have been shown to cause birth defects and cancer in animal tests. It is amazing that Clorox is still in business frankly.

Eco-Challenge:  Give anti-bacterial soaps the boot, because they actually make bacteria stronger in the end. Note how that doesn’t make it into the commercial. Hire a purely green cleaning service. Use a vacuum cleaner with a HEPA filter.

Babies & Toys

Easier:  Use organic or natural shampoos and lotions that are free of parabens. Dress your little one in organic cotton baby clothes. Strive to buy wooden toys or ones free of PVCs. Avoid plastic baby bottles and use glass bottles instead if you can hopefully find them.

Eco-Challenge:  Visit web sites such Mainstreet Moms or the EcoMom Challenge and follow their expert motherly earthly advice.

Bedroom

Easier:  Give conventional chemical-laden sheets the boot, and change to soft organic cotton sheets from Coyuchi or Anna Sova. Slumber under an organic wool comforter that stays the ideal temperature depending on the climate. Dry off with organic cotton towels in the bathroom.

Eco-Challenge:  Switch to a natural or organic mattress, and sleep completely toxin-free, zzzz.

Indoor Air Quality

Easier:  Buy an air filter to suck up the harmful particulates in your home. Switch to green cleaning products; no more poisonous dioxin-laden bleach. Use paints that are labeled as low or zero-VOC (volatile organic compounds). Keep plants around that filter the air.

Eco-Challenge:  Be brave and run an indoor air quality test in your home or workplace to determine just what is flying around unseen; then search and destroy the pollution sources. Live or work in a true LEED-certified green building. Send your children to a green school.

Water

Easier:  Turn off the water while you brush your teeth. Switch from bottled water to filtered tap water if that is an option in your area. Try to take shorter showers. Do large loads in the washing machine and dish washer. Grow native plants that consume less water, especially in dry climates. Learn to love the cactus.

Eco-Challenge:  Switch to a water-friendly, low-flow showerhead, faucet or toilet. They work well and make a big difference. Beat Ed Begley, Jr. at his own eco-game and install a rainwater cachement system. Who says we have to get all of our water from the melting and shrinking snowpack?

The Drain

Easier:  Throw away unused or expired medicines, household cleaners or cosmetics in the trash, never down the drain. Otherwise, they will end up in your local river or bay and eventually poison wildlife and your fellow humans.

Eco-Challenge:  If you own a fish tank, don’t ever throw any seaweed down the drain. See the caulerpa taxifolia seaweed disaster, killer algae that is destroying whole ocean ecosystems, all from one aquarium dumping. Yep.

Remodeling

Easier:  Proceed directly to an eco home design store and don’t pass go. Behold the cornucopia of beautiful, eco-friendly, and healthier zero-VOC paints, bamboo floors, eco-carpet tiles, organic and recycled materials, eco-insulation, non-toxic adhesives, radiant floors, sustainable furniture and much more. Examples are Green Fusion and Eco Home Improvement and ABC Home.

Eco-Challenge:  Be the green envy of your block by becoming officially LEED-certified. Build a true LivingHome.

Getting Around

Easier:  Try to walk when you can, instead of driving. It is great exercise too and you get to see cool things like birds. If possible, let someone else do the driving and take public transportation like the subway, bus or train. It’s fun and cheaper than paying for parking if you live in a city. Carpool and cruise in the HOV lane.

Drive a car with high fuel economy, such as the Prius. Ultimately, it is the gas mileage that matters. Oil is a precious, non-renewable fossil fuel resource. Some conventional cars like the Mini get higher gas mileage than some of the new eco-fraud hybrids. For all cars, keep tires inflated and fire up that cruise control to save gas.

Eco-Challenge:  Impress your neighbors with a new electric car, a plug-in hybrid, or a bio-diesel car. Don’t be seduced by corn-based ethanol which takes more energy to produce than it generates. Hold out hope for the energy-positive cellulosic ethanol from switchgrass. Hire an eco-limo or hybrid taxi service. Try to fly less, and encourage Richard Branson to hurry up with his carbon-free jet fuel. Encourage your favorite automaker to get its act together and give us the fuel economy that is technologically possible and deserved by the American people.

Energy

Easier:  Replace old appliances with Energy Star appliances that conserve energy all day long and while you sleep. Earn rebates from your local utility for doing so hopefully. Use programmable thermostats that heat/cool only when needed. Unplug chargers and electronics while you are not using them; otherwise, they keep drawing electric current and stay warm. Put everything on a power strip and switch to OFF. Turn off lights while you not using them of course. This includes all you retail stores which leave lights on to “advertise” all night long, lame.

Eco-Challenge:  Switch to green power if it is available in your area, lucky dog. Conduct a Home Energy Audit. Install solar panels or, even easier, a solar water heater. Move to Iceland which is geo-thermally powered.

Light Bulbs

Easier:  Replace old dinosaur incandescent light bulbs with new compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs) to save energy and money long-term. CFLs use only 25-33% of the energy and can last up to 10 times as long. It apparently takes 18 seconds to change a bulb, or less if you are fast. See the excellent Home Depot Eco Options department and their eco-pleasing n:vision CFLs.

Eco-Challenge:  Explore LED lighting. Recycle mercury-filled compact fluorescents when they finally burn out. Try the new dimming and softer-light CFLs to create that perfect eco-mood.

Investing

Easier:  Hmmm...avoid the worst offenders like Exxon-Mobil which continues to fund anti-environmental "research". Seriously, have some respect for life on earth.

Eco-Challenge:  Ask your financial advisor about sustainable or socially responsible investing. Put your money in cleantech and greentech companies and funds. Whoever solves the carbon problem should reap large financial returns.

Shopping

Easier:  Use your green dollars to advance the green economy. Your purchasing power matters a lot. Vote for the planet with your wallet. Every dollar counts.

Eco-Challenge:  Strive to buy primarily when you need to replace something. Go vintage or antique shopping as a hobby.

Animals

Easier:  Have your pet spayed or neutered. Shun fur coats or frankly anything that glamorizes wearing endangered animal prints.

Eco-Challenge:  Help save endangered animals like the magnificent tigers, elephants, cheetahs and sea turtles. Do we really have to take these pending extinctions lying down? Be a modern day Noah and support the conservationists at WWF, Conservation International, and WCN. Consider vegan options. And encourage China to stop using tiger parts for recreation.

Carbon Neutral

Easier:  Once you've tackled some of the things above in the categories of energy, light bulbs, and getting around, consider becoming "carbon neutral". Counterbalance your remaining carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by helping to finance clean renewable wind & solar power (or methane capture) in other locations. Buy carbon offsets for your car, home, air travel, or next event through Native Energy or TerraPass for example.

Eco-Challenge:  Go to the next level and become carbon negative. Calculate your remaining carbon footprint and then buy double or triple the carbon credits. Seek out carbon offsets that are truly additional and incremental. If you are hosting an event, make it a carbon neutral/negative gathering through offsets and impress your friends with your eco-savvy. Encourage lawmakers to support a cap-and-trade carbon trading system with a low-enough cap to make true strides in reducing global warming pollution through economic incentives. 

Frolic in Nature

Easier:  Enjoy the beauty of nature. Go for a hike. Visit the beach. Play in your garden. This is probably the easiest and most important thing to do. Stay aware and open and connected to the planet upon which we all depend. Experience the miracle of nature and creation. Have fun while going green!

Eco-Challenge:  Vacation at an eco-resort in an exotic land. Send me a postcard.

Happy Earth Day

Earth Day was founded in 1970. Thirty-seven years later, the world’s attention has turned to green, and it is an exciting time to be alive. Great opportunities exist.

Start with the area you like best. By taking one small green step at a time, every day can be Earth Day. Our blue planet works for us 365 days a year. Let’s consider it with care and respect. Let's join together and be stewards of the planet we love and call home.

Cheer up Kermit, it is becoming easier to go green. Just wait until next year!

October 08, 2006

A Heart of Green

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Welcome to Heart of Green. The purpose of this blog is to connect with others who want to help make the world a greener place and have fun in the process. 

I believe that everyone has a heart of green at their core - ok almost everyone. Anyone who has ever hiked up a mountain or reveled at the beach appreciates the environment in which we live. People who reside in the desert want their patch of green grass, not a native cactus. Even the person trying to dismantle the Endangered Species Act goes to national parks on vacation. But I digress.

Our one and only planet needs our help now. We have a choice. We can start planning to move to Mars, or we can fix the planet that we have. The space elevator is a cool idea, but until it is built, I vote for starting here at home. We have the power to make it so. Failure is not an option.

Heart of Green embodies a passion for green, clean, and everything in between. It supports causes that move the sustainable revolution forward and enable Earth's habitability for future generations. Like what? Glamorous green events, clean cars, renewable energy, organics, biodegradability, Cradle To Cradle design, green building, participation, wildlife conservation, and eco media. And more.

I hope to let you know about green successes and exciting eco events so we can celebrate. Hopefully you can attend!  I am fundamentally an optimist. What other choice do we have?

Green crosses all party lines, all races, all religions, all origins. Green is our distant past and our undeniable future. Green is good for people's health, good for the economy, good for national security, and good for the environment. Green can be the ultimate uniting force of the planet.

Let’s be a positive force of nature.

Your green girl,
Nadine