Posts Tagged ‘green’

A kinder, greener office space

March 30, 2009

I read today that the White House is going green, so it seems like a good time to find some ways to make my own office greener.

I plan to start with the standard “reduce, reuse and recycle” since I already reduce a lot – using less paper and other resources saves money. Since I do a lot of my business for Star50 online, I already use less paper than more traditional businesses. Of course, there is always more we can all do and I plan to do my part!

Recycling, too, is easy. Simply set up bins in a central location for paper, plastic, glass and aluminum cans. I plan to have paper collection bins in several location throughout the office – near printers, copiers and workstations. If you can’t get recycling picked up at your office, you can either take it home for curbside recycling or drop it off at a recycling center on the way home from work.

With the green bug hitting so many people, greener office supplies are becoming more and more available. You can buy everything from organic cleaning supplies to recycled paper to keep your office environmentally friendly. With all the shipping I do, I was happy to find that I can even buy and use green packing materials! Committing to go green with even one product line such as packing materials, can make a huge difference in a business’s environmental footprint.

Another simple and easy way to go green at work is to turn off computers when they are not in use. According to goinggreen.com, nearly half of U.S. employees who use a PC don’t shut down their computers at the end of the workday, wasting energy costing billions each year.

If you are on and off the computer all day, check out the eco-button that allows you to quickly and easily stop and restart the computer each time you step away from the computer.

You can also reduce your energy usage at the office by replacing light bulbs with CFEs or LED lights when they burn out. Both can save energy and save you money. According to The Daily Green, LEDs can save up to $20 a month in locations where the lights are left on all of the time.

There are so many ways to make my office greener I can’t wait to get started!

Green is in the Air

March 24, 2009

St. Patrick’s Day may be over, but it seems like everyone around me is still going green – environmentally green, that is.

I’ve always been concerned with historical preservation, an interest I carry over to many of my handbags. So, it seems natural for me to find ways to preserve the environment as well. With Spring Break and summer travel on the horizon, I’ve been looking for ways to make my trips a bit greener.

Planet Green has some excellent ideas for making Spring Break and summer travel green and easy. With a little bit of planning, you can reduce the environmental impact of your vacation by packing less, using green products, renting a greener hybrid car and eating locally grown foods.

If you are planning a fairly traditional spring break or summer vacation, you can do your part and buy green sunscreen, green clothing, green tents and even organic cocktails. If you are traveling, try choosing a green city such as New York or San Francisco that offers environmentally friendly entertainment.

A trip to San Francisco can include using public transportation, eating organic and vegan foods and visiting state and national parks.

Like San Francisco, New York offers public transportation and green restaurants. It also has several certified environmentally hotels, including the Benjamin that was renovated and Ecotel certified in 1999.

Many other U.S. cities, including Denver, Dallas, Fort Meyers, Detroit and Philadelphia have environmentally sound offerings for residents and tourists who want to have some fun while staying green.

If you want to take it a step farther – or greener, as the case may be – you could join a growing group of people who are planning alternative Spring Breaks and summer vacations during which they volunteer either at home or abroad rather than consuming and polluting.

Depending on your time and your pocketbook, a green vacation could be volunteering at your local food bank, building homes for Habitat for Humanity, painting houses on a Navajo reservation or planting trees in Mexico.

I’m still in the planning and dreaming stages, but wherever I go on my next vacation I want it to be green.

Parading that Irish spirit

March 3, 2009
I don’t know about you, but I’m really hoping I have the “luck of the Irish” on St. Patrick’s Day this year. So I‘m planning ahead for a memorable holiday. Every St. Patty‘s Day I dress all in green, right down to my handbag. And whether it‘s the luck of the Irish or just good planning, I’ve designed several handbags that are available in green, giving me many choices about what purse to carry!

I’ve also been checking out St. Patrick’s Day events across the nation so I‘ll have somewhere to wear all that green. Every pub in the world, of course, will be celebrating with Irish music, dancing and beer and most large cities are having parades.

Here in Denver, Colorado, we’ll kick off the holiday the Saturday before with the biggest St. Patrick’s Day parade west of the Mississippi with more than 200 floats and 10,000 marchers. The parade features floats, marchers, step-dancers, bands and bagpipes.

Wonder which U.S. city has the largest parade in the nation? It’s New York City, where the city’s Irish population shows it’s pride by marching up 5th Street clan by clan. Every year the archbishop of New York reviews the all-marcher parade from the steps of St. Patrick’s Cathedral. The New York City St. Patrick’s Day parade has been around since Irishmen living in New York organized it in 1762 – fourteen years before the Declaration of Independence was signed! Of course, with New York City’s huge Irish population, one parade just isn’t enough – more than 15 boroughs, including Queens and Brooklyn, host their own parades.

If St. Patty‘s Day ever catches me in the deep south I‘ll head to New Orleans, Louisiana – the city that has a parade for everything. The Irish Channel St. Patrick’s Day Committee expects this year‘s St. Patrick‘s Day Parade to be the largest it’s ever had. In New Orleans, parade participants start with a special Mass, then march up Magazine street dressed in formal attire. What could be better than well-dressed Irishmen for a St. Patty’s Day bash?

Though the parades are the public display of Irish spirit in the U.S., the parades are just the beginning. It all ends in a pub full of Irishmen and lovers of all things Irish wearing and honoring Ireland’s patron saint with drink and song.