Thu 18 Mar '10

Eco News: Pacific NW Forests

Pacific Northwest forests are biggest carbon storage ‘banks’ in U.S.
By Ear to the Ground

One of the biggest banks for carbon storage in the nation is right here in the Northwest, according to a new analysis released by the Wilderness Society. Several newspapers, including today’s The Olympian (and Tacoma News Tribune) reported the analysis, as did several other newspapers, wire services and many, many blogs, including the L.A. Times’ Greenspace

Calling the Pacific Northwest’s thick, wet forests the “carbon storage powerhouses of the U.S.,” the analysis says 10 national forests in Washington, Oregon and Alaska store more than 1-1/2 times as much carbon as the entire amount of carbon dioxide burned in fossil fuels throughout the country each year.

The study did not focus on other types of forestland ownerships, such as private and state trust forests. In Washington, fewer than 10 percent of forests on state trust land would be considered old forest, but there are different ways to identify “old” when it comes to trees.

Here are two guides that you can download and use in the field to spot the old stands of trees in your part of Washington. Both were developed and published by DNR using the talents of research ecologist Robert Van Pelt, PhD, of the University of Washington. The Washington State Legislature asked DNR to map and inventory old growth forests on state trust lands, and here are the results:

Identifying Mature and Old Forests in Western Washington

Identifying Old Trees and Forests in Eastern Washington

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products

www.countrymeadowltd.com

Wed 17 Mar '10

Recipe Of The Week: Chocolate Pudding

Do you like pudding??
I like pudding.
Only my pudding comes from a box!
I don’t think I have ever tried to make pudding from scratch however after looking at these recipes it looks quite easy!

10 Favorite Chocolate Pudding Recipes
Smooth and silky, homemade chocolate pudding is one dessert that’s equally popular among kids and adults. These recipes will leave you licking the bowl.

This one looks extremely good!

The Most Chocolate Pudding

Ingredients
1 bar(s) (4-ounce) bittersweet chocolate, chopped
2 tablespoon(s) butter
1 1/2 teaspoon(s) vanilla extract
1 3/4 cup(s) milk
3/4 cup(s) sugar
1/4 cup(s) cocoa
3 tablespoon(s) cornstarch
1/4 teaspoon(s) salt
3 egg yolks
1/2 cup(s) whipped cream (optional)
2 tablespoon(s) chocolate shavings (optional)

Directions

Combine chocolate, butter, and vanilla in a medium bowl, and set aside. Heat milk in a medium saucepan, and bring to a simmer. Whisk sugar, cocoa, cornstarch, and salt together in a bowl. Beat the yolks in a bowl, using an electric mixer set on medium, for 1 minute. Reduce the mixer speed to low, and add the sugar mixture. Beat together until it resembles wet sand. Add half the hot milk, and whisk until blended. Transfer the cocoa mixture to the saucepan. Cook over medium heat, while continuously whisking, until thickened — about 8 minutes. Strain into the bowl of chocolate. Let sit for 3 minutes before stirring smooth with a wooden spoon. Press a sheet of plastic wrap onto the surface of the pudding and chill for 2 hours before serving

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products

www.countrymeadowltd.com

Perfect Chocolate Curls on FoodistaPerfect Chocolate Curls

Tue 16 Mar '10

Sometimes It’s Just Not Worth It

I love luxury, unique products and it makes it even better when the product is made from fair trade ingredients.

However, sometimes cost can be an issue!

For several years now we have offered our Umoja product line which includes soap and whipped body cream.

These products are made with fair trade virgin coconut oil, unrefined shea butter and kpangnan. They are also naturally scented with essential oil blends.

Over the years the cost of the above raw ingredients have increased dramatically resulting in us having to raise our prices. This increase in price has knocked this particular product line into the stratosphere as far as pricing goes.

So while using fair trade ingredients might be well and good it does not benefit anyone if the end price is so high that many people will opt for a lower priced item.

We have made the financial decision to revamp our Umoja product line replacing all fair trade ingredients with the food grade ingredients used in all of our other products. This will bring the end price down very close to what our other soap and creams cost with the exception of the Imara set. Imara is made with a complex blend of essential oils and tends to run slightly higher in cost than fragrance oils but we should be able to bring the price down so it’s affordable!

All of the Umoja products will continue to be scented naturally with essential oil blends!

I love this collection (Imara being my fav!) and look forward to being able to lower our costs so you can enjoy them without having to take out a second mortgage!

We hope to have the new pricing in effect in the next few weeks.

Imara Collection

Imara Collection

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products

www.countrymeadowltd.com

Mon 15 Mar '10

Cool Product – Salt & Pepper Mills

For years I had wanted fancy salt and pepper mills but never really found any that I liked. I wanted something nice but not made from wood.

One day last year as I was browsing Amazon.com I came across a William Bounds set in GREEN!

I bought those up in a hurry as they were the only green ones I could find. I’m assuming they don’t make that particular color anymore however they do have a Ruby Red one!

For a plentiful selection of mills visit William Bounds!

William Bounds Pepper Mill

William Bounds Pepper Mill

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco Friendly Shea Butter Spa Product

www.countrymeadowltd.com

Fri 12 Mar '10

Friday Free-For-All

Daylight Saving
Starts this Sunday.
Set your clocks AHEAD 1 hour.
I really hate losing that one hour however we get to make up for it in the fall when we gain it back!

2012
We bought the movie 2012 last weekend.
I’m hoping to have time this weekend to watch it.

Tougher Cell Phone Laws
Heads up peeps!
Washington lawmakers are passing a new law with sharper teeth for those of you who insist on driving and texting/talking on cell phones.

Once this law passes (and it will!) you WILL be pulled over if you have your cell phone up to your ear….it will NOT be a second offense anymore.

Cost: $124.00

Florida Tomato Shortage
I remember a few years ago we went through this same thing. I certainly won’t mind if there is no tomato on my burger!

What Killed Lehman?
And we are still suffering the after effects.

Cory Haim
So sad and so young.

I have nothing really pressing to do this weekend. Just a lot of small stuff. I do however still have a room I’m trying to declutter. Maybe I can find time to work on that!

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products

www.countrymeadowltd.com

Thu 11 Mar '10

Eco News: Weed Killer Castrates Frogs

Weed killer ‘castrates’ male frogs, study says
By Azadeh Ansari, CNN

(CNN) — Atrazine, a weed killer widely used in the Midwestern United States and other agricultural areas of the world, can chemically “castrate” male frogs and turn some into females, according to a new study.

New research suggests the herbicide may be a cause of amphibian declines around the globe, said biologists at the University of California-Berkeley, who conducted the study. The findings are being published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Researchers found that long-term exposure to low levels of atrazine — 2.5 parts per billion of water — emasculated three-quarters of laboratory frogs and turned one in 10 into females. Scientists believe the pesticide interferes with endocrine hormones, such as estrogen and testosterone.

“The effects of atrazine in the long term have been shown to demasculinize or chemically castrate [frogs], combined with complete feminization of some animals,” said lead researcher Tyrone B. Hayes, a biologist and herpetologist at the University of Berkeley.

“We need to reconfigure how we evaluate chemicals in the environment and the impact on environmental health and public health,” he said.

Hayes found that 10 percent of the exposed genetic male frogs developed into functional females who copulated with unexposed males and produced viable eggs. The other 90 percent of the exposed male frogs expressed decreased libido, reduced sperm count and decreased fertility, among other findings.

Syngenta, a Swiss company that is the largest manufacturer of atrazine, has challenged the validity of Hayes’ study.

“We haven’t seen these kinds of responses that Dr. Hayes reports,” said Keith Solomon, an environmental toxicologist at the University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada, who has served as a consultant to Syngenta. “Some of these studies are poorly conducted and are entirely inconsistent.”

The new study’s implications for atrazine’s effect on humans is unclear. But some scientists are concerned the herbicide may pose risks to reproductive health.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency last year launched a comprehensive evaluation of the herbicide to investigate any possible links between atrazine and cancer and to determine whether new restrictions are necessary. The EPA’s current safety standard for atrazine in drinking water is three ppb.

The European Union banned atrazine in 2004 because it was consistently showing up in levels higher than 0.1 ppb — its threshold for harmful chemicals — in drinking water.

Farmers in the United States continue to use atrazine on crops.

The herbicide has been a long-standing favorite among corn, sorghum and sugarcane farmers because it is affordable and can eliminate the need for tilling the soil. Tens of millions of pounds of atrazine are used each year in the United States. Syngenta estimates that 60 million pounds were used during 2008, most of it on corn.

A 2006 study by the U.S. Geological Survey found atrazine in approximately 75 percent of stream water and about 40 percent of all groundwater samples from agricultural areas tested between 1992 and 2001.

The Natural Resources Defense Council, an advocacy organization, released a report in August 2009 that documented spikes of atrazine in the water supplies of Midwestern and Southern agricultural areas where the pesticide is primarily applied.

Home or municipal carbon filters can remove atrazine from water but some water filtration systems in small towns are not equipped to filter out atrazine. Water systems in a handful of states have sued atrazine’s manufacturers in an effort to force them to pay for removing the pesticide from drinking water.

Tim Pastoor, principal scientist for Syngenta, told CNN that the EPA’s current levels for atrazine are safe and that “there is political pressure to get atrazine re-examined.”

“Residues of atrazine and all our crop protection products in water do not pose a health risk for consumers,” Syngenta says on its Web site.

The company also says “ongoing laboratory and field research by university scientists shows that atrazine has no effect on the survival, growth or limb deformities of frogs.”

But Jennifer Sass, a senior scientist with the NRDC’s health and environment program, believes the research by Hayes and the other University of California, Berkeley, biologists is valid.

Sass also is skeptical of Syngenta’s claims.

“Their tactic is to flood the scientific literature with negative data to negate the other studies,” she said. “It’s only their studies that show that atrazine is not an endocrine disrupter.”

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products

www.countrymeadowltd.com

'

Eco News: Toxic Towns

Toxic towns: People of Mossville ‘are like an experiment’
By David S. Martin, CNN Medical Senior Producer

Westlake, Louisiana (CNN) — Gather current and former Mossville, Louisiana, residents in a room and you’re likely to hear a litany of health problems and a list of friends and relatives who died young.

“I got cancer. My dad had cancer. In fact, he died of cancer. It’s a lot of people in this area who died of cancer,” says Herman Singleton Jr., 51, who also lost two uncles and an aunt to cancer.

Singleton and many others in this predominantly African-American community in southwest Louisiana suspect the 14 chemical plants nearby have played a role in the cancer and other diseases they say have ravaged the area.

For decades, Mossville residents have complained about their health problems to industry, and to state and federal agencies. Now with a new Environmental Protection Agency administrator outspoken about her commitment to environmental justice, expectations are growing.

“I’m pretty hopeful now,” say Debra Ramirez, 55, who grew up in Mossville and who lost a sister at 45 of sarcoidosis, an inflammatory disease. “I do see her trying to do the right thing.”

Lisa Jackson, a native of New Orleans, Louisiana, and the first African-American administrator of the EPA, this year listed environmental justice as one of her seven priorities.

And the EPA held a meeting in Mossville last month formally kicking off a study designed to see if the community qualifies as a Superfund site, reserved for the most polluted places in the United States. Superfund site designation would bring federal funding for cleaning up Mossville.

Mossville Environmental Action Now (MEAN), the local environmental group, has asked government and industry to relocate residents who want to leave, offer a free health clinic and lower emissions from the plants. Superfund relocates residents only as a last resort.

“There are people that are getting sick; there are people who are dying because of what is happening in our community. These chemicals are killing us. They will destroy Mossville if nothing happens,” says Dorothy Felix of MEAN.

Thousands of pounds of carcinogens such as benzene and vinyl chloride are released from the facilities near Mossville each year, according to the EPA’s Toxic Release Inventory.

Chemical boom
The industrial boom began in and around Mossville during World War II. Vinyl chloride makers, refineries, a coal-fired energy plant and chemical plants now operate in what was once rural country, rich in agriculture, fishing and hunting.

Robert Bullard, author of “Dumping in Dixie,” says it’s no surprise industry chose Mossvillle, an unincorporated community founded by African Americans in the 1790s.

“What happens is zoning becomes very political, and what happens is people with power, with lawyers and elected officials who can fight for them and make decisions for them, oftentimes will get things placed away from them and placed in locations where other people live” Bullard says.

Without the power, Bullard says, African-Americans have borne the brunt of living near industry, landfills and hazardous facilities.

“African Americans are more than 79 percent more likely to live in communities where there are dangerous facilities that pose health threats,” says Bullard, director of the Environmental Justice Resource Center at Clark Atlanta University.

Bullard says Jackson has breathed new life into environmental justice since she took office last year. During the previous eight years, he says, “environmental justice was non-existent or invisible.”

Mossville fears
Over time, Mossville residents became worried emissions from the plants were affecting their health.

Those fears heightened in 1998 when the federal Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry tested the blood of 28 Mossville residents and found dioxin levels three times the national average.

Dioxins are carcinogens. Volcanoes and forest fires create dioxins naturally. They are also released during vinyl chloride production, at waste incinerators and by wood processing facilities.

Residents were retested for dioxins in 2001, with similar results, but in 2006 the agency concluded that residents did not face a health risk, an assessment echoed by local industry.

“The emissions from the plants are within the standards set by the various agencies, and they are of a level that they have no ill effects on the local community,” says Larry DeRoussel, executive director of the Lake Area Industry Alliance.

DeRoussel speaks for local industry. CNN invited all 14 companies to speak on camera. None of them accepted; some said interviewing DeRoussel would suffice.

DeRoussel points to statistics showing the cancer rate in Calcasieu Parish, the local county, is not significantly higher than the state average.

But Wilma Subra, a chemist from New Iberia, Louisiana, who has worked with Mossville residents, says the statistics are misleading because the parish covers such a large area, more than 1,000 square miles, and more than 180,000 residents. Mossville is a tiny fraction of that, with about 375 homes adjacent to the chemical plants.

“The people of Mossville are like an experiment. They know that they have high levels of dioxin in their blood, and they’re allowed to continue to live there and be exposed,” says Subra, recipient of the MacArthur genius grant in 1999 for her environmental work with communities.

After the EPA announced its Superfund investigation, Felix says she’s hopeful for the first time in years Mossville will be saved.

“This is the first time I’ve had a little hope in EPA,” Felix says.

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products

www.countrymeadowltd.com

'

Updating Blog…..

So WordPress wants me to update to the latest and greatest version.

Our blog is set up so I just click the Please Update Now link and it is supposed to be updated automatically…..with no glitches.

But we all know….
Glitches sometimes happen….

Here goes….

Update:
Ok..that was really scary!
In past versions all I had to do was click on the Automatic Upgrade link and it did everything it was supposed to…all by itself!

This time however the blog was actually deactivated and I had to manually go through a series of steps to deactivate plug-ins, upgrade the blog, upgrade plug-ins, then reactive the blog.

Thank goodness it appears that everything came out fine!

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products

www.countrymeadowltd.com

Wed 10 Mar '10

Recipe Of The Week: Hot Wings

I looked at all the recipes under this category and hot means spicy hot.
Nose sweating, tongue burning hot.
I don’t like hot.

However I’m still going to post the link below for those of you who do.
And no, I didn’t save and print out any recipes.
As I said….
I don’t like hot.

7 Must-Try Hot Wings

Perfect for parties or weekend munchies, these hot wings kick up the heat — and the flavor. Food & Wine’s Grace Parisi makes the best classic buffalo wings — slightly crispy, a bit saucy, and very spicy — then creates six new versions with flavorings like Old Bay, mango, and Jamaican jerk.

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products

www.countrymeadowltd.com

Mexican Wings on FoodistaMexican Wings

Tue 9 Mar '10

Essential Oil VS Fragrance Oil

Essential oils are obtained most often by steam/water distillation from the leaves, bark, stems and/or roots of specific plants. Essential oils can be highly concentrated and need to be diluted in a carrier oil for use on the skin. Essential oils are used in aromatherapy, bath/body products and candles. Due to climate/harvesting conditions essential oil prices can fluctuate dramatically from season to season.

Because steam distilled essential oils are derived directly from plants they are considered ‘natural’ however, those essential oils that are obtained by solvent extraction could very well still have a bit of solvent that is not 100% removed.

Some of my favorites are:
Lavender
Patchouli
Spruce
Rosemary
Thyme (white)

Fragrance oils can be made with a combination of essential oils and synthetics. Fragrance oil blends are considered proprietary and the manufacturer is not required to reveal the exact oils used. Fragrance oils are also highly concentrated and should not be used directly on the skin. Fragrance oils are very versatile and are made to be used in just about every scented product imaginable!

There are those people who insist on promoting the misconception that fragrance oils are bad for you (because they are not ‘natural’) but as of yet I have not seen anyone provide proof (scientific abstracts) to substantial their claims. All fragrance oil manufacturers must follow guidelines using GRAS (generally recognized as safe) ingredients and are not allowed to use ingredients known to cause harm.

Why use one over the other?
While essential oils can be very nice by themselves or in blends you are limited as to what you can create.

I can guarantee you, you will not be able to create a strawberry or lilac scented product using essential oils (there isnt a strawberry or lilac essential oil!!!). Be very wary of others selling any type of product that states they use an essential oil that so obviously cannot be distilled (ie: banana, apple, almond, buttercream etc.). If they do not know the difference between an essential oil and a fragrance oil they are either being misleading or they simply have not done their research and should not be selling their product in the first place!

Even though we offer a small selection of soap scented with essential oil blends I much prefer using fragrance oils! There are literally hundreds of premade blends out there ready to try and when you take those premade blends and start combining them for your own signature scent you could come up with thousands of different combinations!

I hesitate to list my favorite fragrance oils!
I really don’t like to comment on specific scents as smell is highly subjective from person to person. What is very strong to one person may be very weak to another. Smell can also be affected by mood. I know when I have a headache or am not feeling quite up to par there are certain scents that I have to stay away from. I also know that a scent that I love one day I could leave 3 days later!

Right at this very moment my favorite scents are:
Satuma Guava
Ginger Lime
Sandalwood Vanilla
Crystal Blue
That however could change tomorrow!

Scents I hate:
I can, without doubt, tell you what scents I hate (which is why we don’t make products with them!).

Lemongrass
Eucalpytus
Years ago we used to make votive candles using these two essential oils in combination. It finally got to the point that it was literally making me sick that I had to discontinue them…which was too bad as they were a great seller!

Other than those two scents/essential oils I can pretty much say I can handle just about everything else!

Rebecca
Country Meadow Ltd.
Eco Friendly Shea Butter Spa Products

www.countrymeadowltd.com

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