Here’s a site where you can take a simple and fun quiz to test your composting knowledge. It takes less than a minute and might give you some information you didn’t already know.
Category Archives: urban farming
No Christmas Gifts This Year
On NPR I heard about a website called No Christmas Gifts This Year. The idea is that on average Americans are planning to spend $431 on Christmas gifts, that they probably can’t afford. This is down from last year’s figure of $859. (According to the American Research Group)
You can send a note to a friend or family member requesting that you spend time together instead of exchanging gifts. It’s a nice way to take the Grinch-y-ness away from the idea of a year with fewer gifts.
Take a peek at the site and send it to some friends. Less wrapping paper, packaging and junk that will eventually get tossed in the landfills sounds like a good Christmas present for the earth!
Christmas Sights
Lest you think that I spend all of my time in the country, I thought I would post some photos from my hometown of New York City. The other day we picked Lindsay up from school and went to see some of the beautiful Christmas decorations that New York does so well. Our first stop was Lord & Taylor to see the window displays. They were sweet and magical with amazing detail. The photo below shows Clara and the Nutcracker watching a sugar plum fairy dancing. Lindsay was mesmerized.
After that, we went to Rockefeller Center. The normal hordes of people stayed away (somewhat) because of a light drizzle. It was warm, so a little rain didn’t spoil the fun for us. It actually made it possible to get right up to the ice skating rink and see the skaters. We then went to Teuscher Chocolates and got some delicious and very pricey chocolate. But hey a tradition is a tradition. I think next year we might investigate Maison du Chocolat and see how they stack up. We peeked at the windows of Saks 5th Avenue, but they didn’t hold a candle to the ones at Lord and Taylor.
Our very last stop was to grab a bite to eat at Prime Burger. I read about it in NY Magazine’s listing of places to eat around Rockefeller Center. Besides having regular tables, they had funny little pull in desktops. The food was typical diner food with the dial reading high on the grease-o-meter, but Lindsay loved it there. A happy kid at the end of the night is all I could ask for as we contentedly rode the subway back home.
Save a tree
If you are being inundated with holiday catalogs like I am, there is something you can do to reduce the amount you receive. There’s a great website called Catalog Choice that makes it very easy to reduce the number of catalogs you receive. Just click on their site, log in and then select the catalogs that you receive that you no longer want sent to you. You might receive a few more catalogs from the ones you’ve declined because the companies print out several mailing’s worth of catalogs at a time. But, I’ve noticed that the amount of catalogs I receive has been greatly reduced.
The moon tonight
It’s rare that many objects in the night sky outshine the bright city lights here in NYC. The three brightest objects in the sky have moved close to one another. That would be the moon, Jupiter and Venus. Run outside and take a peek because they won’t be this close until November 18, 2052!
Mushroom Hunting In France
So I know that this blog is supposed to be all about all things urban, and it hasn’t been lately. I went to France with my sister to visit my father. He’s not well, so he spent a lot of time sleeping. During his afternoon naps, my sister and I went out on photo safaris. And just for the record…although I live in one of the biggest cities, I am a nature lover. We go up to the Berkshires to visit my husband’s family and I soak in as much nature as I can while I’m there.
So while my father was resting and the relentless French hunters were in the woods shooting, my sister and I walked in the woods (wearing bright colors thank you very much) and took photos. We were absolutely amazed at the diversity of mushrooms.
We ran into a man who was mushroom hunting. He was an elegant older gentleman with a white handlebar mustache. I couldn’t have made up a more perfect French mushroom hunter if I tried. Okay, I guess I would have given him a basket instead of a plastic shopping bag, but I doubt I would have thought of the mustache. I spoke with him in my halting French and asked him what he was looking for. He had two different types of mushrooms that we never did see ourselves. One was a charcoal gray mushroom and one was called sanguine, or something like that with blood (sang) at the beginning of the word. That was very descriptive, because where the mushroom was broken, red liquid seeped out of it. It left very believable blood drops on the sides of his bag.
Below are a few of the mushrooms we saw. The tiny yellow ones that look like the ends of a pencil eraser are called bird’s nests. When the spores are ready the tops come off and you see tiny little puff balls inside the nest that resemble eggs. Absolutely tiny and amazing!