Archive for April, 2012

Free driving for Earth Day

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

To celebrate Earth Day on Sunday April  22  Cityhop is offering $75 driving credit to every individual member who signs up before April 24. Just put Earth Day in the comments section of the join up application. It’s easy, it’s all on line. See how much you’ll save and don’t miss out. Tell your friends this is their chance to see the benefits of carsharing!

Time magazine recently came out with an interesting article about how mainstream ‘carsharing’ is in the US. The article points out:

Last year, the average U.S. household paid $4,155 gassing up their cars, and when gas, insurance,  depreciation, vehicle payments, and other expenses are tallied up, the average  car costs $8,776 annually. These costs will only increase now  that prices for gas and new cars have risen substantially. There’s an obvious  alternative to owning a car—not owning a car—and the rise of car sharing makes  it increasingly feasible.
Read more: http://moneyland.time.com/2012/04/16/whats-car-sharing-really-like/#ixzz1sQgKfPIr

With most cars sitting idle for 91 % of the time, now is a good time for you to ask yourself can you afford not to look at joining carsharing with this offer?

Earth Day coming up – eat green!

Sunday, April 15th, 2012

Earth Day 2012 is coming up on Sunday April 22. It’s an opportunity to think about the amazing job this earth does providing for us all. It’s also a chance to say thanks and practice an eco-friendly behaviour!

We are going to do a series of blogs on Earth Day and watch out, the closer we get Cityhop carshare could have some surprises for you!

With Earth Day in mind here are some ways to green up your diet.

Buy organic:  Yes it is a bit more expensive and can look a bit peculiar! But remember those veges that aren’t perfect are less tampered with! Buying organic usually means that those veges have been produced with health in mind. Choosing organic foods is reported to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by up to 68 percent.

The following list means you don’t always have to buy organic! The US Environmental Working Group named a “Clean 15”  of veges and fruit  least likely to be contaminated with pesticide residues).

They are onions, corn, pineapple, avocado, asparagus, sweet peas, mango, eggplant, cantaloupe, kiwi, cabbage, watermelon, sweet potatoes, grapefruit and mushrooms.

Buy local: We all know the mantra, buy local because it cuts down on your food miles. I like the idea that someone locally (often a small operation)  has grown something and then sold it locally. Lots of people must agree with this which is why Farmer’s Markets are so popular. When we buy local we are reducing the journey food travels from farm to fork.

Typically small farms use sustainable agricultural techniques that protect water and build healthy soils. Their livelihood, depends on it. I read that small is also good because small growers  typically plant a variety of crops, whereas some large industrial farms, grow acres of the same crop. Crop diversity is a good defense against the spread of damaging insects and plant pathogens. If a problem arises in one crop, it’s unlikely to spread to others.

Grow your own: Whether it’s a pot of herbs or you replace a bed of flowers with dark leafy greens, a home garden is the ultimate local food source. Nothing beats the satisfaction of picking and eating something you have grown!

And don’t forget our friends at Hungry Bins, who have NZ’s best worm farm for feed your garden with.  Maybe just like a New Year resolution which you apply to your own habits you might consider an Earth Day resolution, start a worm farm, start growing your own veges, plant a fruit tree or join carshare!

Being a green city

Friday, April 6th, 2012

The garden with railway tracks still visible

 

The Huffington Post has come out with an interesting article that Auckland Council could learn from. The article lists 10 of the greenest cities in the United States, possibly the last place many of us would think of as green!

10 large cities have been measured on their clean energy, public transit and local food. We think of American cities as overcrowded, polluted and dirty but with clean efficient public transport, bikes, car share and other friendly infrastructure, the planting of trees, encouraging locally produced food and looking for renewable energy sources see how more progressive these US cities are to Auckland.

“Slashing greenhouse gas emissions and coming close to zero waste is no easy feat for a metropolis with a population of at least 250,000, but these 10 cities — from Boston to San Francisco — prove that sustainability is possible on the largest of scales, in good economic times and bad.”

Read about the efforts the cities have taken to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and become more sustainable. Not surprisingly most of the cities are on the west coast.

Of more interest to me, is how seriously these American councils are taking the need to be more sustainable and the efforts they have gone to, to make it easier for their residents and ratepayers to be more eco-friendly. How have they done this? By supporting carsharing, bike sharing initiatives, creating more bike ways, green open spaces, planting more trees and much more.

Len Brown, Auckland Councillors please consider this!

One person’s junk

Sunday, April 1st, 2012

Cityhop loves the idea of people re-using and recycling! Our cars get re-used by lots of people every day!

The NZ Herald  VIVA had a great story on the online movement finding a home for unwanted items and giving them a new purpose in life.

Many years ago, I tried to get the Auckland Regional Council to develop a website on this very topic to discourage people throwing old jam jars and other no longer wanted items into the rubbish stream. It feel on deaf ideas. Each week I take allsorts of things to childcare centres, empty boxes of cornflakes for their pretend shop; coloured paper and crinkly sounding paper for collage table and so on.

Fortunately the private sector has come up with the solution. Freecycle began in 2003 in Tucson, Arizona and is now global. Gotta love the way the internet does this! Its mantra is “changing the world one gift at a time.”

At its core are the principles of sustainability whereby one man’s junk becomes another’s treasure.

The day I looked the Drury Playcentre was looking for paint, someone wanted large cushion covers and plenty of people had things to give away from bags of boys clothing to filing cabinets and much more!