Thu 10 Dec '09

Eco News: Rapidly Rising Sea Level

Sea Level Rise of Up to 1.9 Meters (6′3″) This Century?
Written by Zachary Shahan

Sea level may actually rise much faster than previously expected, a new scientific study shows.

The study shows that by 2100, sea level could rise between 75 and 190 centimeters (about 2′6″ to 6′3″). The study uses very up-to-date data collected from satellites and builds on previous work by one of the authors. It is now published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The findings continue the scientific warnings that if we do not do something, climate change will take us on a snowball’s path to widespread and incomparable destruction.

Using measurements of sea level and temperature from the last 130 years, the researchers, Martin Vermeer of Helsinki University of Technology in Finland and Stefan Rahmstorf of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany, predict that sea level is likely to rise much more than previously predicted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) if swift and strong action is not taken to keep the temperature down.

“Since 1990 sea level has been rising at 3.4 millimetres per year, twice as fast as on average over the 20th Century,” says Stefan Rahmstorf. If this rate remains steady, that would result in a rise of 34 centimeters by the end of the 21st century. However, the thing is that as the temperature increases, certain feedback loops make sea level rise faster and faster. As Rahmstorf says, “the data show us clearly: the warmer it gets, the faster sea level rises. If we want to prevent a galloping sea level rise, we should stop global warming as soon as possible.”

The projections from this study show that even with a relatively low temperature rise of 2 degrees Celsius, sea level will rise over one meter (over 3′3″).

These projections are about three times higher than those from the IPCC’s Fourth Assessment Report in 2007 because that report did not fully take into account the results of ice loss in Greenland and Antarctica.

Here is yet another study showing us that humans must make quick and strong changes or else changes will happen in nature with far more serious consequences, and even by the end of this century. Will we act in an environmentally balancing manner?

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products
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'

Eco News: Greenhouse Gases Are Dangerous

EPA: Greenhouse gases are harmful to humans
Announcement comes as Obama prepares to attend climate conference

WASHINGTON – The Environmental Protection Agency took a major step Monday toward regulating greenhouses gases, concluding that climate changing pollution threatens the public health and the environment.

The announcement came as the Obama administration looked to boost its arguments at an international climate conference that the United States is aggressively taking actions to combat global warming, even though Congress has yet to act on climate legislation. The conference opened Monday in Copenhagen.

The EPA said that the scientific evidence surrounding climate change clearly shows that greenhouse gases “threaten the public health and welfare of the American people” and that the pollutants — mainly carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels — should be regulated under the Clean Air Act.

“These long-overdue findings cement 2009′s place in history as the year when the United States government began addressing the challenge of greenhouse-gas pollution,” said EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson at news conference.

The action by the EPA, which has been anticipated for months, clearly was timed to add to the momentum toward some sort of agreement on climate change at the Copenhagen conference and try to push Congress to approve climate legislation.

“This is a clear message to Copenhagen of the Obama administration’s commitments to address global climate change,” said Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., lead author of a climate bill before the Senate. “The message to Congress is crystal clear: get moving.”

Obama planned to talk with former Vice President Al Gore at the White House on Monday as the president prepares for his appearance on Dec. 18 at the climate summit in Copenhagen. Gore won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2007 for his work toward combating climate change.

Obama is also meeting on Wednesday with environmental leaders and U.S. business leaders to discuss climate change.

Under a Supreme Court ruling, the finding of endangerment is needed before the EPA can regulate carbon dioxide and five other greenhouse gases released from power plants, factories and automobiles under the federal Clean Air Act.

The EPA signaled last April that it was inclined to view heat-trapping pollution as a threat to public health and welfare and began to take public comments under a formal rulemaking. The action marked a reversal from the Bush administration, which had declined to aggressively pursue the issue.

Business groups have strongly argued against tackling global warming through the Clean Air Act, saying it is less flexible and more costly than the cap-and-trade bill being considered before Congress. On Monday, some of those groups questioned the timing of the EPA’s announcement, calling it political.

“The implications of today’s action by EPA are far-reaching … individual Americans and consumers and businesses alike will be dramatically affected by this decision,” said Charles T. Drevna, the president of the National Petrochemical & Refiners Association. Drevna, in a statement, said “it is hardly the time to risk the remainder of the U.S. industrial sector in an attempt to achieve a short-term international public relations victory.”

Waiting for Congress to act
Any regulations are also likely to spawn lawsuits and lengthy legal fights.

The EPA and the White House have said regulations on greenhouse gases will not be imminent even after an endangerment finding, saying that the administration would prefer that Congress act to limit such pollution through an economy-wide cap on carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.

Nevertheless, the EPA has begun the early stages of developing permit requirements on carbon dioxide pollution from large emitters such as power plants. The administration also has said it will require automobile fuel economy to increase to a fleet average of 35 miles per gallon by 2016, another push to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.

The EPA’s readiness to tackle climate change is expected to give a boost to U.S. arguments at the climate conference opening in Copenhagen this week that the United States is making broad commitments to reduce greenhouse gases.

While the House has approved climate legislation that would cut emissions by 17 percent by 2020 and about 80 percent by mid-century, the Senate has yet to take up the measure amid strong Republican opposition and reluctance by some centrist Democrats.

Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., lead author of the Senate bill, has argued that if Congress doesn’t act, the EPA will require greenhouse gas emissions. He has called EPA regulation a “blunt instrument” that would pose a bigger problem for industry than legislation crafted to mitigate some of the costs of shifting away from carbon emitting fossil fuels.

The way was opened for the EPA to use the Clean Air Act to cut climate-changing emissions by the Supreme Court in 2007, when the court declared that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are pollutants under the Act. But the court said the EPA must determine if these pollutants pose a danger to public health and welfare before it can regulate them.

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products
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Wed 9 Dec '09

Holiday Desserts

Looking for something a little more fancy for Christmas dessert?

Check out these recipes from Delish!

Unexpected Holiday Pies & Dessert Recipes

This looks like one I can tackle!

Chocolate Caramel Cream Pie

Ingredients

8 tablespoon(s) unsalted butter
2 cup(s) (about 5 ounces) finely crushed chocolate wafer cookies
2 tablespoon(s) Cognac
5 ounce(s) bittersweet chocolate, finely chopped
4 large egg yolks
2/3 cup(s) dark brown sugar
2 tablespoon(s) dark brown sugar
1 tablespoon(s) cornstarch
1/8 teaspoon(s) salt
2 cup(s) heavy cream
2 tablespoon(s) heavy cream
1 cup(s) (plus 2 tablespoons) whole milk
1 1/2 teaspoon(s) pure vanilla extract
Caramel Sauce
1 tablespoon(s) cocoa powder

Directions
Make the crust: Preheat oven to 350°F. Melt 4 tablespoons of butter. Stir the crushed cookie crumbs, melted butter, and Cognac in a medium-size bowl. Press the crumb mixture into the bottom and all around the sides of a pie pan. Bake for 10 minutes, remove from oven, and cool completely on a wire rack.

Make the pudding: Place the chocolate in a large bowl and set aside. Whisk the egg yolks, 2/3 cup brown sugar, cornstarch, and salt in a medium bowl and set aside. Heat 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons cream, milk, and remaining butter in a medium saucepan over medium-high heat until the mixture just begins to boil. Remove from heat and, whisking continuously, gradually add the hot milk to the egg mixture. Return the milk-and-egg mixture to the saucepan and, whisking continuously, cook over medium heat until mixture comes to a boil. Cook for 1 more minute, whisking continuously, and stir in 1 teaspoon vanilla extract. Remove from heat and strain the pudding into the bowl with the chocolate. Let sit for 2 minutes and fold the chocolate into the pudding with a spatula. Cool to room temperature.

Finish the pie: Pour Caramel Sauce into the bottom of the piecrust and refrigerate for 10 minutes. Spread the pudding over the caramel and chill for 2 hours. Beat the remaining cream, brown sugar, vanilla, and the cocoa powder in a large bowl until stiff peaks form. Top the pudding with the cream and chill for 30 minutes or up to 6 hours.

Chocolate Caramel Cream Pie

Chocolate Caramel Cream Pie

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

Tue 8 Dec '09

Christmas Decor

I know it’s not quite last minute but if you’re like me Christmas and guests will be here before you can say ‘Merry Christmas!’

Courtesy of Better Homes & Garden:

Last Minute Christmas Decor

Here is a link with MANY inexpensive and easy ways to decorate for the holidays!

One of my favorites:

Natural Light
Nestle chubby candles in a bed of mixed nuts and tiny red ornaments set on a tray for portable ambience.

Natural Light Christmas Decor

Natural Light Christmas Decor

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

Mon 7 Dec '09

Cool Product – Christmas Cards

It is always appreciated to receive Christmas cards from friends and family and what better way than to send a unique handmade card!

See these etsy sellers below…
But HURRY!
These won’t last.

Snow Bunny Lop Mini Prints Post Card Set by ashleywhitejacobsen

Holiday Greeting Card by studiopetite

Happy Holidays Ornament Card by carriescards

Warm Winter Wishes Snowman Holiday Note Card by oldladybern

Set of 10 Holiday Greeting Cards – The Mitten Tree by BeeDazzlesGifts

Chickadee in Snow Card by NatureMandalas

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

Fri 4 Dec '09

Friday Free-For-All

Quickie notations and links:

#1 I am sitting here on pins and needles waiting for the Amanda Knox verdict to come in. I sure hope she got a fair trial and I hope she is found innocent. It would be tragic if it came out any other way.

#2 Swift Is Here!
Community Transit has launched way cool buses for a fast and easy way to commute up and down Highway 99 from Everett to Shoreline.

#3 Scotch Anyone?
100 year old Scotch found buried in Antarctica!

#4 Shoe-Fitting Fluoroscope
Fascinating!

#5 Emo
Found out what an Emo was. Guess it’s better than being Goth!!

#6 Glycerin Explosion
Local industrial accident…
Falls under my category of disaster…
So naturally I’m interested!

#7 Nearly Naked Baristas
FINALLY local governments are getting off of their asses and will now pass legislation to regulate coffee stands that not only peddle crappy coffee but sex as well!

#8 Snow or Not?
Appears the local weatherpersons are predicting snow flurries next week…then again…maybe not!

#9 Myspace
I was on Myspace before any other networking site and in the beginning I used it a lot.
Now…
Not so much.
It just seems like there is a lot of crap (advertisements and such) on there now which, for me, makes it uninviting.
If you want to link up either personally or be a fan of ours then check out our Facebook links over to the right! You will have to created an account first to see my personal page and join our Fan page.

#10 Do I Test It Out First?
We bought online two papasan type chairs for two of the tween granddaughters. They arrived yesturday in two big boxes.
Do I pull them out of the box and set them up to make sure all is well (then hope I can get them back in the boxes)…
Or do I keep them in the box and hope nothing is broken?

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

Thu 3 Dec '09

Another Ice Age Coming?

I will say this again in case you have not heard me say it before….
I am FASCINATED with disasters…both natural and manmade.

I have seen the movie The Day After Tomorrow probably 15 times and I will most likely watch it another 15 times!

Earth could plunge into sudden ice age
Experts: ‘Big Freeze’ about 12,800 years ago happened within months

By Charles Q. Choi
Special to LiveScience

In the film, “The Day After Tomorrow,” the world gets gripped in ice within the span of just a few weeks. Now research now suggests an eerily similar event might indeed have occurred in the past.

Looking ahead to the future, there is no reason why such a freeze shouldn’t happen again — and in ironic fashion it could be precipitated if ongoing changes in climate force the Greenland ice sheet to suddenly melt, scientists say.

Starting roughly 12,800 years ago, the Northern Hemisphere was gripped by a chill that lasted some 1,300 years. Known by scientists as the Younger Dryas and nicknamed the”Big Freeze,” geological evidence suggests it was brought on when a vast pulse of fresh water — a greater volume than all of North America’s Great Lakes combined — poured into the Atlantic and Arctic Oceans.

This abrupt influx, caused when the glacial Lake Agassiz in North America burst its banks, diluted the circulation of warmer water in the North Atlantic, bringing this “conveyer belt” to a halt. Without this warming influence, evidence shows that temperatures across the Northern Hemisphere plummeted.

No time to react
Previous evidence from Greenland ice samples had suggested this abrupt shift in climate happened over the span of a decade or so. Now researchers say it surprisingly may have taken place over the course of a few months, or a year or two at most.

“That the climate system can turn on and off that quickly is extremely important,” said earth system scientist Henry Mullins at Syracuse University, who did not take part in this research. “Once the tipping point is reached, there would be essentially no opportunity for humans to react.”

For two years, isotope biogeochemist William Patterson at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada and his colleagues investigated a mud core — a tube of mud — taken from the ancient lake Lough Monreach in Ireland. Because this sediment was deposited slowly over time, each layer from this core effectively represents a snapshot of history, with slices just a half-millimeter thick presenting one to three months.

“Basically, I drive around in western Ireland looking for the right conditions — bedrock, vegetation and lake — to obtain the most complete record of climate,” Patterson explained.

By looking at isotopes of carbon in each slice, the researchers could deduce how productive the lake was. When plants grow in lakes, they prefer carbon-12 to make up their organic tissue — that is, carbon atoms that have 12 protons and neutrons in total in their nucleus. This leaves the lake water with relatively more carbon-13. At the same time, oxygen isotopes give a picture of temperature — when animals or plants produce calcium carbonate, the ratio of oxygen-16 and oxygen-18 isotopes within are related to temperature.

At the start of the Younger Dryas, Patterson and his colleagues discovered temperatures and lake productivity dropped over the course of just a few years.

“It would be like taking Ireland today and moving it up to above the Arctic Circle, creating icy conditions in a very short period of time,” Patterson said.

Their findings also suggest that it may have taken 100 to 200 years before the lake and climate recovered, rather than the decade or so that Greenland ice cores had indicated.

“This makes sense because it would take time for the ocean and atmospheric circulation to turn on again,” Patterson said.

The discrepancies between the evidence from the mud core and the ice cores might be due to disturbances in how material flowed within the ice. “Sometimes there’s melting, and you have percolation of material between layers, which can blur the records,” Patterson explained. “We found a core that had not been disturbed even on a millimeter by millimeter basis, so the sediment had been layered in order since it was deposited.”

Chilly future
Looking ahead to the future, Patterson said there was no reason why a big freeze shouldn’t happen again.

“If the Greenland ice sheet melted suddenly it would be catastrophic,” he said.

This kind of scenario would not discount evidence pointing toward global warming — after all, it leans on the Greenland ice sheet melting.

“We could say that global warming could lead to a dramatic cooling,” Patterson told LiveScience. “This should serve as a further warning rather than a pass.”

“People assume that we’re political, that we’re either pro-global-warming or anti-global-warming, when it’s really neither,” Patterson added. “Our goal is just to understand climate.”

Patterson and his colleagues detailed their findings at the European Science Foundation BOREAS conference on humans in the Arctic, in Rovaniemi, Finland.

© 2009 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

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

'

Remembering Bhopal

Worst industrial disaster still haunts India
25 years after lethal Bhopal gas leak, injuries and birth defects linger

BHOPAL, India – Hazra Bi wishes she could forget. But her damaged family is a living reminder of that December night 25 years ago when lethal gas leaked from a pesticide plant in Bhopal, India, in the worst industrial disaster the world has ever seen.

The gas that swept through her poor neighborhood left her nearly blind in one eye, menopausal at 36, with searing headaches and breathlessness. It left her son, then 4, unable to control his bladder and suffering debilitating panic attacks. And two years ago it gave her a granddaughter born severely underweight, her legs like twigs, who still cannot walk or talk.

The Bhopal industrial disaster killed about 4,000 people in the early hours of Dec. 3, 1984. A few days later the death toll had doubled. Over the next few years, the lingering effects of the poison nearly doubled the toll again, to about 15,000, according to government estimates. Local activists say the real numbers are almost twice that.

A quarter-century later, thousands like Bi are still grappling with the effects of exposure to the deadly gas as it winds its way through generations not even born when the disaster struck. Rights groups say toxic waste from the plant still contaminates the soil and groundwater in nearby neighborhoods.

Still birth defects
“We’re still finding children as young as 2 months old being born with birth defects,” says Satinath Sarangi, director of the Sambhavna Trust Clinic, which offers free health care for those exposed to gas or polluted water.

According to the government, at least 500,000 people were affected by the gas leak, and activists like Sarangi say that thousands of children, born to parents directly exposed to the gas leak or poisoned by the contaminated water, are suffering from cleft lips, missing palates, twisted limbs.

Varying degrees of brain damage are being found, as are chaotic menstrual cycles, they said. Even more common are all sorts of skin, vision and breathing disorders.

Government officials say there is no current contamination and dismiss assertions that the birth defects are related to the disaster. Babulal Gaur, the state minister for Gas Relief and Rehabilitation, says the diseases plaguing the children are only a consequence of living in poor slums.

American chemical company Union Carbide Corp. has said that the accident — which took place when water entered the sealed tank containing the highly reactive MIC — was an act of sabotage by a disgruntled employee, never identified, and not lax safety standards or faulty plant design, as claimed by some activists.

$470 million settlement
Union Carbide was bought by Dow Chemical Co. in 2001. Dow says the legal case was resolved in 1989, when Union Carbide settled with the Indian government for $470 million, and that all responsibility for the factory now rests with the government of the state of Madhya Pradesh, of which Bhopal is the capital.

Tomm F. Sprick, a spokesman for Union Carbide gave The Associated Press a statement saying “the groundwater issue at the Bhopal site is best addressed by the state government of Madhya Pradesh, which owns the site and is responsible for clean up activities,” and that the company gave the Indian government all the toxicity information about the chemicals involved in the manufacture of MIC.

It’s a responsibility that the state government accepts.

“Dow Chemical does not own that site. We do,” says Gaur, the minister.

Through the twisting, dirt-filled alleys of the slums that bore the brunt of the gas leak, it’s impossible to walk past more than a dozen homes without finding at least one young child with visible physical abnormalities.

Dressed in a faded blue sweater and bright red pants, Hazra Bi’s granddaughter, Taheba, drags herself across the floor as she plays with a piece of silver foil.

“A 2-year-old walks, talks, responds to its name, but this is the fate of the third generation of Bhopal,” Hazra Bi says, as she watches over the child.

Looks half her age
Elsewhere in the city, 26-year-old Rizwana Bi sits on a plastic mat minding her 8-year-old daughter Menaz, who looks half her age and whose twisted body is strapped into a special chair with a wooden back to support her spine.

Rizwana and her husband (who are unrelated to Hazra) both were exposed to the gas as children, and have two sons, both of whom have severe speech defects and poor mental development.

She is one of dozens of parents who bring their children to a special school and clinic run by the Chingari Trust, a nonprofit organization funded in large part by the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize awarded in 2004 to Bhopal activists and survivors Rashida Bee and her friend and neighbor, Champa Devi Shukla.

Chingari, which means “spark” in Hindi, says it has identified hundreds of children with disabilities ranging from cerebral palsy to speech defects who were born to parents exposed to the gas or the contaminated water.

Hundreds of tons of toxic material from the factory still sit in a warehouse on the premises, but Gaur says there is no contamination of either the soil or water.

The tragedy of Bhopal’s children is compounded by the lack of any detailed research into the long term health implications of exposure to the gas.

Studies never published
In 1985 the Indian Council of Medical Research — the top government-funded body conducting medical investigations — initiated two dozen studies into the likely biomedical impact of MIC exposure. Most of those studies were never published, say doctors involved in the research.

“We were told that studies could not be published because of some legal issues, but to date those studies have not been published,” said Dr. N.R. Bhandari, a pediatrician who was the main investigator in five studies.

According to V.M. Katoch, the New Delhi-based head of the medical council, most of the main findings of the investigations were published and “the individual studies will not merit a publication anyway.”

The council is open to funding new studies in Bhopal, Katoch said, but added that in the last 10 months they have received only two project proposals.

For now, people like Hazra Bi remain caught between despair and hope.

“For us nothing changes. People come and write about us and then they go away. We stay here and our problems stay here,” she said. “But we will go on fighting.”
~~~~
For an in depth review of the Bhopal disaster click HERE.

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

Wed 2 Dec '09

Traditional Christmas Cookies

I LOVE the holiday themed sugar cookies but I seldom have time to make them!

I have a few favorites that I make every year (russian teacakes, molasses cookies with frosting) but this year I’m going to try a few new ones!

Here is a link to Old Fashioned Christmas Cookies courtesy of Delish.com.

Enjoy!

Sugar Cookies With Ornamental Frosting

Ingredients

1 cup(s) (2 sticks) butter (no substitutions), softened
1/2 cup(s) sugar
1 large egg
1 tablespoon(s) vanilla extract
3 cup(s) all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon(s) baking powder
1/2 teaspoon(s) salt
Ornamental Frosting (optional)
Coarse sugar crystals, silver dragées, holiday decors (optional decorations)

Directions

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. In large bowl, with mixer on low speed, beat butter and sugar until blended. Increase speed to high; beat until light and creamy. On low speed, beat in egg and vanilla. Beat in flour, baking powder, and salt until blended.

Divide dough into 4 equal pieces; flatten each piece into a disk. Wrap each disk with plastic wrap and refrigerate 1 hour or until dough is firm enough to roll. (Or place dough in freezer 30 minutes.)

On lightly floured surface, with floured rolling pin, roll 1 piece of dough 1/8 inch thick. With floured 3-inch to 4-inch cookie cutters, cut dough into as many cookies as possible; wrap and refrigerate trimmings. Place cookies, 1 inch apart, on ungreased large cookie sheet.

Bake cookies 10 to 12 minutes or until lightly browned. Transfer cookies to wire rack to cool. Repeat with remaining dough and trimmings.

When cookies are cool, prepare Ornamental Frosting, if you like; use along with sugars and candies to decorate cookies. Set cookies aside to allow frosting to dry completely, about 1 hour. Store in tightly covered container (with waxed paper between layers if decorated) at room temperature up to 2 weeks, or in freezer up to 3 months.

Ornamental Frosting

Ingredients

1 package(s) (16-ounce) confectioners’ sugar
3 tablespoon(s) meringue powder, (see note below)
Assorted food colorings (optional)

Directions

In bowl, with mixer at medium speed, beat confectioners’ sugar, meringue powder, and 1/3 cup warm water until blended and mixture is so stiff that knife drawn through it leaves a clean-cut path, about 5 minutes.

If you like, tint frosting with food colorings as desired; keep covered with plastic wrap to prevent drying out. With small spatula, artist’s paintbrushes, or decorating bags with small writing tips, decorate cookies with frosting. (You may need to thin frosting with a little warm water to obtain the right spreading or piping consistency.)

Christmas Cookies

Christmas Cookies

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

Tue 1 Dec '09

Snowman Soap Gift Bag

Need a quickie gift?
How about a stocking stuffer?

Check out our Snowman Soap Gift Bags!

Each gift bag includes 3 – 2.5 oz. bars of soap in the following scents:

Apple Spice
Autumn Winds
Pumpkin Spice

We have a limited amount of snowman bags so order yours today!
(snowman color will be our choice)

Now….
How Easy Was That?

Snowman Soap Gift Bags

Snowman Soap Gift Bags

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

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