Thu 23 Jul '09

Eco-News: Recycled Jewelry / Dirty Librarian

I LOVE jewelry…especially handmade vintage-looking unique, one or two-of-a-kind jewelry (hint hint: my birthday is next month!!!).

The Dirty Librarian (don’t you just love that name??!!) fits my specifications perfectly!

Here is a snippet from their website:
The current collection of Dirty Librarian Chains continues to incorporate reworked vintage costume jewelry that is hand picked from dead-stock as well as second-hand sources. A piece such as the Call Number necklace incorporates eleven gold and silver-plated vintage chains and four unique vintage charms. The materials and components of each design constantly change based on what is available, making each piece one of a kind as well as creating a unique history that arises from the interaction of individual vintage components.

If you are looking for vintage style recycled upscale jewelry head on over the the Dirty Librarian!

My personal favorite of course is the stack style necklaces.

Dirty Librarian Stack Necklace

Dirty Librarian Stack Necklace

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco-Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products
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www.countrymeadowltd.com

'

Eco-News: American Pika

American Pika Being Considered for Endangered Species Protection Due to Global Warming
Written by Rhishja Larson / Eco-Worldly

The American Pika (Ochotona princeps), a small relative of the rabbit, may be facing extinction as warming temperatures eliminate Pikas from their alpine habitat. The USFWS is expected to decide by Feb. 1, 2010 if the American Pika will receive endangered species designation.

An alarming number of Pikas have already become early victims of global warming. They are believed to be regionally extinct in in some areas of the Great Basin mountains of Nevada and Oregon, where more than a third of the American Pika population has disappeared.

Pikas are highly adapted to their alpine environments. Their dense fur makes them susceptible to overheating, and Pikas will die if exposed to temperatures as low as 78 degrees Fahrenheit.

Pikas do not hibernate, but instead prepare for the winter by cutting and sun-drying vegetation for storage, which they consume in the winter. This haying activity has given the America Pika the nickname “ecosystem engineer”

Although most closely related to hares and rabbits, Pikas resemble hamsters, and are roughly the size of a domestic rat. They communicate with a series of “peculiar short squeaks.”

Pikas are diurnal and live in colonies. They do not inhabit burrows, making them especially sensitive to warming temperatures, as they cannot seek refuge underground.

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco-Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products
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www.countrymeadowltd.com

Wed 22 Jul '09

Heat Wave Notice: Suspending Scrubs

We have had and are still having an unusually HOT summer this year here in the Puget Sound area. Temperatures have been holding steady at 80 degrees and above with the next 7-10 days forcasted to be around 95!

Even though our emulsified suger scrubs are a stable product they do contain a large amount of shea butter…which melts in hot temperatures.

To protect the integrity of our scrubs and to insure you don’t receive a melted product we have suspended all sales/shipping of our sugar scrubs until the temperatures come back down to normal levels.

If you are local and would like to pick up your scrub order in person please let us know!

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco-Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products
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www.countrymeadowltd.com

'

Recipe Of The Week: Breath Mint Pie

As I stated yesturday I am not fond of eating ‘mint’…..

However….
The recipe below (courtesy of Guy Fieri) sounds simply ‘breath-taking’!

Do YOU have a favorite mint recipe???
Email us (sales(at)countrymeadowltd(dot)com with your recipe and picture and we will post it here in a future blog post!

Breath Mint Pie
Courtesy of Guy Fieri

Ingredients
6 ounces (1 1/4 sticks or 10 tablespoons) butter
6 cups chocolate sandwich cookie crumbs (recommended: Oreo(r))
1 quart mint chocolate chip ice cream, slightly softened
1 pound dark chocolate covered mint candy, frozen (recommended: Junior Mint)
1 cup whipped cream
1 cup chocolate syrup
12 mint sprigs

Directions
In saute pan, heat butter over medium-low heat until softened. Remove from heat, add cookie crumbs to pan and stir until butter is evenly distributed through the crumbs.

Line a “half sheet” size pan (approximately 13 by 18 by 2 inches deep) with plastic wrap. Spread half the cookie crumb mixture over the plastic.

With a mixer on lowest speed (or by hand), combine ice cream and mint candy, mixing slowly and trying to avoid breaking up the mints.

Pour the ice cream mixture over the cookie crumbs and spread gently throughout the pan, trying not to break the cookie crumb base. Top evenly with remaining cookie crumb mixture, cover with plastic wrap and re-freeze for a few hours.

Cut into 12 triangular pieces, by cutting in half lengthwise, then thirds crosswise, and cutting each resulting rectangle into right triangles. Serve each triangle topped with whipped cream, chocolate syrup, and mint sprigs.

Breath Mint Pie

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco-Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products
cmlogo
www.countrymeadowltd.com

Tue 21 Jul '09

Ingredient Of The Week: Peppermint

I am not a big fan of edible peppermint.
About the only foods I like with peppermint are ice cream, cookies and the VERY occasional Peppermint Patty!

I do, however, like peppermint in candles and body products…especially when it’s blended with vanilla!

We have both peppermint and spearmint growing in our garden but it’s mostly used for aroma-enjoyment (crushing the leaves in your hand for smelling!) rather than eating.

Our Ingredient of the Week: Peppermint
(as borrowed from Peppermint-Wikipedia)

Peppermint (Mentha × piperita, also known as M. balsamea Willd) is a hybrid mint, a cross between the watermint (Mentha aquatica) and spearmint (Mentha spicata). The plant, indigenous to Europe, is now widespread in cultivation throughout all regions of the world.

Peppermint typically occurs in moist habitats, including stream sides and drainage ditches. Being a hybrid, it is usually sterile, producing no seeds and reproducing only vegetatively, spreading by its rhizomes. If placed, it can grow anywhere, with a few exceptions. It is an invasive species in the Great Lakes region, noted since 1843

Uses
Peppermint is sometimes regarded as ‘the world’s oldest medicine’, with archaeological evidence placing its use at least as far back as ten thousand years ago.

Peppermint has a high menthol content, and is often used as a flavouring in tea, ice cream, confectionery, chewing gum, and toothpaste. The oil also contains menthone and menthyl esters, particularly menthyl acetate. It is the oldest and most popular flavour of mint-flavoured confectionery. Peppermint can also be found in some shampoos and soaps, which give the hair a minty scent and produce a cooling sensation on the skin.

In 2007, Italian investigators reported that 75% of the patients in their study who took peppermint oil capsules for four weeks had a major reduction in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) symptoms, compared with just 38% of those who took a placebo.

Similarly, some poorly designed earlier trials found that peppermint oil has the ability to reduce colicky abdominal pain due to IBS with an NNT (number needed to treat) around 3.1, but the oil is an irritant to the stomach in the quantity required and therefore needs wrapping for delayed release in the intestine. Peppermint relaxes the gastro-esophageal sphincter, thus promoting belching. Restaurants usually take advantage of this effect by taking advantage of its use as a confectionery ingredient, which they then call “after-dinner mints.”

Peppermint flowers are large nectar producers and honey bees as well as other nectar harvesting organisms forage them heavily. A mild, pleasant varietal honey can be produced if there is a sufficient area of plants.

Peppermint oil is used by commercial pesticide applicators, in the EcoSmart Technologies line of products, as a natural insecticide.

Outside of its native range, areas where peppermint was formerly grown for oil often have an abundance of feral plants, and it is considered invasive in Australia, the Galápagos Islands, New Zealand, and in the United States

Cultivation
Peppermint generally thrives in shade and expands quickly by underground stolons. If you choose to grow peppermint, it is advisable to plant it in a container, otherwise it can rapidly take over a whole garden. It needs a good water supply, and is ideal for planting in part-sun to shade areas.

The leaves and flowering tops are the usable portion of the plant. They are collected as soon as the flowers begin to open and then are carefully dried. The wild form of the plant is less suitable for this purpose, with cultivated plants having been selected for more and better oil content. Seeds sold at stores labelled peppermint generally will not germinate into true peppermint, but into a particularly poor-scented spearmint plant. The true peppermint might rarely produce seeds, but only by fertilization from a spearmint plant, and contribute only their own spearmint genes.

Peppermint is a component in our Grapefruit Mint collection.

Make sure you check back tomorrow…as we will be featuring a cooling, mouthwatering minty freshness recipe!

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco-Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products
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www.countrymeadowltd.com

Mon 20 Jul '09

Grapefruit Mint Sale

Grapefruit Mint is my personal favorite scent in our Gardener’s Collection.

Grapefruit Mint is a synergistic blend of grapefruit, yuzu, red ginger, lemon along with mint, cucumber and lettuce.

This week our Grapefruit Mint products are 15% off.

Sale includes soap (4.5 oz.) lotion (8 oz.) and sugar scrub (16 oz.).
Sale starts July 20, 2009 and ends July 26, 2009
Sale is limited to quantity in stock

Don’t forget -
We offer FREE SHIPPING on product orders over $75.00!

Grapefruit Mint Sugar Scrub

Grapefruit Mint Sugar Scrub

Grapefruit Mint Lotion

Grapefruit Mint Lotion

Grapefruit Mint Soap

Grapefruit Mint Soap

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco-Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products
cmlogo
www.countrymeadowltd.com

Fri 17 Jul '09

Friday Free-For-All

*Deoderant
**Hair
***Wine
****Fashion

*Deoderant
I have had a hell of a time finding a deoderant that does not leave white residue on your clothes. Even though labels say are residue-free they are not. I’ve even tried two different kinds of Toms of Maines deoderant which is sort of clear gel like….and even though it does NOT leave white residue it also DOESN’T work!

Can anyone recommend an UNSCENTED deoderant that does NOT leave residue on your clothes???

**Hair
I’ve had long hair forever….it currently ends down past the middle of my back. Most of the time I simply wear it up in a ponytail as it keeps it out of my face and I feel more efficient without all that long hair hanging around.

But I’m tired of long hair and I would love something a tad more stylish…..so I’m breaking the mold tomorrow and getting a new ‘do’. It involves cutting my hair to a medium length, re-highlighting and a flat iron. With the approval of my long-time hair stylist I hope to have a new updated look as of tomorrow afternoon!

***Wine
I have never aquired a taste for wine and instead have avoided it all of my life due to the nitrate levels. I am a life-long sufferer of headaches (migraines & tension) so I try to avoid any and all situations that trigger them.

I did, however, come across a DELICIOUS wine cooler recipe several years ago and usually make it every summer. Due to the diluted nature of the final product this wine recipe does not trigger my headaches. I make this recipe in one of those sun tea glass jars with the spigot towards the bottom as it makes a nice presentation!

Tropical White Wine Cooler

3/4 c. Sugar
3/4 c. Frozen Lemon Juice, thawed
3 c. Water
1/2 Pineapple, peeled & thinly sliced
1 Mango, peeled & thinly sliced
1 750 ml Bottle of Sauvignon Blanc or other white table wine

In large pitcher, mix sugar, lemon juice and water stirring until sugar is dissolved. Add the wine and fruit slices. Stir well, crushing fruit to extract juices. Refrigerate 1 hour and serve over ice.

****Fashion

Last weekend hubs and I went to Tacoma’s Art on the Ave to see the fashion show which was THE highlight of the entire event!

Our daughter (and her significant other) are upcoming fashion designers and both have a degree in fashion design. Every time I see what she can and has done I am amazed at the imagination and creativity that is shown.

I’ve been trying to help her come up with a company name and I’m 92% certain she has decided on one particular one. Once she decides 100% on the name we will proceed with a website and logo.

In the meantime I am posting pictures of her designs below.
In this particular show she had two hoodies, a dress, purse and a pants/shirt outfit. As of today pictures of her purse and pants/shirt outfit are not available yet.

Please notice the hood on the red hoodie. It is actually braided (is that the right term?) and her purse is the same way only with different material. She has had SEVERAL compliments on this particular hoodie and several people are putting in their orders!

If you would like a customized design please contact me and I will forward your information on to her. Once we get her website up and running I will post it her so you can contact her directly.

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Red Hoodie

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Red Hoodie

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Red Hoodie Closeup

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Red Hoodie Closeup

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Red Hoodie Back

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Red Hoodie Back

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Brown Hoodie

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Brown Hoodie

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Brown Hoodie Back

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Brown Hoodie Back

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Black Dress

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Black Dress

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Black Dress Side

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Black Dress Side

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Black Dress & Red Hoodie

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood Black Dress & Red Hoodie

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood (and Lance!)

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood (and Lance!)

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood

Fashion Designer: Melissa Wood

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco-Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products
cmlogo
www.countrymeadowltd.com

Thu 16 Jul '09

Eco-News: What Is the Problem With Palm Oil?

Palm oil is in just about everything….from snacks (chips) to beauty products to…..soap..both commercial soap and handmade soap by cottage industries.

Palm oil plantations are the #1 reason our rainforests are being destroyed and the burning of peat fields contributes to pollution resulting in climate changes….which effects the entire eco-system.

Country Meadow Ltd. will never use palm oil in any of our products…ever.

More information below:

Rainforest Action Network

**Palm oil and the destruction of vital ecosystems
Palm oil plantations are expanding into the planet’s most biodiverse ecosystems, including rainforests, grasslands and peat swamps in South America, Southeast Asia, the Pacific and Africa. These regions are home to millions of plant and animal species, including highly endangered orangutans, clouded leopards, and sun bears.

**Palm oil contributes to global climate change
Transforming ecosystems into monocultural oil palm plantations contributes heavily to climate change. Rainforests are clear-cut and burned, and carbon-rich peat swamps are drained and burned. Deforestation accounts for a quarter of global greenhouse gas emissions and is the primary reason that Indonesia and Brazil are now the world’s third and fourth largest greenhouse gas polluters.

Palm oil results in the displacement of Indigenous people and small family farmers. The spread of massive palm oil plantations often violates traditional and Indigenous land rights by forcing small family farmers to shift from subsistence to export-driven commodity farming or pushing them off their land entirely.

Palm oil is produced through exploitative labor practices. Many palm oil-plantation workers face abuse, harsh working conditions, unfair pay, and exposure to toxic pesticides. In Papua New Guinea, a gendered system of palm oil harvest called the Mama Lus system pays women less and forces them into harder, more dangerous labor than their male counterparts.

**Who is causing rainforest destruction?
U.S. agribusiness giants ADM, Bunge and Cargill are the ABCs of rainforest destruction: They dominate the world markets for palm oil and soy crops that are grown on cleared rainforest lands.

ADM is deeply involved in the production and sale of palm oil. It is also one of the greatest recipients of government subsidies, which means taxpayers are footing the bill for ADM’s rainforest destruction. An ADM affiliate, Wilmar, is the largest palm oil producer in the world, and its practices are among the most destructive.

Bunge, though not a household name in the U.S., is the largest agribusiness and food company operating in Brazil. While Bunge is primarily involved in soy operations that are devastating communities and ecosystems throughout South America, it is also among the largest importers of palm oil into the United States.

Cargill is the most powerful agribusiness and commodity trading group in the world. It owns a dozen plantations in Indonesia and Malaysia, where it grows oil palm on freshly cleared rainforest land. It is also a major global trader of palm oil.

**What is the Rainforest Agribusiness Campaign?
Rainforest Action Network’s Rainforest Agribusiness Campaign is working to defend forests, farmers and our climate by demanding that ADM, Bunge and Cargill stop clearing rainforests for industrial-scale palm and soy plantations. We work in partnership with communities and small family farmers affected by the expansion of palm oil and soy crops, as well as with local NGOs that work on related issues. In the United States, we work with grassroots supporters, shareholders and partner NGOs to pressure ADM, Bunge, and Cargill and the companies they supply to find sustainable alternatives to palm oil.

Our campaign focuses on food and fuel—the main types of ingredients for which palm oil is used in the U.S. market. We address the use of palm oil in food, soaps and cosmetics by identifying which products contain palm oil and what palm oil-free alternatives are available. We also address palm oil as a source of agrofuels—or industrial-scale biofuels—which are the leading cause of the recent wave of palm oil expansion.

**Please Note: We (Country Meadow Ltd.) have not signed the pledge on the above website because we do NOT use palm oil in any of our products!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Planet Save

So what is the problem with palm oil?
Take a peek at this short video!

**To Recap The Video:
Palm oil is in many common supermarket products such as snacks, candy, and even soaps and detergents. Rainforest Action Network has created a site to educate consumers on the how destructive palm oil is to our global environment. Palm oil destroys vital ecosystems, contributes to global climate change, results in the displacement of Indigenous people and small family farmers, and is produced through exploitative labor practices.

Please help educate grocery shoppers about these facts and take action in anyway possible. RAN tells us: “Palm oil plantations are expanding into the planet’s most biodiverse ecosystems, including rainforests, grasslands and peat swamps in South America, Southeast Asia, the Pacific and Africa. These regions are home to millions of plant and animal species, including highly endangered orangutans, clouded leopards, and sun bears.”

Big palm oil companies pay to have important oxygen providing rainforests clear cut for their palm crops and painfully push out the native people that rely on the land. This endangers the plants, animals and waterways that entire communities have thrived on forever.

Endangered rainforest ecosystems that are made into monocultural oil palm plantations not only hurt locally but also globally as they contribute heavily to climate change. How is this? Well, in order to grow their palm crops beautiful rainforests are clear-cut and burned, and carbon-rich peat swamps are drained and burned. This burning causes major pollution.

“Deforestation accounts for a quarter of global greenhouse gas emissions and is the primary reason that Indonesia and Brazil are now the world’s third and fourth largest greenhouse gas polluters.“

In addition,“the spread of massive palm oil plantations often violates traditional and Indigenous land rights by forcing small family farmers to shift from subsistence to export-driven commodity farming or pushing them off their land entirely…” and “many palm oil-plantation workers face abuse, harsh working conditions, unfair pay, and exposure to toxic pesticides. In Papua New Guinea, a gendered system of palm oil harvest called the Mama Lus system pays women less and forces them into harder, more dangerous labor than their male counterparts.” explains Rainforest Action Network.

Now with internet campaigns like this it is possible for the word to spread faster than their fires and for us to take a collective stand against palm oil.

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco-Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products
cmlogo
www.countrymeadowltd.com

Wed 15 Jul '09

Local Adult Male Cat Needs New Home

My daughter’s friends mom is not wanting her adult male cat anymore and is looking for a new home asap or the cat will be put down.

Details:

Male
Approx. 10 yrs old
White
Seattle Area

I honestly do not know if the cat has any health issues or is neutered (I assume it is) so if you are interested in giving this cat a forever home where he can live out the rest of his life please let me know asap via 425.672.8908 or sales(at)countrymeadowltd(dot)com. Please put CAT in the subject line. I will take your information and pass it along to the correct party.

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco-Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products
cmlogo
www.countrymeadowltd.com

'

Local Women’s Networking July 16, 2009

Short notice I know and I appologize for that!

Tomorrow (Thursday, July 16, 2009) there is a women’s business networking meeting at Karen Jamison’s house from 6 pm – 8 pm in Bothell.

If you would like to attend please let Karen know asap via phone (425-984-4120).

I look forward to seeing you there!

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco-Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products
cmlogo
www.countrymeadowltd.com

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