Sun Valley: Archives

Topic: Ecology

Women with a Cause: Carole King, Part 2

Plum had the wonderful opportunity to sit down with singer/songwriter Carole King. In this segment, Carole discusses the founding of her own record company (Rockingale Records), the release of her "Welcome to My Living Room" DVD, and her environmental work, particularly her work for Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act.

Women with a Cause: Carole King, Part 3

Women with a Cause: Carole King, Part 1

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Community Canine Clean Sweep

Farley on Trail

We’ve all done it. (Or, at least we’ve all wanted to do it at some point in our hiking career.) You’re out on the trail, having a good time, hiking around and your dog goes number two. You know you are supposed to take your plastic sack, pick up that mess and dispose of it in the neatly placed dog-waste cans. But the idea of carrying that thing another two miles sounds awful, and so sometimes, you just might look the other way.

Craig Barry on MNN

Executive Director of the Environmental Resource Center, Craig Barry, discusses the environmental programs he's involved with on the MorningNoon&Night show.
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Celebrate Earth Day

Green Your Scene Promo
Every year, on April 22, we celebrate Earth Day. It is a day to come together and show our appreciation for the environment here and everywhere. The tradition began in 1970 thanks to U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson. His idea was to start a nationwide grassroots movement that would push the environment into the political limelight, and his idea worked.

Senator Nelson came up with Earth Day after he took a trip to Santa Barbara, CA and saw the devastating aftermath of an oil spoil off the coast. He was so disgusted and outraged that he went back to Washington and passed a bill designating April 22 as Earth Day.

The date April 22 was chosen for a number of reasons. For one, it was the birthday of actor Eddie Albert, who did a lot of work for the environment. It was also the birthday of John Muir who founded the Sierra Club. It was also the birthday of Julius Sterling Morton, founder of Arbor Day, a tree-planting holiday that began in 1872. It was also the 100th birthday of Vladimir Lenin, which may have been just sheer coincidence, but J. Edgar Hoover, director of the FBI, was not thrilled and allegedly conducted surveillances during the 1970 Earth Day demonstrations.

That being dead, the first Earth Day was a huge success. On April 22, 1970 20 million Americans took to the streets, parks, and auditoriums to demonstrate for a healthy, sustainable environment. Smaller groups that had been fighting different forms of environmental abuse like oil spills, raw sewage and pesticides joined together in solidarity. Twenty years later, in 1990, Earth Day drove the movement toward recycling. In 2000, activists pushed for an end to global warming and development of clean energy. Last year Earth Day was one of the largest environmental celebrations ever with around one billion people from all over the world including countries such as Ukraine, Venezuela, Togo, Spain and beyond.

Let’s make this year’s Earth Day even better. To find out more about what you can do to improve your environment check out Plum’s Earth Bytes.

Earth Bytes: Forget Snail Mail

cat opens mail

Want to cut down on your carbon footprint and save money? Try email over snail mail, especially if you are a business with a big old mailing list.

Here’s an example of how bad mass mailings can be on your pocket book and the environment. Let’s say you are an art gallery in Ketchum. For your show mailings, normally you have special glossy paper that has to be printed in California. Then those cards have to come back to Sun Valley for approval. Then they journey to Boise for a mail service to send it all over the country. According to a website the environmental cost of such mailings is devastating; before reaching its destination each card will have traveled around 2,000 miles only to end up in a landfill sooner than later.

So ditch the envelopes and the stamps and start working on that list of emails. You, your costumers and the earth will not be sorry for this new technological improvement.

Going Green on MNN

Steve and Dennis of FirmGreen Energy, brought environmental awareness to the 48STRAIGHT weekend and their green one pieces to the set of MNN. Find out ways to go green.
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Michael Ames on the Guide: Habitat

Sun Valley Guide Editor Michael Ames talks to Plum's David Kuhn about the new spring issue of the guide: Habitat.
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Sun Valley: Going Green

The Community Library hosted three nights of lectures designed to educate the community on ways to go green. Plum chatted with the speakers about global warming and how everyone can do their part to better the environment.
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Earth Bytes: Engaging Dystopia

Mary Mattingly
“If the bath water got only half a degree warmer every hour, we would never know when to scream.” -Bertrand Russell


When Barbi Reed, owner of Anne Reed Gallery and Muffet Jones, Gallery Director, attended Art Basel Miami they came across something entirely new: almost every artist there was creating art that dealt with the environment. Both Reed and Jones admit to being surprised. As Jones elaborates, “while artists have always been on the cutting edge of ideas and social issues, the focus on the environment is fairly new.” In Miami, Reed says, the emphasis on the environment was “blatant”.

Earth Bytes: Green Your Scene

Green Your Scene Promo

As a part of 48STRAIGHT’s move toward zero emission and zero waste events, 48STRAIGHT and the Community Library will co-host the Green Your Scene Environmental Symposium, March 11 -13, 2008. The Symposium will be a prelude to 48STRAIGHT’s weekend of snow sports competitions and musical performances.

Each night speakers from all over the nation and the world will talk about climate change and what we can do on the macro and micro level, especially in mountain town communities. Sun Valley native Aimee Christensen will serve as the moderator for the three-day symposium.

Here is a complete schedule of events:

Tuesday, March 11 at The Community Library

Rocky Anderson, former Mayer of Salt Lake City, known for reducing
greenhouse gas emissions from municipal operations by 31% in less than four years, will speak about global warming, its consequences and what we can do to fix it.

Nancy Taylor,
will lecture on how to build an earth-Friendly community, teaching individuals and businesses what they can do to reduce their carbon footprint.

Auden Schendler
, will offer concrete ways we can implement green solutions into the Wood River Valley, drawing on years of experience.

 

March 12th at The Community Library

Jana Dean will talk about the link between the human condition and the earth’s condition. Dean’s lecture will describe experiences of activism, crisis, community, healing, and practical local wisdom that point the way to sustaining planetary systems.

Jack Turner
will teach us what happens at home, how global warming effects not only the melting ice caps, but also our local, daily lives.



Thursday, March 13th, Presbyterian Church of the Big Wood


May Boeve
will discuss the current grassroots movement to combat climate change throughout the United States.

Mariel Hemingway,
Sun Valley native, will discuss how healthy living can turn into eco-consciousness and environmental preservation.

Michael Franti
will participate in an interview with moderator, Aimee Christensen, giving his insight on the state of the world, what we can do to be more green, and how he works to make his tours more eco-friendly.


The lectures are free and open to the public.

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