Archive for the ‘christmas’ Category

Super Christmas Trees are the future

Sunday, December 16th, 2007

Researchers at the University of Southern Denmark are at work developing a cloning method for Christmas trees which can mean that in a few years all the world’s Christmas trees will be identical and perfect.  The researchers have developed a special robot which can select the best Christmas tree seeds, clone them and get them to sprout with the help of hormones.

When the seeds have sprouted, they will be planted in earth and the result will be Christmas trees which are completely identical.

“Only wind and weather will effect the trees.  But if they have precisely the same growth conditions it will be impossible to see the difference between the trees,” said Engineer Palle Hermansen, a professor at the University of Southern Denmark, to the Danish newspaper “Nyhedsavisen.”

He emphasizes the point that the perfect Christmas tree is not genetically modified.

“We are not going in and messing with nature.  We simply chose the elite of Christmas trees and copy them,” explains Palle Hermansen.

Despite this, many are not enthusiastic.

“Many traditions and feelings are attached to the Christmas tree.  The charm is in the search for the perfect Christmas tree.  You take a saw and go out into the forest to find the best tree.  That search can become meaningless if all trees are perfect and the same” says Dr. Phil Johan de Mylius who is also employed by the University of Southern Denmark.

Ten tips for an eco-wise Christmas

Friday, December 7th, 2007

Between Thanksgiving and New Year’s day, Americans throw away a million extra tons of garbage each week, including holiday wrapping and packaging, according to Robert Lilienfeld co-author of the book “Use Less Stuff: Environmental Solutions for Who We Really Are.” This year, Americans will send nearly 2 billion holiday cards, use more than 38,000 miles of ribbon and leave millions of Christmas trees on the curb.

Ten tips for an eco-wise Christmas
Between Thanksgiving and New Year’s day, Americans throw away a million extra tons of garbage each week, including holiday wrapping and packaging, according to Robert Lilienfeld co-author of the book “Use Less Stuff: Environmental Solutions for Who We Really Are.” This year, Americans will send nearly 2 billion holiday cards, use more than 38,000 miles of ribbon and leave millions of Christmas trees on the curb.
 
 
Here are ten tips for an ecological Christmas:

1. Do not send a traditional card but use an electronic card which does not require physical resources to make or distribute. Many electronic cards can be personalized. Try for example this one.

2. Stop using plastic Christmas decorations. Make them yourself from, for example, recycled paper. Artist Jeff Clapp turns empty aluminum oxygen canisters from Mt. Everest into decorative bells for $2,400 each. Leftover aluminum shavings are also used, making nice tree ornaments that someone might actually buy (the “Everest” balls are $48 for four at Eco-Artware.com)

3. Use LED lights. Trade in the old style light bulbs with modern LED lights. LED lights use 80-90% less energy compared to old light bulbs. You can also use living lights like people do in many countries. You can chose soy, vegetable, wax or beeswax candles all of which are renewable and biodegradable materials rather than paraffin wax candles.

4. Plan your shopping trip. Go where you need to go but do all your shopping at once to avoid repeat journeys.


5. Avoid new shopping bags when you buy Christmas presents. Are you afraid of being stopped for shoplifting? Danny Seo, the author of “Simply Green Giving” attaches his receipts to the outside of shopping bags with a paper clip.

6. Pack your presents in ordinary gift wrapping. Be creative. Use newspaper or colorful pages from magazines. You can also pack presents in a beautiful scarf and make the packaging part of the present.

7. Buy alternative Christmas presents such as gift certificates to charitable organizations. Oxfamamericaunwrapped.com invites donors to “buy,” among other things, a camel ($175), a cow ($75), a sheep ($45), building tools ($25) or finance the planting of 50 trees ($30) as a way to support Oxfam’s programs in developing countries. Another alternative is to give friends items that save energy, such as low-flow shower heads and fluorescent light bulbs, which use much less energy than candescent bulbs.

8. Buy a genuine Christmas tree. Artificial trees can be difficult to dispose of. Genuine Christmas trees can be burned or made into compost. New trees are replanted each year but you can also buy a Christmas tree with roots which can be replanted into the ground so that you can reuse the tree next year. Friends of the Urban Forest of San Francisco (Fuf.net) rents nontraditional trees, such as Southern Magnolia and Strawberry, for $150, and replants them on city streets once Christmas is over.

9. Deck the table with clay or porcelain plates and use cutlery made of metal which can be washed and reused again and again.

10. Use cold water to do the dishes after Christmas dinner. You will discover that it can certainly be done. Use ecological dish soap such as Ecover Ecological Washing Tablets or others..