Archive for the ‘family’ Category

Paws for Life

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

By: Bev Kachel

You want Sustainability???  PLEASE, check us out!

We are Pueblo’s thirty- year- old, best kept secret…but that’s changing.  We are PAWS for Life/Animal Welfare and Protection Society, a no-kill, non-profit, animal shelter located at 800 N. Pueblo Blvd.

For those of you who are familiar with us, you know our shelter needs an update…badly!!  What started out to be a safe haven and shelter for our animals has evolved into a 7.5 acre campus including a 25,000 square-foot built-green shelter.  We are seeking Platinum LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification, the highest certification level designated by the US Green Building Council.  Our campus will include a new Platinum shelter, doggie day care, bark park, agility course and emergency vet care facility.  Given state regulations for shelters including things such as air exchange requirements and other necessities,coupled with the sustainable aspects for heating and cooling, it became evident to our architect and engineer that we would qualify for the LEED certification…that’s how it started!

You can read the rest of the story on Page 6 of That’s Natural! Quarter 1, 2010 here: http://issuu.com/ThatsNatural/docs/tnq1_2010_web

Sustainability From the Start – The Simplicity of Sustainability

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

By: Angela Beery
When I think about sustainable living, I think about simplicity.  It was Leonardo DaVinci who said “simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.”  Living sustainably not only makes sense – it’s simply genius!  It follows the laws and order of the universe.  It obeys the “House Rules” plaque my great-grandmother has posted on her bathroom wall – “If you sleep on it – make it up.  If you wear it – hang it up.  If you drop it – pick it up.  If you dirty it – clean it up.”  Sustainable living is the ultimate common sense.
The simplicity of sustainability makes life easier and more economical in all areas – including when it comes to raising young children.  It’s easier because you need less.  It’s more economical, again, because you need less.  Raising a sustainable-minded family proves that less is indeed more.

You can read the rest of the story on Page 6 of That’s Natural! Quarter 1, 2010 – here: http://issuu.com/ThatsNatural/docs/tnq1_2010_web

Last Child In the Woods – Book Review

Friday, March 12th, 2010

By: Susan Fries

“For children, nature comes in many forms.  Unlike television, nature does not steal time; it amplifies it.  It (nature) serves as a blank slate upon which a child draws and reinterprets the culture’s fantasies.”  This begins Richard Louv’s appeal in “Last Child in the Woods”  to recognize that children are losing their connection to nature through their increasingly limited experience of being outside.

Richard Louv received the 2008 Audubon Medal and has coined the phrase “Nature Deficit Disorder” to explain the effect less contact with nature has on children’s’ mental health.  Louv is the co-founder and chairman of Children & Nature Network, an organization dedicated to getting children back into nature.  As well, Louv’s writings have inspired the “No Child Left Inside Act of 2009”.  Imagine having to legislate that children have the right to be taught “environmental literacy,” nature and healthy living?  While mainstream education has all but eliminated any connection between students and nature, almost all “alternative” educators recognize the necessity of unstructured exploration at nature sites to insure that students are equipped with creative problem solving skills. Maybe there is a lesson to be learned here?

Find the rest of the review on Page 8 of That’s Natural! Quarter 1, 2010 here: http://issuu.com/ThatsNatural/docs/tnq1_2010_web


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