Musings of an everyday woman . . .

Reflections on living and loving life . . .

My Contribution to APLS October Blog Carnival October 12, 2008

I’ve learned an awful lot this past year while attempting to live in a more earth-friendly, sustainable lifestyle, and am offering my “two cents” on the theme of Environmental Education for the APLS October Blog carnival.  Click here to see what APLS (Affluent Persons Living Sustainably) is all about!

 

At first I thought–no way–I’m not affluent and I’m only really beginning to try to live sustainably, but then I learned differently from my green, bloggy friends.  To see where you fall on the “Global Rich List,” click here.  You may be very surprised about the definition of “affluence”, too! 

Anyway, Abbie over at the Farmer’s Daughter  (and my daughter in real life, lucky me!) is hosting this event at APLS October Blog carnival.  So, regarding the topic of “Environmental Education” . . .

Thanks to Abbie, I had the pleasure of taking part in a life-changing event, which really made me re-think the way we live.  Two summers ago, we had the pleasure of taking part in teacher professional development, which included living at a totally green school in Cape Eleuthera for a week!  I really learned by living and this experience has had a profound effect on how I now think about everything–in a much more environmentally-friendly fashion.

 

First, a bit of a side step to the Island School, because this was really a life-changing experience for me.  Who wouldn’t accept the opportunity to go to the Bahamas for a week on vacation with your daughter?  Granted, it was August (read very hot, humid here) and it wasn’t really a vacation, but a learning experience (read no AC, limited water supply, etc.), so this is what it really meant:

·         Spending an entire day traveling: 3 planes, including one tiny one from Rock Sound to the Cape, an hour spent in a steaming, hot Caribbean airport waiting for a taxi that would take us for a 2-hr. equally steamy ride over rough roads at a hefty fee

·         Absolutely no COLD water and NO ice for drinks.  In fact, the basic beverage of choice was warm water, which we carried everywhere with us in refillable containers, which had been collected off the roof (and purified through an electrostatic process).  Fortunately I didn’t see the multitude of frogs that inhabited the holding tank until our last day on the island.

·         An introduction to “Navy” showers, which means five minutes, tops, that the water is running, and turning if off between lathering up and rinsing

·         “If it’s yellow, let it mellow . . . “  (OK, I thought this was just my Dad, many years previously, who said this because he was just plain cheap!)  Later, I learned that I had grown up “green” in part before it was fashionable.  This was probably the toughest habit to kick, because I had developed an automatic reflex to flush over the years. . .

·         Sleeping in dormitory-style rooms (25 or so women in double-decker bunkbeds) sans air-conditioning, just a few overhead fans

·         While sleeping in this heat, also being visited by “no see-ums,” which visited nightly, squeezing their tiny bodies in between the screens.  (Fortunately for me, I must not have been as tasty, young and sweet, as some of my colleagues were, because if I spritzed with bug spray (probably a no! no!) before retiring, I didn’t wake up in the raised red welts that some of my colleagues did.)

·         Washing dishes, filling compost buckets, slopping pigs . . . and did I say washing dishes by hand?

·         Filling large water jugs and lugging them to the dorms at night

·         Waking up to the blowing conch at 6 am to participate in an hours- long exercise sessions of running, biking, and/or swimming

   OK, to be fair, here was the UPSIDE:

·         Swimming in the incredibly clear, turquoise, cleansing waters of the Caribbean

·         Bonding with fellow, like-minded teachers from all over the world who were looking for a little adventure over the summer and the opportunity to learn something new

·         Waking up to the lovely tune of the blowing conch at 6 am to participate in a morning greeting with friends and an hour long exercise session of running, biking, and/or swimming

·         Crab hunting at night with flashlights and lots of laughs

  • Eating delectable island-grown salads and spicy Caribbean rice dishes, mostly from local ingredients, with fresh fruit for dessert
  • Discovering the local marine wildlife through snorkeling and scuba expeditions
  • Visiting local schools, also supported the Island School
  • Touring Cape Eleuthera Research Institute to learn about hydroponic gardening, local fish species, and efforts to preserve the coral reefs (a joint adventure with the Island School)
  • Oh, and did I say swimming in the brilliant, turquoise, clear, wonderful Caribbean waters?

    

Abbie and me in the incredible Bahamian waters, the best way to get clean!

Abbie and me in the incredible Bahamian waters, the best way to get clean!

 

  

  

 

 

Working to preserve the coral reefs . . .

Working to preserve the coral reefs . . .

   

 

  

 

Our colleagues/friends at the Island School . . .

Our colleagues/friends at the Island School . . .

 

   

 

  

 

 

Incredibly beautiful local flora, grows best over the environmentally-designed septic system!

Incredibly beautiful local flora, grows best over the environmentally-designed septic system!

 

 

Wake-up call!

Wake-up call!

 

 

Hydroponically-grown lettuce

 

   

   

 

  

 

 

  

Converting used vegetable oil into bio-diesel to power vehicles on the island . . .

Converting used vegetable oil into bio-diesel to power vehicles on the island . . .

 

   

 

 

Fresh lobster for dinner!

Fresh lobster for dinner!

 

 

We did attend classes, too, outside mostly . . .

We did attend classes, too, outside mostly . . .

 

   

 

 

 

 

Group meetings, sharing, learning, dancing, etc. . . .

Group meetings, sharing, learning, dancing, etc. . . .

 

    

 

 

 

  

   

So, what did I learn at the Island School?

  

 

 

 That I needed to make some life-style changes!

So . . .

Here are a few very simple things I’ve done so far . . .

  • I’ve totally stopped buying bottled water and now use re-fillable aluminum bottles like SIGG or non BPA-plastic filled with my own lovely tap water.
  • I take my own bags to the grocery store and avoid piles of plastic, chinzy bags gathering in my pantry.  (I’ve worked on this a while and now I actually REMEMBER to take my bags with me.  I must admit that I’ve collected quite a cute collection of recyclable bags and that now I’ve expanded beyond the grocery store, taking them everywhere I go shopping.)
  • I actually DO recycle plastics, bottles, and aluminum cans now on a regular basis, rather than just pretending that I do (which was once in a while).
  • I actually LIKE it hot in the summer, even sticky, icky hot, because it’s an excuse to jump in the pool.  My three guys can’t stand the heat after working outside in it all day, so we just have AC in the bedrooms for sleeping.  I must admit that I shut it off during the day, keep curtains closed and doors shut, and only turn it on in time for it to be cool for their sleeping comfort.
  • OK, this might be crazy, but I heard this from a thrifty friend.  At first, I thought it was a bit out there and then I tried it: I shut the furnace off during the day (and now after showers at night, too) because why heat it up all day and night to make hot water that no one needs it?  In the winter, we use our combo wood/oil furnace, so we actually use very little oil.

Probably one of the most important things that I brought back with me was realizing that it was up to me to help spread the word about living in a much more environmentally-friendly way.  I love to share the experiences from the Island School with others–and I’ve also brought much of this information back to my students–although they’re in elementary school– because it’s NEVER too soon to start thinking GREEN!

So, to me, Environmental Education means LIVING it and SHARING it with those around me, especially my students!

 

One Response to “My Contribution to APLS October Blog Carnival”

  1. That post took me back… but only to the good parts, not the hot nights, warm water, and lack of internet!


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