Happy Earth Day to everyone!
At ANTIDOTE, We Try to Make Every Day Earth Day
With Planet Positive Hair Care, every day includes:
But Earth Day Gives us a Reason to Celebrate By Doing More. How will you celebrate?
Re-use and recycle.
We'll also recommit ourselves to recycling 100% of our recyclable waste - we hope that you will join us, too. Talk about a small thing with a big impact - only 29% of people recycle their PET bottles (you know who you are!) As a result, plastics make up a growing share of our garbage. Recycling removes plastic from our waste, and gives trash a new life.
Get outside.
Earth Day is a great excuse to plan a field trip. Check out good hikes near you to find a new one, or revisit an old favorite. Alltrails is our "go to" site to find hikes where ever our travels take us. One of our favorite places is Stroebe Island Marsh Preserve. It's beautiful any time of year. This is the last cattail marsh on the lower Fox River - a place stewarded by native people for thousands of years and a reminder of land's ability to clean water naturally.
While you are out in nature, try taking your time to do some forest bathing. Sit under a tree, study its bark, follow its branches, feel its energy. Time Magazine's Qing Li explains, "We all know how good being in nature can make us feel. We have known it for centuries. The sounds of the forest, the scent of the trees, the sunlight playing through the leaves, the fresh, clean air — these things give us a sense of comfort. They ease our stress and worry, help us to relax and to think more clearly. Being in nature can restore our mood, give us back our energy and vitality, refresh and rejuvenate us."
Encourage friends to go "green."
What we use to clean ourselves in our showers ends up in our streams, gets swallowed by fish who feed us and other living things. In a world of harsh chemicals and artificial ingredients, ANTIDOTE plant powered products use ingredients that are better for people and the environment. All ANTIDOTE shampoos and conditioners are Environmental Working Group "Green Rated." No matter what brand you choose, natural products are one small way we can all make a difference.
Buy shade grown coffee.
Tropical shade trees in the tropics are home to countless migrating birds. The loss of this habitat has a direct impact on the loss of bird population. One key driver of this is clear cutting to support cheaper sun coffee. Give our feathered friends a break by buying shade grown coffee. By the way, coffee prefers shade and shade grown coffee is the richest, most delicious kind you can buy.
Earth Day was born in Wisconsin (just like ANTIDOTE!)...
In the 1960’s, US Senator from Wisconsin Gaylord Nelson proposed a constitutional amendment that "Every person has the inalienable right to a decent environment." He spearheaded the first Earth Day on April 22, 1970 with the belief that the more people understood about the environment, the more they would take better care of it and demand better protection.
Wisconsin has a long tradition in environmental balance. From the first settlers to A Sand County Almanac to Earth Day.
(Wisconsin Native American Indian Tribes Map, Great Lakes Intertribal Council)
The first settlers got it. The area we now call Wisconsin was first settled by the Ojibwe, Potawatomi, Oneida, Menominee, and Ho-Chunk people. While each had their unique relationship with nature, they shared a sustainability ethic. They thrived off of the land and rivers, yet cared for the land. Award-winning poet Paula Gunn Allen explains, “We are the land ... that is the fundamental idea embedded in Native American life.... It is … a part of our being, dynamic, significant, real. It is our self ... It is not a matter of being ‘close to nature’ ... The Earth is, in a very real sense, the same as our self (or selves) ... It is a matter of fact, one known equably from infancy, remembered and honored at levels of awareness that go beyond consciousness, and that extend long roots into primary levels of mind, language, perception and all the basic aspects of being ...”
In modern times, Wisconsin has continued to play a leading role in protecting the environment.
A book that changed the world.
"Long respected in his own fields of forestry and wildlife ecology, Leopold ..., in 1937, ... became focused on reaching the general public with his conservation message... of how the natural world worked and inspired them to take action to ensure the future health of the land and water that sustains all life," says the Aldo Leopold Foundation. Aldo Leopold’s A Sand County Almanac continues to spark generations of environmentalists. Written in the 1940’s about Leopold’s home in Baraboo, Wisconsin, the book shows how a healthy planet is good for all – for our health, recreation, and our economy. Leopold’s friendly writing style and thoughtful arguments made this a best-seller – selling over 2 million copies.
Let us know how you plan to celebrate Earth Day this year, and make every day Earth Day.
We love hearing from you!
- Abigail + David
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