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Grass Roots Green: Humble Things in Nature Can ‘Make’ a Room

Cheryl Terrace by Cheryl Terrace | September 24th, 2009 | Comments (0)
topic: Eco Decorating, Green Living | tags: affordable green decorating, branches, conscious design, decorating with nature, eco-friendly decorating, eco-friendly design, flowers, nature in the home, nature indoors, plants, rocks

cropped2ndblogI have always been a frugalista, eco-fashionista, and precycler — I just didn’t know the labels! Eco thinking is embodied in my everyday behavior and the natural way I have always designed spaces, which I refer to as conscious design. Having elements from nature in a home environment signals a presence of life supporting systems, which inherently give us a feel-good-green-vibe. The good news (really good news these days) is that it is not expensive; in fact, it’s often free!

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The Ladybug Wars: Confessions of an Obsessed Organic Gardener

Leslie Garrett by Leslie Garrett | June 26th, 2009 | Comments (1)
topic: Green Living | tags: aphids, flowers, gardening, ladybugs, organic garden, vegetable garden

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There comes a time in any mother’s trajectory when she can clearly look back and see when she lost her mind. My moment of insanity occurred last week. My six-year-old and I were enjoying a lovely morning outside — me poking around in my garden while she, bug bucket in hand, sought out toads or creepy crawlies to examine. I was mentally congratulating myself on my perennials, which (if I do say so myself) are looking quite spectacular.

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Is It OK to Take Pieces of Our Travels Home?

Candice Gaukel Andrews by Candice Gaukel Andrews | May 12th, 2009 | Comments (9)
topic: Eco Travel, Green Living | tags: flowers, leave no trace, mementos, natural places, pine cone, seashells, travel, Utah

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On a bookcase in my home office is a tiny piece of shed seal fur I spotted on a beach in New Zealand, a Douglas fir pine cone I absconded with from a forest floor in British Columbia, and a piece of shale I picked up from the rocky shores of Newfoundland. Looking at these mementos I’ve picked up on several journeys near and far reminds me of my travels; and arranged as they are in a circle, they create a “map” of sorts, a visual representation of where I’ve had the great fortune of going to in the world and the arc I traveled back home.

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