Using a dull knife, fill
the spaces in the pinecone with peanut butter.
Roll the sticky pinecone
in the bird seed and push the seeds into the crevices
with your fingers. Make sure you fill it up with seeds.
Tie the string onto the
top of the pinecone. Cut the string, leaving it at least
six inches long.
Hang the pinecone from a
tree outside as a treat for wild birds.
Make your own
Recycled paper
Paper that has been used and
treated for use again is recycled paper. Paper from homes,
offices, and schools can be collected, sent to special
recycling centers, and remade into usable paper. This
process can take place over and over. Every year we cut down
more trees to meet the world's demand for paper. Recycling
will help save trees from being cut down.
What
you'll need
a blender
a whole section of
newspaper
2 and a 1/2 single
newspaper pages
5 cups (1.2 liters) of
water
a pan 3 inches (7.6cm)
deep
a piece of screen to fit
inside the pan
a measuring cup
a flat piece of wood the
size of a newspaper's front page
waxed paper
How to do
it...
Tear the two-and-a-half
pages of newspaper into tiny strips.
Place the strips in a
blender with 5 cups of water. ASK PERMISSION TO USE THE
BLENDER. HAVE AN ADULT SUPERVISE THIS STEP. Cover the
blender and blend the newspaper and water.
Pour about 1 inch
(2.5cm) of water into the pan. Pour the blended paper
pulp into the measuring cup.
Put the screen into the
pan. Pour one cup (240 ml) of pulp over the screen.
Spread the pulp evenly
in the water with your fingers.
Lift the screen and let
the water drain off.
Open the newspaper
section to the middle. Put the newspaper on a waterproof
surface. Place waxed paper in the center of the
newspaper. Place the screen with the pulp on the waxed
paper. Close the newspaper.
Carefully flip over the
newspaper section so the screen is on top of the pulp.
THIS STEP IS VERY IMPORTANT.
Place the board on top
of the newspaper and press out extra water. Open the
newspaper and take out the screen. Leave the newspaper
open and let the pulp dry for at least 24 hours. When
your paper pulp is dry, peel it off the waxed paper and
write on it !
Eco-Facts
Now you know how to make
recycled paper. Wood pulp, the raw material used in most
paper production, comes from trees. More than 1 billion
trees are cut down each year to make disposable diapers!
Recycling efforts are increasing worldwide because of our
concern over the deforestation of the earth. Discarded
items, such as computer paper, grocery bags, milk cartons,
boxes, and newspapers, are now collected, cleaned and
recycled.
Explore
Some More
Try to buy only recycled
paper products. Find a recycling center in the business
pages of the phone book. Recycle newspapers, magazines, or
other paper products. Write to your governor and ask that
state offices and businesses use only recycled paper.
Some ideas
you can use to BE GREEN
Take a hand towel to school
to use instead of paper towels.
Use only your own and to take it home to be washed on
Fridays. Using the towel gives the you an opportunity to cut
back on the amount of trash you produce. I encourage you to
share this concept with your families.
Don’t let go of that balloon!
Each time a helium balloon floats away, they may end up
hurting animals and fish. Helium balloons fall (eventually)
back down to the earth and strong winds can blow them to our
oceans. A sea animal may try to eat the balloon and that
could kill them. Balloons can also wrap around small animals
and hurt them. No matter how much fun it is to let your
balloon fly - don’t. If you want to fly something fun that
won’t hurt animals try flying a kite.
Brush your teeth green!
Of course just brushing your teeth won’t save the planet,
but there are things you can do while brushing that will
help. You can save lots of water by turning off the sink
faucet while you're brushing. Also, stay away from pump
dispenser toothpastes; they add much more waste to our
landfills than a normal tube. Some companies are even making
toothbrushes and toothpaste tubes that you can recycle. Take
a look at your local co-op and see what’s available.
Have
any old toys? don't throw them away!
Before throwing that old toy away see if a friend of yours
might want to trade one of their toys for your old toy
(always ask an adult before doing this). If no one wants
your toy donate it to a thrift store or charity that gives
toys to other children who may not have as many cool toys as
you do.
All about
water
80% of the Earth is covered
with water, yet only 3% of it is fresh water, and less than
1% of all water is ok for human consumption. The rest of the
water is salty ocean water, or fresh water that is frozen in
a glacier. And of that tiny 1% of fresh water that we can
use, an even tinier amount is used as drinking water. There
are many places in the world that are reaching the limits of
their water supplies. As populations rise, and the climate
gets warmer, more and more people will not have access to
fresh water. In fact, it is predicted that 2 out of every 3
people with suffer from water shortages in the next few
decades.
Here’s what you can do:
Did you know that every time you flush the toilet, it uses
five to seven gallons of water? That means that in a year
you will flush about 13,000 gallons of fresh water down the
toilet! Luckily there is an easy solution if your home does
not already have ultra–low flush toilets. Find a small
plastic juice or water bottle, soak off the label, fill the
bottle with water and close the cap tightly. Place the
bottle in the tank of the toilet, making sure to position so
that it won’t get in the way of the flushing mechanism. This
is called displacement. The bottle will fill part of the
space in the tank that water would normally fill. You will
save 1 to 2 gallons every time you flush! Try this in all of
the toilets in your home, and estimate how many gallons of
water your family will save.
Other tips for saving water:
Turn the water off while
brushing your teeth, washing your hands and doing the
dishes.
Take shorter showers.
See if you can get your shower time down to less than 5
minutes.
If you help out with the
dishes, fill the sink or a tub with hot water to wash
the dishes in. Rinse the clean dishes in another tub of
hot water or rinse them all under the faucet at once to
reduce the time that the water is running. Make sure to
only run the dishwasher when it is full.
The same applies to
laundry, only run your washing machine when you have a
full load.
Water your lawn and
plants in the morning or evening. Water evaporates 4 to
8 times faster during the heat of the day. Use a
watering can instead of a hose.
How
much water does it take to...
Take a shower or bath…17
to 24 gallons
Brush my teeth…2 to 5
gallons
Wash the car…50 gallons
Use the dishwasher…8 to
15 gallons
Run the washing machine
35 to 50 gallons for each load
Watering the lawn with a
sprinkler…210 gallons per hour
Have a
Green Party
Birthday parties come and go
in a whirlwind of shrieking kids, inflated balloons, sugar
highs, and greasy pizza. Left in their wakes are piles of
plastic cups, forks, and plates topped with barely eaten
birthday cake. A dozen new toys means mounds of packaging
and wrapping paper will end up in the trash, along with the
old toys now being tossed to make room for the new. Why is
it that kids birthday parties too often turn into a frenzy
of waste? Having a green
party can be as easy as pie. Just incorporate all the
eco-friendly changes you have made in your home while
planning your party.
Here's
some tips to keep it green:
Send out
e-vites instead of regular paper invitations.
Use real silverware, or
reuse plastic ones.
Use real or bio-degradeable
plates and cups.
Use cloth napkins.
Instead of giving cheap
plastic party favors, be more creative and give
something that you made, like these
homemade crayons, or that will be useful, like
pencils.
Host a party outside and
enjoy the day without depending on store–bought games.
Go to the beach, the park, the pool or play games like
tag and wiffle ball.
Prevent all the waste
involved in receiving gifts. Here's a
guide to turning the usually wasteful and over done
gift giving aspect of a birthday party into an
opportunity to help out one's community.
Here's a video with some more earth–friendly party tips: