Green Pet Products: 12 Eco Essentials for Dogs

August 8, 2011 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments 

[ By Steph in Animals & Habitats. ]

Kind-hearted and loyal, our dogs are faithful companions that help us enjoy the simple pleasures in life, like luxuriating in a patch of sun or wading in a cool creek. So why not protect them from pesticides and other toxins, and keep their paw prints from making too deep of an impression upon the earth? These 12 green pet products including toys, treats, collars and beds are recycled, sustainable, natural and healthy to dogs, humans and the planet.

Stainless Steel Portable Water Bottle

(images via: olive green dog)

It’s always a great idea to bring along some water for your dog when you’re out, especially if you’re engaging in physical activity like frisbee or a hike. The H2O4K9 water bottle is made of food-grade stainless steel with a polypropylene lid that doubles as a drinking bowl. The bottle holds 25 fluid ounces, is fully recyclable and free of BPA and other toxins.

Planet Dog Wood Chuck with Orbee-Tuff RecycleBall

(image via: planet dog)

Not only is this a great design to lob balls long distances for your dog to fetch, it’s also made from eco-friendly materials – and a lot more attractive than similar neon-colored plastic versions. Planet Dog’s Wood Chuck thrower is made of renewable bamboo with an ergonomic handle made of recycled cork scraps. The accompanying Orbee-Tuff RecycleBall is made of 100% recycled materials and is super-strong, holding up to even the most enthusiastic of chewers.

Eco Pick-Up Dog Waste Kit

(images via: fetchdog)

Be a responsible dog owner – always pick up after your pet when you’re taking a walk, whether it’s on a downtown street or at the park. Biodegradable bags are thought to be an even better option that reusing plastic shopping bags, because they at least have a chance of breaking down in a reasonable amount of time. The Eco-Pick Up Dog Waste Kit is just one of many similar dispensers for these bags that are compact and easy to carry – you simply clip it onto the dog’s leash.

Doggie Dooley In-Ground Waste Digester System

(image via: drs foster & smith)

At home, when you clear the yard of land mines left behind by your dog, don’t toss them in the trash. Consider an in-ground waste digester system like the Doggie Dooley. This bucket-sized container works like a septic system, using environmentally friendly enzymes and bacteria to turn dog waste into a liquid that’s absorbed by the ground.

Organic Bumper Bed by West Paw Design

(image via: green dog love)

You’re careful about purchasing bedding for yourself that’s free of toxic chemicals – extend the same care to your pooch. An organic bed is simply healthier for your pet than one that has been treated with pesticides or other harmful substances. The Organic Bumper Bed by West Paw Design is comfy and cozy, and you can customize the colors.

Freezy Pups Kit Dog Treats

(image via: only natural pet)

Make your own organic frozen dog treats using this simple kit, which consists of a tray of bone-shaped molds and a set of four flavored treat mix packets. Each packet makes 14 treat in white cheddar cheese, juicy apple, sweet potato n’ maple or chicken soup flavors. Of course, with a little imagination, you can DIY this – just use an ice tray and fresh, natural pureed foods.

Earth Dog Decorative Hemp Dog Collar

(image via: olivegreendog)

Available in solid colors and cheerful modern prints, the Earth Dog Decorative Hemp collar features a triple-layer, 100% hemp canvas construction. Choose from adjustable quick-release or martingale belt-style. These hypoallergenic collars are hand-made in the USA; matching harnesses and leashes are also available.

Ark Naturals Neem Protect Spray

(image via: vitacost)

Protect your pet from fleas and ticks naturally, and keep them smelling fresh along the way. The insect-repelling essential oils citronella and neem are far healthier for your pets and for you than common pesticides like pyrethrin. Neem oil can also help heal existing bites and soothe itching.

Recycled Doggie Tee

(image via: fromscratch)

Profess your eco-friendly inclinations with a recycled message tee for your dog. Eco tees by ‘From Scratch’ are made from 100% recycled ring-spun cotton/poly jersey reclaimed from cotton waste and plastic bottles. Design choices include ‘Treehugger’, ‘The Green Apple’, ‘Love the Planet’, ‘Paper or Plastic?’ and ‘I’m All Natural’.

New Age Pet Eco-Concepts Bunkhouse Dog House

(image via: petco)

If your pet spends a lot of time outdoors, you’ll want to get her a comfortable dog house to shelter her from the elements. The New Age Pet Eco-Concepts Bunkhouse is made of 100% recycled plastics and recycled wood products, and features a weatherproof interior and exterior. This dog house has a raised floor for ventilation, a double-wall design that provides extra insulation from harsh temperatures, and a removable roof for easy cleaning. It can be painted with any exterior latex paint to match your house.

Super-Tough Chew Toys from Planet Dog

(images via: planet dog)

Encourage your dog to chew on designated toys, not your shoes! Planet Dog rates its chew toys from 1-5 ‘chompers’ to tell you how well it will hold up to dogs with a strong urge to chew. The Slobber-Wick Squeak Bone is great for dogs that won’t do too much damage, and the Orbee-Tuff Recycle Bone, made of scraps from other products that would otherwise by discarded, are somewhere in between. Got the kind of dog that could chew through a wall if left unattended for too long? Try the Orbee-Tuff Diamond Plate Ball, which is practically impossible to destroy.

Castor & Pollux Organix Dog Food

(image via: petco)

While fresh, raw food may be the ideal choice of nourishment for dogs, many people still prefer pelletized dry food. One of the best brands available is Castor & Pollux Organix, which is made of human-grade chicken meat. Also containing fresh organic apples,  broccoli, carrots, pumpkin and pears as well as millet and quinoa, this natural organic dog food does not contain corn, wheat, soy or by-products.


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Ahead Of The Curve: Hudson Bay’s Semicircular Nastapoka Arc

August 2, 2011 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments 

[ By Steve in Geography & Travel & Nature & Ecosystems & Science & Research. ]


Billions of years of bombardment by space rocks of all sizes have left our planet remarkably unscathed, yet if one looks closely the traces of enormous ancient impact craters are all too obvious. Or are they? Hudson Bay’s Nastapoka Arc may superficially resemble the many frozen lava “seas” of the moon but its actual origins are much more down to Earth.

Great Whitewater North

(image via: Wikipedia)

Hudson Bay, known to many from its prominent place in the center of Canada (and the Canada Dry ginger ale label), was first discovered by European explorers on this date in 1610. Henry Hudson had thought he had found the fabled Northwest Passage but ended up being abandoned by a mutinous crew who didn’t share his desire to confirm the possibility.

(images via: Son of the South and Wikipedia)

Hudson lost out twice: this seemingly endless body of water was merely an enclosed bay, and although Hudson is memorialized by having it named for him, he received nary a farthing for the naming rights. We can possibly add a third fail, as Hudson sailed across the huge Nastapoka Arc without even realizing it. Oh Henry!

(images via: Ye Olde Jonathan Birge, WN.com and TravelJournals)

Looking at a map of Hudson Bay one quickly notices two salient features. One is James Bay, a southeastward-pointing fingerlike projection. The other is the Nastapoka Arc, a strikingly semicircular stretch of coastline that, if expanded beyond its over 155° natural arc, would form a nearly perfect circle some 280 miles (450 km) in diameter.

Knowers Arc?

(images via: BBC, Science Daily and AOAS)

The Earth bears the scars of hundreds of meteor and asteroid impacts, most of them well under a mile or so in diameter. Where are the really big impact craters, like those so plainly visible on the Moon? Most have vanished due to the actions of weathering, erosion, glaciation and plate tectonics over hundreds of millions of years, and most of the larger impacts occurred very early in the Earth’s history.

(images via: Ogle Earth, Daily Galaxy and KEN14)

When a large crater is discovered, it’s often through the analysis of magnetic and/or gravitational anomalies that reveal subsurface evidence of the impact. If any surface features are found, time has distorted them such that their relation to an ancient impact would not be guessed at without the invisible data. A prime example is the Wilkes Land Crater in Antarctica, a 300-mile (480 km) wide basin estimated to be up to 500 million years old.

(image via: Oceandots)

Assuming the Nastapoka Arc is the remnant of an ancient asteroid impact, it sure doesn’t act like one! Only two aspects of the area ring meteoric alarm bells: the exquisite, cookie-cutter sweep of the shoreline and the offshore Belcher Island archipelago which sits just about where a large crater’s central peak would be found. There’s no raised crater rim, though grounds could be made for repeated episodes of glaciation having shaved it flat.

(images via: Manitoba Historical Maps and WorldAtlas)

Here’s another neat anomaly about the Nastapoka Arc. Early mapmakers had neither the knowledge or the instruments required to draw accurate maps, and so many early maps show geographic features in a rounded, less fractal-like style (see 1886 map, above left). As time passed and better maps became available, however, the Nastapoka Arc seemed to regress to a more rounded configuration. This led to a number of geographers, geologists and astronomers to wonder if the feature’s origins didn’t evolve, well, naturally.

Lunar Tunes

(images via: DailyMail UK, FARK.com and Tower Records)

I mention astronomers because the emergence of modern maps roughly coincided with the first clear photographs of our near neighbor in space, the Moon. Our battered satellite displays an abundance of impact craters, some of which were later flooded by lava and became the Lunar Maria. The features were so named due to their dark tints, homogenous surfaces and distinct “shorelines” (actually crater walls). They looked like the oceans of Earth… but did earthly seas look like lunar maria?

(images via: Michael A. Covington, Newport Geographic’s photostream and Vaz Tolentino)

They do indeed… at least, in one particular place: the Nastapoka Arc. Circular reasoning dictates the “unnatural” arc must have been formed by an impact event, a cosmic cookie-cutter as it were. These reasoners thought they had the perfect pair of pairs all lined up: the Nastapoka Arc off of Hudson Bay, and the Sinus Iridium off the lunar Mare Imbrium.

(image via: Our Amazing Planet)

On the face of it, it’s easy to draw conclusions based on a host of circumstantial evidence. “It walks like a duck, it talks like a duck, therefore it must be a duck!” Trouble is, ducks don’t talk… and geologists now look for a number of essential clues to confirm if a crater-like feature has a celestial origin. Above is Crater Lake in Oregon, USA… not the crater you were thinking of.

Derp Impact

(images via: Ottawa-RASC and Barnes & Noble)

Following the 1968 publication of On the possibility of a catastrophic origin for the great arc of eastern Hudson Bay by C.S. Beals, a 1972 investigative expedition headed by Dr. Robert S. Deitz and J. Paul Barringer failed to find any of the now-recognized markers of an interstellar impact: shatter cones, unusual melted rocks such as suevite, pseudotachylite or mylonite, radial faults or fractures, signature injection breccias, or other related evidence of what geologists call “shock metamorphism”.

(images via: God Was Love, USRA and SubarcticMike)

Even the Belcher Islands didn’t fit the mold of an impact’s central peak (or remains thereof), being instead composed of ancient rocks of many types – none of them unearthly or with a direct or indirect impact-related origin. Sorry folks, show’s over, nothing to see here, just plate tectonics at work. You can fool the casual eye but you can’t fool Mother Nature. Then again, maybe we just haven’t found the right evidence yet. As someone once said, “the truth is out there.”

(image via: Nunatsiaq Online)

It’s somewhat ironic that early astronomers once thought the impact-related Lunar Maria were the seas of the moon while the Nastapoka Arc – a sea of the Earth – formed though tectonic processes occurring deep within the Earth. So much for WYSIWYG… geology sometimes takes a long and complex route to an ending that only seems obvious to us.


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Microlending Help for Green Entrepreneurs

May 17, 2011 by · View Comments 

Charlotte entrepreneur Thomas Elijah talks to the chamber about how he was able to finally launch his dream company thanks to a loan made possible by the Michael Scott Mater Foundation and new partner ACCION USA.

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Deep Cargo: An Ocean Of Lost Shipping Containers

April 19, 2011 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Steve in History & Trivia & Nature & Ecosystems & Science & Research. ]


Up to 10,000 shipping containers are lost at sea every year, a number that may seem quite high but is actually just a tiny percentage of the approximately 50 million containers sent by sea annually. While most quickly sink out of sight, these containers and their strange & varied cargoes are increasingly on our minds.

Can Overboard!

(images via: KIMO and Perpetro Consulting)

The fate of lost shipping containers depends on a number of factors. Some may float for some time and become shipping hazards in their own right. The majority, though, sink quickly as they are not air-tight and their contents are usually not buoyant.

(images via: Coast Guard News, KIMO and Ed Matthews)

Since most maritime commercial traffic flows along prescribed shipping lanes, one would expect the thousands of shipping containers lost at sea each year for at least several decades to begin marking, as it were, the paths of the world’s cargo ships.

(images via: Cargolaw and Dark Roasted Blend)

The situation can be likened to a messy eater snacking on potato chips as he walks to and from his school day after day. If the fallen chips weren’t biodegradable, they would begin to build up along the eater’s path – and shipping containers do not decay appreciably over the course of human lifetimes.

Lost & Found… In Davy Jones’ Locker

(image via: Contained)

The yellow TEX container above was discovered by a research team from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI), who were surveying the floor of Monterey Bay using the remote controlled submersible “Ventana”. The container rests upside down, 1,300 m (4,265 ft) below the surface.

(images via: GeoGarage and Planetsave)

Researchers were able to record the serial numbers on the container and traced to the container ship Med Taipei (above), which left San Francisco just 4 months before (in February of 2004). The ship had lost 15 of its containers during a storm off the California coast, including this particular one which holds over 1,100 steel-belted radial tires made in China. Other containers lost from the ship contained wheelchairs, cyclone fencing, clothing, and recycled cardboard.

(images via: SIMON)

The MBARI team returned to the sunken container’s location in March of 2011 and were surprised at what they found. Images sent back by cameras on the ROV “Doc Ricketts” revealed a preponderance of marine life on and around the 40-foot-long metal shipping box. Just 7 years since it sank, the container had become an isolated underwater reef with a functioning ecosystem featuring predators and prey.

(images via: Miguel Angelo and Shippipedia)

While there is much to be said in favor of establishing artificial reefs, the effects of providing so many such environments in places where they’re not found naturally are subject to speculation.

(images via: Cargolaw)

Are we inadvertently setting up underwater “highways” invasive species can use to travel to new locations? And what about the contents of these sunken containers – it’s estimated about 10 percent carry toxic substances as their cargo.

Chips Off The Old Block

(image via: HamptonRoads)

Beachcombers strolling on the Outer Banks of North Carolina, USA, on November 30th, 2006 were greeted by a strange sight: thousands of bags of Doritos tortilla chips had washed up on the beach, along with the partially open cargo container that they were originally packed into. The chips were dry and edible as they were sealed in bags – a fact that may have allowed the container to float all the way to the beach.

(image via: Shirlaw News Group)

Don’t like chips? How about chocolate chips then? In February of 2008, thousands of packages of McVitie’s chocolate biscuits washed up on the beach at Blackpool, UK, after the cargo ship Riverdance made a bit of a misstep when gale-force winds forced the ship to run aground.

(images via: gCaptain and MNN)

Perhaps the most famous case of lost shipping containers (and found cargo) concerns a consignment of 28,800 bathtub toys called Friendly Floatees. The sealed, air-filled toys began their odyssey in January of 1992 aboard a Chinese cargo ship that saw several 40-foot (13.3 m) intermodal shipping containers slip overboard in rough seas.

(images via: PopSci, Florentijn Hofman and The Plastic Patrol)

Seattle oceanographers Curtis Ebbesmeyer and James Ingraham saw an opportunity in the shipping company’s loss: it would be possible to construct a detailed model of ocean currents by tracking the progress of the red beavers, green frogs, blue turtles and yellow ducks.

(images via: Daily Mail UK, NY Daily News and Ed Matthews)

Indeed, over the next 15 years the toys began washing up on the world’s seashores. By the summer of 2007 they were being reported from the United Kingdom and Scandinavia, which meant that they had been locked into the polar ice pack and carried from the Pacific to the Atlantic. The incident perfectly illustrates how even a single lost shipping container can have a global impact.

Diecast Away

(images via: Roshy, On Kayaks and Velotour)

Now multiply that single lost shipping container by several thousand, and do it again for 10, 20, 30 years or more. Are the world’s best vacation beaches and scenic shorelines destined to be the final destinations for flotillas of floating Fritos bags, shipwrecked Spalding sneakers and various vanquished volleyballs?

(images via: Cargolaw, Yidio, Delvecchio and Creative Article Marketing)

Not only will some future Cast Away Crusoe have hundreds of Wilsons to keep him company, he could use them to build one supremely sporty raft – and this time, we won’t have FedEx to thank (or blame).


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How to Help Japan

March 17, 2011 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments 

Visit Redcross.org or text REDCROSS to 90,999 to donate $10 from your phone.Save the Children has also responded. Eiichi Sadamatsu of the organization released a statement, saying:

“We are extremely concerned for the welfare of children and their families who have been affected by the disaster. We stand ready to meet the needs of children who are always the most vulnerable in a disaster.”

The organization is currently organizing efforts and donations to its Children’s Emergency Fund will support outreach.

UNICEF is also coordinating efforts to help the children of Japan. Use this form on UNICEF’s website to donate 100 percent of your desired amount to their fund designated for victims of the earthquake or text JAPAN to 864233 to donate $10.

International Medical Corps is responding to the health needs of the disaster’s victims. Nancy Aossey, President & CEO, International Medical Corps said in a statement:

“We are putting together relief teams, as well as supplies, and are in contact with partners in Japan and other affected countries to assess needs and coordinate our activities.”

To donate or learn about other ways you can contribute to its medical response, visit Internationalmedicalcorps.org. Also, text MED to 80888 from any mobile phone to give $10.

The Japan Earthquake and Tsunami Relief Fund was launched at GlobalGiving.org to garner funds that will be given to a variety of relief organizations helping victims of the earthquake. It has already raised over $100,000, particularly from concerned Twitter users around the world. The project page explains:

We are working with International Medical Corps, Save the Children, and other organizations on the ground to provide support. Our partners on the ground are working hard to provide immediate relief.

Salvation Army personnel are organizing efforts in Tokyo and will soon send a team to help the severely damaged city of Sendai, Japan. To contribute to earthquake relief, text ‘JAPAN’ or ‘QUAKE’ to 80888 to make a $10 donation or visit SalvationArmyUSA.org.

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is sending two three-person teams to the Iwate and Miyagi prefectures in Japan. To learn more about the organization’s efforts or make a donation, visit Doctorswithoutborders.org.

Other relief organizations are also sending representatives to disaster sites, including AmeriCare and Shelterbox.

MercyCorps is gathering donations for its overseas partner, Peace Winds Japan, which currently has personnel on the ground distributing emergency relief in Japan.

Along with an appeal for monetary donations, Operation USA has also announced efforts to collect bulk corporate donations of health care supplies. If you are interested in donating bulk medical items, visit OpUSA.org.

The International Fund for Animal Welfare will soon be deploying a team to assess needs regarding animal rescue. Dick Green, the organization’s emergency relief manager for disasters, wrote on IFAW’s blog:

“As we saw most recently in Haiti, major disasters require long-term planning and a concerted effort between NGO and governmental ranks to ensure that the greatest number of animals and humans benefit from the intervention.”

They are encouraging support through donations, which will be used to buy pet food, veterinary supplies, vaccines and other necessities for animals needing help.

For any who have loved ones abroad, Google has stepped up to help. Along with a tsunami alert posted on its front page, Google has launched the Person Finder: 2011 Japan Earthquake to help connect people that may have been displaced due to the disaster. Google has also launched a crisis response page filled with local resources and emergency information.

Judy Chang, head of PayPal’s nonprofit group, announced that transactional fees incurred by money transfers to US 501(c)(3) organizations (or charities registered with the Canada Revenue Agency) between March 11 and April 10 will aid relief efforts in Japan.

World Vision has announced global mobilization in response to tsunami warnings. Geoff Shepherd, the organization’s humanitarian and emergency affairs director for the Asia-Pacific region, released a statement on World Vision’s website, saying:

“We’ve also alerted our Global Rapid Response Team and have put team members on standby for possible deployment to affected areas. This could be a very serious disaster in multiple countries and our staff are prepared to respond.”

Beth

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Earl Phalem - NewDay Social Entrepreneurship Distinguished Speakers Series

November 23, 2010 by · View Comments 

The NewDay Social Entrepreneurship Distinguished Speakers Series presents prominent leaders from across the field of social entrepreneurship to share their own experiences, challenges, insights, thoughts, and recommendations to students and the community. The speaker series provides the Tulane community an opportunity to meet and engage with some of the most remarkable people working in the area of social entrepreneurship today. Earl Martin Phalen, CEO of Reach Out and Read and Founder of Summer Advantage, USA Phalen, who was born into the foster care system, works to do all that he can to ensure that all children have access to a high-quality education and are given a fair chance to fulfill their potential, just as he was. Reach Out and Read, promotes early literacy skill development of children ages 0-5 and Summer Advantage USA ensures the academic and social development of school-aged children, ages 5-14. President Obama modeled federal legislation after his summer learning program. Phalen is a Mind Trust Fellow and Ashoka Fellow, and holds a BA from Yale University and a JD from Harvard Law School.

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Paying it Forward at Trader Joe’s

September 3, 2010 by admin · View Comments 

It all started with a trip to Trader Joe’s. Jenni Ware had just rung up her groceries, which came to a total of $207. But as she reached into her purse, she discovered that she’d left her wallet at home.

Ware was about to go home grocery-less when she received a kind offer from the stranger in line behind her, a woman named Carolee Hazard. Hazard offered to pay Ware’s entire bill, simply asking her to send her a check to cover the cost.

The next day, Hazard received a check for $300—$93 more than she’d lent to Ware.

“I didn’t know what to do with the money,” Hazard told USA Today. “I’d thought to mail a check back to Jenni, but in the day and age of Facebook, I turned to my friends to decide what to do with the money instead,”

A friend suggested donating the cash to charity. Hazard thought that was a great idea, and selected the Second Harvest Food Bank, matching the $93 with an additional $93 of her own.

Several of Hazard’s friends were so inspired by her actions that they decided to make their own $93 donations. Soon, their friends were following suit. The group of philanthropists created “the 93 Dollar Club,” and a Facebook page to go along with it. A year since that fateful day at Trader Joe’s, the club has raised more than $100,000 to fight hunger in America.

Now that their story is getting so much attention, Hazard has a bold new goal: doubling donations to $200,000. Want to help? Check out the Facebook page for more info.

Source: Gimundo

Beth

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That Sinking Feeling: The Top 10 Drained Lakes

[ By Steve in Geography & Travel, History & Trivia, Nature & Ecosystems. ]


I like lakes, you like lakes, Luke Luck likes lakes, you get the picture but when lakes leak with little or lack of warning, there’s a lot less to like. This look at 10 drained lakes of the past and present shows the gravity of the situation when Mother Nature – or, on occasion, the errant hand of Man – suddenly decides to pull the plug.

Tempe Town Lake, Arizona, USA

(images via: DesertUSA, ASU and GWilmore)

Tempe Town Lake is a 2-mile long artificial lake that runs through the center of Tempe, Arizona, USA. The lake sits within the bed of the Salt River, which is almost always dry due to diversion of the river’s water for agricultural use at various points upstream.

(image via: KAM-AZ)

The lake is only about 13 feet deep on average and is held in place by innovative inflatable dams at either end. The Dams allow the Salt River to flow along its natural course at times when storms and flooding create an unusually high level of water in the river bed.

On July 20, 2010, the west side of Tempe Town Lake’s outflow dam suffered (for want of a better term) a blowout that allowed most of the lake’s water to quickly drain into the Salt River. Most of the approximately 10,000 fish living in the lake were swept downstream and an alligator named Tuesday was released into the remaining pools of water to eat what fish remained.

Lake Delhi, Iowa, USA

(images via: CBS News and Vacation Rentals)

The Delhi Dam, on the Maquoketa River south of Delhi, Iowa, was built over a 7-year period from 1922 to 1929. Lake Delhi was created behind the dam and over the succeeding decades proved to be a much-desired location for recreational boating, fishing, and lakeside summer housing.

(images via: Washington Times, Des Moines Register and FOX News)

Call it a dammed shame, but many say the failure of the Delhi Dam was an accident waiting to happen. Flooding in 2008 had caused a half-million dollars worth of damage to the dam and exceptionally heavy rains (approximately 10 inches in 12 hours) caused the swollen lake to overtop its southern embankment on July 24, 2010.

(image via: Des Moines Register)

Rapid erosion of the embankment sped up the outflow and by the next day, Lake Delhi was no more. As the lake and the Delhi Dam were owned by the Lake Delhi Recreation Association, it’s uncertain whether state or federal funds will be used to help rebuild the dam and restore the lake. If not, those who invested in former lakefront property will be out of luck AND lake.

Lake Delton, Wisconsin, USA

(images via: FlyHighWi, RV.net and Wunderground)

If residents of Lake Delhi are searching for some hope, they may find it in Wisconsin’s Lake Delton. Like Lake Delhi, Lake Delton is a man-made lake created in the 1920s as a way to attract visitors to the Wisconsin Dells tourist and vacation area. The lake – more of a reservoir, actually – is only about 10 feet deep and has a surface area of around 260 acres… at least it did, until June 9th of 2008.

(images via: Howder Family)

Heavy rains had raised the level of Lake Delton and put tremendous pressure on the dikes that separated the lake from the Wisconsin River 800 feet away. The sudden collapse of a 400-ft section of County Highway A that ran on top of the containment dike caused a deluge that completely drained Lake Delton in a matter of hours. Several lakefront homes also collapsed though there was no loss of life. Here’s a short video showing the state of the former Lake Delton 2 weeks after the water drained out:

Empty Lake Delton, via TFHowder

(image via: Wikimedia)

Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle quickly announced the state would be repairing the lake and indeed, by Memorial Day of 2009 Lake Delton was re-opened with great fanfair.

Iceberg Lake, Alaska, USA

(images via: Far North Science and Stelia’s Guides)

Iceberg Lake, a glacial lake in the Wrangell-St. Elias Mountains area of Alaska, leads a precarious existence by regularly filing and draining, sometimes catastrophically as it did in 1999. The lake is also remarkably responsive to weather conditions as it is pinned between two glaciers whose level of annual advancement and melting decide the fate of the lake.

(image via: National Park Photo Tour)

Scientists exploring the exposed bottom of Iceberg Lake discovered that distinct layers of sediment deposited on after another provided them with a detailed record of the area’s climate that could be traced back to the year 442 AD. Among other findings, the researchers were able to discern the Iceberg Lake did not drain at all during the Medieval Warm Period, a several centuries long warm interlude that existed up until the advent of the Little Ice Age, which lasted from approximately 1600 to 1850 AD.

Lake Haramaya, Ethiopia

(images via: Road To Ethiopia and Adis Ababa University)

Lake Haramaya was a freshwater lake in Ethiopia that was around 30 feet deep and whose shoreline stretched for about 10 miles – not an especially large lake but one that provided residents of the city of Harar with drinking water and farmers & fisherman with livelihoods. The keyword is “was”… overuse by residents, farmers and commercial enterprises caused the lake to drain completely in roughly a decade.

(images via: Gadaa.com, Road To Ethiopia and The CLP)

Lake Haramaya is not the only lake in Africa’s volcanic Rift Valley to run dry, and human use (and abuse) is not the only factor involved. Climatologists have noted an increased frequency of droughts over the past several decades and it’s thought that increasing human exploitation of the lake in recent years was enough to tip the balance.

Scott Lake, Florida, USA

(image via: The Ledger and Democratic Underground)

Scott Lake is a 291-acre natural lake in Lakeland, Florida, 30 miles east of Tampa. Like Lake Delhi, Scott Lake is owned by the surrounding homeowners who are once again asking state authorities to refill the lake and preserve their property values. Yes, “once again” – Scott Lake has drained before, in the early 1970s, caused by sinkholes opening up in the porous limestone bedrock that lies beneath the lake.

(images via: Democratic Underground, Thomas.net and Death By 1000 Papercuts)

In June of 2006, as many as 4 sinkholes suddenly opened in the lakebed and before you could say “Great Scott!”, Scott Lake was drained. Since then a heated controversy has arisen over demands from wealthy owners of lakeside property that water from Florida’s freshwater aquifer be used to refill the lake. This wasn’t a problem in 1974 but today, water is in short supply as Florida’s population puts increasing strain on the state’s fresh water supplies.

White Lake, Russia

(images via: Above Top Secret, Free Republic and BBC)

In May of 2005, residents of the village of Bolotnikovo near Nizhni Novgorod, Russia, were shocked to find that most of the water in White Lake had mysteriously vanished. No explanation could be offered for the sudden and silent loss of roughly a million cubic meters of water. “It looks like somebody has pulled the plug out of a gigantic bath,” said a correspondent fr Russia’s NTV. Though an official from a nearby village speculated that the lake’s water flowed into an underground river, others had their own suspicions, believing that “outside forces” were responsible. One man was quoted as stating “I think that America got us here.” It seems that in rural Russia at least, the Cold War never really ended.

Lake Peigneur, Louisiana, USA

(images via: Troy McClure, Damn Interesting and WayMarking)

Lake located above a salt mine? Scary. Oil drilling in and around said lake? Crazy! But then, we all know that the right hands at big oil companies (we’re looking at you, BP) sometimes don’t know what their left hands are up to… or down to, and in the case of Texaco’s drilling rig in Louisiana’s Lake Peigneur, that would be down to 1,300-odd feet below the bottom of a 10-ft deep lake. When the 14-inch wide drill bit broke through the roof of the mine, the results were predictable yet still spectacular.

(images via: Circa71 and Ticklebooth)

Thirty years before the BP disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, carelessness on an oil rig created a chain reaction of events that saw the 1,125 square acre lake (plus several barges, trees and 65 acres of shoreline land) quickly drain into the underlying Jefferson Island salt mine.

This video from The History Channel shows some of the events connected with the catastrophic drainage of Lake Peigneur, filmed by eye-witnesses at the time:

Lake Peigneur – Disappearing Lake, via The History Channel

So, what have we learned from the Lake Peigneur disaster? Considering the salt dome beneath the now saline lake is being used as a storage for pressurized natural gas while oil drilling continues in the area, the answer is “not much”.

Aral Sea, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan

(images via: Elgadfly and New Eurasia)

Once the 4th largest inland body of water in the world, the Aral Sea now ranks at just 10th – and falling. A victim of misguided agricultural policies enacted by a nation (the USSR) that is no more, the Aral Sea itself may soon be no more since its main inlet rivers have been dammed to provide water for cotton farms. As the lake shrinks, its waters become more and more saturated with salt , fertilizer and pesticides to the point that an estimated 75 million tons of toxic dust and salts are blown across Central Asia each year. Images of the Aral Sea’s shocking retreat taken from orbiting satellites and spacecraft are, in a word, tragic.

(image via: Econuz)

Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan are the successor states to the USSR in which the toxic Aral Sea now lies, and although no longer bound by decrees from the Kremlin, the 2 states cannot agree on how to preserve or even restore the Aral Sea. In the meantime, the loss of over 90 percent of the sea has caused the entire region’s climate to become more extreme, and exposure to poisonous, windblown dust from the exposed lake bed has created a health crisis of immense scope. The shocking image above dates from the summer of 2009.

(image via: Telegraph UK)

There is, however, new hope for the Aral Sea as the Kazakh government and the World Bank are working to restore the lake to at least a semblance of its former size. As the images above show (2004 on the left, 2010 on the right), the Aral Sea’s surface area has rebounded 30 percent and depths in some areas have grown from 98 feet to over 130 feet.

Lake Missoula, Northwestern USA

(images via: The Resilient Earth and Glacial Lake Missoula)

Picture a lake with a surface area of 3,000 square miles containing 500 square miles of water, blocked by an ice dam that is actually an arm of a retreating glacier. This precarious image once existed, in western Montana, about 13,000 years ago and is known today as Lake Missoula. When the ice dam was breached and the lake began to drain westward towards the Pacific Ocean, a flood of biblical proportions ensued.

(images via: NPS and Summit Realty)

Not only is it estimated that it took only about 48 hours for the lake to drain completely, this nightmarish scenario is thought to have taken place as many as 40 times over a 2,000 year period. The repeated series of cataclysmic floods scoured vast stretches of eastern Oregon and Washington states into the Channeled Scablands. The remains of an enormous waterfall three times the height and width of Niagara Falls can be seen above top.

(images via: Huge Floods and Pics Digger)

Gigantic potholes, gargantuan ripple marks, dry waterfalls and other large-scale geologic features state unequivocally the incalculable power of rushing water – and lots of it. These features show some similarities to features found on the planet Mars and it’s now thought that our neighboring planet was subject to massive flooding events in its younger, wetter days.

(image via: Wikimedia)

Lakes, especially larger lakes, seem to be permanent fixtures of the landscape they occupy. In the geological big picture, however, this isn’t necessarily so and when change comes, it often comes suddenly and strikingly. Water tends to seek its own level under the influence of gravity, that’s just the way nature is… and nature knows no timetable and acts without regard to the works or wishes of Mankind.


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Big lakes, tiny lakes, freshwater lakes, briny lakes… and more than a few that are one-of-a-kind. These 10 amazing lakes “shore” are special!
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Building up to Microfinance USA - highlights from Microfinance CA 2009

June 23, 2010 by · View Comments 

Microfinance USA 2010 will be held May 20-21, 2010 in San Francisco, CA. The conference where microfinance practitioners, investors, policymakers, and enthusiasts meet to engage, explore, and expand the domestic microfinance field. This video shows highlights from Microfinance, CA 2009, which inspired the Microfinance USA conference.

http://youtube.com/v/vuDjbtr48cs.swf

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Housing On The Wing: 10 Bitingly Bizarre Bat Houses

June 8, 2010 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Steve in Animals & Habitats, Home & Garden, Nature & Ecosystems. ]


Bats… these fascinating, furry, flying mammals do humanity a great service by eating uncounted numbers of mosquitoes and other insect pests, so why not help the little guys out by furnishing them with suitable homes to roost in? These 10 bizarre bat houses may look somewhat creepy to us but to our winged friends, they’re home sweet home!

The Bat Cone, Baghdad, Iraq

(images via: Outdoors Webshots, MSG R.C. Wegner and Carolina Vargas)

This unusual looking cone-shaped structure was once a pigeon cove located on the grounds of a palace former Iraqi dictator Sadaam Hussein built for one of his mistresses. Today the palace is a U.S. Army post called Camp Liberty (formerly known as Camp Victory North) and the pigeon cove is now a home to a colony of bats. Hey, to the victors go the spoils!

(image via: Travel Webshots)

As can be judged by the size of other objects in the above photo, the cone-shaped bat house is rather large. It’s said that when the sun goes down, hundreds of bats stream out from the bat house to go about their nightly bug-eating rounds.

Modernist Bat House by Alex Metcalf

(images via: My Amazing Fact and We Make Money Not Art)

British designer Alex Metcalf crafted a prickly yet practical Bat House in 2007. The artist used wood and slate to provide an old-time “distinctive aesthetic” for the bat house, which is meant to help raise awareness of the need for (and loss of) bats in the Greater London area. As modern residential upgrades and new construction gradually eliminates the attic and loft spaces favored by bats, the creatures are losing an ideal urban habitat.

Berkeley Bat House, London, UK

(images via: Bat House Project, Arts and Ecology and Treehugger)

An environmentally friendly bat house at the London Wetland Centre is now open for business… bat business. The large, breathable structure was designed by architecture students Jorgen Tandberg of Oslo and Yo Murata fof Tokyo, acting on a design concept put forth by local artist and bat enthusiast Jeremy Deller. “It’s great,” commented Deller on the finished bat house, “I wouldn’t mind living there myself.”

(image via: Treehugger)

The Berkeley Bat House was built with guidance from the UK’s Bat Conservation Trust (BCT) and was designed to house all 8 species of bats found in the locality. Among its many bat-friendly features are an invisible black roof to warm the interior and walls made from Hemcrete, a carbon-locking type of concrete made of hemp fiber and lime.

Sugarloaf Key Bat Tower, Florida, USA

(images via: Direct Villas Florida and Panoramia – Cayobo)

The Sugarloaf Key Bat Tower, or “Perky’s Folly” as some call it, stands solemnly at Marker 17 of Lower Sugarloaf Key, in the midst of what was to be a thriving holiday resort built by south Florida businessman Richter Clyde Perky. The wooden tower was intended to house bats Perky imported from Cuba and Texas, with the intent that the bats gobble up the multitude of malaria-spreading mosquitoes that plagued the marshy Lower Keys.

(image via: Direct Villas Florida)

The 30-ft tall tower was completed in 1929… not a great year for any kind of investment, let alone a resort for free-spending pre-jet-setters. In any case, Perky soon learned that you can lead bats to a bat house but you can’t make them live there: once released, the foreign bats flew off to the four winds, the bat house remained bat-less, and the budding resort was soon guest-less.

Municipal Bat-Roost, San Antonio, Texas, USA

(images via: Wikimedia and The Reformation Online)

If the “municipal bat-roost” above looks familiar, it should be: it was designed by Dr. Charles A. R. Campbell, the same person who sold the Sugarloaf Key Bat Tower to Richter Clyde Perky from Sugarloaf Key. Campbell’s bat-roosts were more successful at attracting and housing bats, however, probably because unlike Sugarloaf Key, the various Texas locations where Campbell built his bat-roosts were in close proximity to sources of fresh water.

(image via: Shorpy.com)

Campbell was a big believer in bats, calling them “one of man’s best friends” and extolling their value in controlling mosquitoes. Before designing his towers, he noted that bats liked to roost in church steeples and incorporated their shape, style, even the cross on top to help the bats feel at home. Another feature of the design was a trapdoor intended to allow easy removal of bat guano, a prized and valuable fertilizer. If you’re wondering just how much guano bats living in one of Campbell’s towers could produce in a year, records show that in 1918 the crop of guano harvested from the Mitchell’s Lake Bat Roost weighed 4,012 pounds!

Highland Bat House, Japan

(image via: BSCJ)

Though it looks at first glance like a water tower, this is actually a “Bat Tower” located in an ecological park near Iwakura City, Aichi Prefecture, Japan. Most bat houses in Japan are small, often taking the form of a hollowed-out log. Larger towers like this one are much less common.

University of Florida Bat House, Gainesville, Florida, USA

(image via: SunSentinel.com)

The largest occupied artificial bat house in North America and, perhaps, the world can be found on the shores of Lake Alice at the University of Florida campus in Gainesville, Florida. It’s estimated that each night over 100,000 free-tailed bats in the UF colony consume up to 20 million insects, providing the campus and the surrounding area with free, environmentally friendly pest control.

(images via: UF News, Wikimedia and UF News)

Tragedy struck the UF Bat House in early August of 2009, however, as the tower’s internal wooden roosting fins collapsed under the weight of as many as 200,000 bats – and their accumulated urine.

John Knox Road Bat House, Tallahassee, Florida, USA

(images via: Florida Bat Conservancy and University of Florida Today)

This bat house, located in Tallahassee, Florida, looks old and even somewhat oriental with its red clay tiled roof but it was actually constructed in 1999. The use of very tall supporting poles keeps the bats safe from predators while providing ventilation – guano collection on a large scale is no longer practiced.

(image via: Wikipedia)

The 10′ by 10′ by 23 feet high bat house was built with the support of the Twilight Group, a privately funded non-profit organization whose mission is to provide educational programs about bats and through doing so, promote their conservation. Situated on the John Knox Road marsh pond, the approximately 60,000 Brazilian Free-Tailed bats that roost in the house from October through March find both fresh drinking water and abundant insect foods close at hand. Er, wing.

Bat Castle Bat House

(images via: BackYardBird and Dreamstime)

Want a bat house of your very own? There are plenty of plain-jane bat houses around and of course the bats really don’t care what they look like – but YOU do. That’s where The Bat Castle comes in. Priced at under $100 and made in the USA, this sturdy cypress wood bat house features non-rusting brass fittings and internal netting for your bat-guests to hang onto when roosting. Seats 50 to 60, eerie music optonal.

(image via: Studio G)

The Bat Castle may look like a novelty item but it’s approved by those who know one end of a bat from the other. “I like this bat house very much,” reports George Marks, Founder & President of the Florida Bat Conservancy. “The length of it allows the bats to move up and down within the house to find variations in the internal temperature.” Cool indeed, though if it were up to me I’d call it The Bats Motel, heh.

To The Bat Pole!

(image via: Decepticreep)

No, not THAT Bat Pole… though what you do in the privacy of your own bat cave is your own bat business.

(images via: Birdhouse Info and Outdoors Webshots)

Bat Poles do exist, though sliding down them isn’t recommended. These poles – pipes, more like – offer a no-nonsense solution for those who want to provide their local bats with a safe house but don’t want to disturb the aesthetics of their architecture.



Bat houses have a long history, as our ancestors figured out long ago that bats in the neighborhood meant less bugs biting them. It’s a true tragedy, then, that bats have been decimated by the mysterious fungal disease known as White Nose Syndrome. Giving bats a place to live could help them as a species – the more the merrier, as they say. A bat house, bizarre or not, installed on an outer wall or on a post is a very cool, ultra low maintenance way to do your bit for bats.


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Architecture of a Recession: Abandoned Housing Developments

The homebuilding business is always particularly hard-hit by an economic downturn. These developments were abandoned to return to nature when the money ran out.
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