Thursday, February 9, 2012

From the Heart to the Home: Living Sustainably and with Thought

My mind really gets going when I start ingesting some of the ideas over at Eco Friend. This humble little web site isn’t big and flashy, but they tend to collect ideas and images on a wide variety of green topics. Though they aren’t generous with the links, Google makes it easy to look things up for further study.

Today the piece that caught my eye was called “Eco Friendly Houses for Green Living.” This is always a topic of interest for me because, in many ways, it embodies so much of our focus at the Center for Reuniting Families. After all, the home often symbolizes the very heart of the family. And it seems to me that, if we make an effort to make that familial heart as efficient and earth-friendly as can be, we’ve already taken steps to make the family itself more healthy. That is, ideally, caring manifests into every portion of our lives: If we begin by caring deeply about the planet, we come to care about where and how we live. We care about what we eat and where it came from. With all this caring and thought in our lives, how can we not also care more about each other? It is, in a way, about a culture of thought and caring and a way of living consciously that we try to share here at every opportunity.

So the piece on eco friendly houses really gave me a lot to think about. Though not all of these houses are ones I would think of as perfectly eco friendly, I love that an increasing number of people are giving thought and more than lip service to making the structures that protect us more Earth friendly in many ways. And I love that even people like Dow are now talking about the need to make big changes in the way we live and build. More than talk: they’re making it happen.

Of the houses discussed in the article, I was especially impressed with the Torus Design concept house (shown above left). In some ways this house completely reconsiders the way we as a culture currently think about buildings and homes. And when you read about it, you realize that was the point. From the web site of the designer, Colorado’s Dream Green Homes:
The Torus Design concept was inspired by the movie Thrive, which outlines ways of creating prosperity and equality in the world. The design brings together three emerging trends: increasing self sufficiency — including renewable energy and food production, families moving back together to save money, and sustainability. These trends are evident in the growth of home gardens, organic food, green building, eco-conciousness, off-grid homes, do-it-yourself attitudes, and cost cutting strategies such as bartering and trading for goods and services.
With people and companies like this putting such great effort into rethinking this most basic of human needs, it’s difficult not to be optimistic about the future. I love what it says about thinking about sustainable living and the families that will get to create the core of their lives around these bright, new hearths.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Super Efficient Prius On the Way

A Toyota Prius that gets 95 mpg may be in easy view according to Treehugger, who tends to get a bead on such things. From Treehugger:
The plug-in hybrid (PHEV) version of Toyota's best-selling Prius hybrid, which is debuting in the U.S. next month and will be commercially available in 14 states this Spring (national rollout in 2013), was first supposed to be rated at around 87 MPG-equivalent. This alone would have been enough to put the plug-in Prius pretty high on the fuel-efficiency list, but after more testing, Toyota has revised its estimate and now says it is confident that the Prius PHEV will get 95 MPGe, which is 2 MPGe more than the Chevrolet Volt, which is rated at 93 MPGe.
You can read more here.

Meanwhile, Britain’s Lightning Car Company is getting ready to debut their completely electric supercar. We certainly live in a time of great and exciting change! You can read more about that car here.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

A Month -- a Lifetime -- in View

I love National Geographic’s Daily News for a quick snapshot of the health and heart of our planet. At a time when we can be given so much news that is both conflicting and disheartening, National Geographic’s concerned but mostly non-political take can be refreshing. And one thing I really enjoy: it often gives me a smile along with a dose of new information. Not many news agencies can say that!

Their “Best of” photo collections are a great way to get a fast view of the planet and a few of those smiles. Here the “Best of January” begins with a trio of penguins admiring a plush toy in their image. It’s a gorgeous shot and a great thought: “The composition of this image reinforces what to me is its main point,” says Monica Corcoran, senior National Geographic photo editor, “communication. The ‘talking heads’ are not sure what to make of this oddly familiar intruder.”

Thanks, National Geographic, for once again reminding us that there is so much still to smile at in the world -- so much to lift our hearts and souls and refresh for all the work we still need to do to ensure these many wonders continue.