Trunk Show at Green Goods for the Home

Don’t miss Bare Root Designs trunk show on Saturday, Feb 13th, in the Green Goods for the Home shop in Des Moines East Village.

Bare Root Designs was conceived and created by coworkers and friends Courtney Wagler and Kelcee Murphy. Courtney and Kelcee’s careers involve caring for others all day long. The two friends began learning about jewelry design and then making jewelry together as a way to care for themselves and nurture their creativity. After receiving many compliments and much encouragement from family and friends, Bare Root Design was born. The term and concept of bare root embodies the spirit of their work and the intention of their business: simple, natural, nourishing, connectedness.

You may visit their website at www.barerootdesigns.com or on facebook!

Plantable Holiday Gift Tags

Plantable Holiday Gift Tags are  Here

Plantable Holiday Gift Tags are Here

Four Mile Market Schedule of Events

Green Goods for the Home is proud to be a vendor for the entire season at the Four Mile market at 3711 Easton Blvd., on Des Moines’ east side.  The season kicked off with Jazz in July, and an environmental night, but the summer is just heating up at this market!  Check out the great schedule of events yet to come….

July 15  
Hot Air Balloon Ascension – Hope in for a ride in a hot air balloon, check out the produce vendors, and enoy the crafts and merchandise showing off their wares.  Of course…stop by Green Goods to see what’s new.

July 22
Cool Cars -  Souped up cars, race cars, and more will be on display.  Stop by and check it out!

July 29
Crazy Contests – for kids of ALL ages

August 5

Iowa/National Farmers Market Week .  Show our local vendors how much we appreciate them.

August 12
Back to School – Green Goods for the Home promises to have some back to school specials!

August 19
 Closed (State Fair)

August 26
Flea Market -  What treasures will you find?

 
September 2, 9 and 16: More fun events will be announced!

Greenwashing

Greenwashing is a term used to describe the practice of companies spinning their products and policies as environmentally friendly, when in fact it is a just a deceptive use of green PR or green marketing.

Consumers and companies need to be aware of this practice and be able to recognize what products, services and/or practices are truly safe, effective, and environmentally friendly. Education is key.

The following comment comes from Keith Miller, Manager of Environmental Initiatives and Sustainability at 3M, based in St. Paul, Minnesota. He spoke at a Conference Board’s annual Business and Sustainability Conference in DC recently and answered a question about greenwashing. Good information!

“Firstly, there are no blanket statements that ‘this product is green’. We avoid using broad environmental claims such as “safe for the environment” or environmentally friendly”. Claims must be specific and be clear to customers or the general public.

Secondly, claims must be relevant to the product. For example, claiming that a product is cadmium free, when the product has never contained cadmium, and nor have any of its competitors, is not relevant.

Thirdly, that there must be compelling data to substantiate the claim. We need to know the claim is technically accurate. “

JAZZ in July, Four-mile Market and Skatepark

Green Goods for the Home will be a vendor at the Four-Mile Community Center at 3711 Easton Blvd on Des Moines east side, beginning July 1st, 4-7 p.m.  Come join this fun for the first night of the market for the season. 

The opening night will feature the dedication of the new skate park, Jazz in July featuring Fuzion Jazz with Saxman Jones (starting at 6 pm) and of course the Market !  Produce vendors, arts, eco-friendly products, home made crafts, foods and more. 

Stop by the Green Goods for the Home booth and pick up your FREE sample of our new cleaning line!

Fact: E-mail Uses Energy, Too

You might want to think before you press “send” on your next e-mail. Sending, receiving and storing e-mail does have an impact on the environment. All that information and data has to be stored somewhere. And it is – in giant computer server “farms” and data center facilities. Not only are they numerous, but they are electrically intensive. In 2006, the Environmental Protection Agency estimated that servers and data centers represented 1.5 percent of total electricity usage in the country for that year – and that equals 61 billion kilowatt hours. How much energy is that? Just 10 billion kilowatt hours of electricity powers 1 million U.S. households each year.

If things continue as they are, the amount of electricity servers and data centers use is projected to grow to about 120 billion kilowatt hours in 2011. The U.S. Department of Energy’s current goal is to improve overall energy efficiency in data centers by 10 percent, which would save 10 billion kilowatt hours.

So, the next time you need to send an e-mail to your co-worker in the cubical next door or down the hall, it might be better for the environment – and your health – if you delivered the message in person.

Hey look! 

 Green Goods for the Home is mentioned in the Des Moines Register’s Juice publication!  Our silver market bag is featured item # 7.  Check it out!  (It is also on newstands in the Des Moines metro)

It’s Bagalicious!

 

OPEN HOUSE 

Sneak Preview

Everything baggish!  Shopping bags, purses, and more…all eco-friendly, of course!

 Wednesday—March 11th

 6:30—8:00 p.m.

 Village Bean (400 E Locust), in Des Moines’ East Village

 

Come browse our spring collection of NEW bags and some of our classics.

Mingle, visit, enjoy the Village Bean Coffee and Beverages.  And maybe leave will a cool bag or two!

 

Visit Green Goods in Des Moines’ East Village

We are so excited to be sharing space in Claude’s Living Well Loft 107 at 333 East Grand in Des Moines’ East Village!  Claude Claude promotes healthy homes and total wellness which complements the Green Goods mission.   

 

Green Goods for the Home will have regular store hours from 10:30-5:30 on Friday and Saturday with expanded hours coming soon.  Stop by Loft #107 at 333 E. Grand and say hello.  What a great way to see, touch, smell and try some of our eco-friendly products.  While you are here, ask about a healthy home/total wellness demonstration so you can experience the difference!

 

Of course, Green Goods still loves home shows, but are pleased to offer a store front for your shopping convenience and exposure to a wellness home.

 

Mention this blog and receive a 10% discount on your first purchase!

One Step at a Time … One Person at at Time

One Person at a Time….One Step at a Time

The polar ice caps are melting.  Extreme weather is wreaking world-wide havoc. Our water resources are being contaminated. Rising oil costs reflect the limited resources of our highly sought-after fuel.  Feeling overwhelmed and don’t think you can make a difference?  Yes, you can.   We all can.

My personal journey began as I was standing in line at the grocery store, feeling quite proud of my new sturdy, reusable shopping bags and how my purchases fit nicely into just two bags.  But when I looked at the other checkout lanes, shoppers with the same amount of product were walking out with 8-10 plastic bags!

Plastic bags

These plastic bags (petroleum based), may well be reused for waste can liners, or perhaps pet clean-up or a number of other assorted uses.  Unfortunately, even the reused bags will end up in the land fill….for hundreds of years.  When they finally do starting decomposing, the small particles allow toxins to escape into the earth.  Consider these facts from gleaned from the Australian Bureau of Statistics and the Environmental Protection Agency

·         Plastic bags are made of polyethylene

·         Polyethylene is a petroleum product

·         Production contributes to air pollution and energy consumption

·         Four to five trillion plastic bags are manufactured each year

·         Americans throw away approximately 100 billion polyethylene bags per year

·         Only  1% of these bags are recycled

·         It takes 1000 years for polyethylene bags to break down

·         As polyethylene breaks down, toxic substances leach into the soil and enter the food chain

·         Approximately 1 billion seabirds and mammals die per year by ingesting plastic bags

·         Plastic bag choke landfills

·         Plastic bags are carried by the wind into forests, ponds, rivers, and lakes

Plastic Bottles

A week or so after my plastic bag epiphany, I discovered that 80-90% of all plastic water bottles end up n the land-fill.  And to top it off, there are the BPA issues as well – the toxins that leach from the plastic bottles!  So I invested in a quality aluminum bottle with a secure liner, and decided it was time to let other people know about the issues. 

Plastic water bottles are very convenient but it is important to pay attention to the type of plastic your water bottle is made of, to ensure that the chemicals in the plastic do not leach into the water.  If you taste plastic, you are drinking it, so get yourself another bottle.The type of plastic bottle in which water is usually sold is typically a #1, and is only recommended for one time use. Do not refill it. Better to use a reusable water bottle, and fill it with your own filtered water from home and keep these single-use bottles out of the landfill.

 

 

 

Baby bottles are also impacted.  Canada’s newly-elected Prime Minister Stephen Harper, is drafting the world’s first regulations to prohibit the importation, sale and advertising of plastic baby bottles that contain the chemical bisphenol A.  The US has been urged to follow suit. Yes, the risks are real!  Polycarbonate bottles are at issue – to check, simply look at the bottom of the bottle for the number 7 in the recycling symbol.

Types of plastic reported to be safe include: #2 HDPE (high density polyethylene), #4 LDPE (low density polyethylene), and #5 PP (polypropylene).

A  Mission

Just by starting with reusable shopping bags and drinking bottles, I discovered a passion.  Now I am very aware of what chemicals are in my cleaning products and foods.  I’m also aware of the excessive waste we create in this nation that clogs our landfills.

By taking simple steps, we can all make a difference.  Awareness is the key.  Educating and sharing tips on simple solutions makes going green less intimidating.  In many ways it is a simpler life-style.  Whether it is home-made natural cleaning supplies, innovative new products, or just the basics that got me started – reusable bags and bottles, it is taking simple steps that make a difference.  These simple steps make us more aware and proactive.

Step by step, I’ve learned that I can make an impact on our planet, as well as my own health, safety and comfort.     Each of us has the opportunity to make change. 

One person at a time …One step at a time