Archives

Gardens are Growing....in Number

By Mark Bevis on Thursday, July 30, 2009.

On Saturday, Governor Lynch is scheduled to announce at the Concord Farmers Market that August is Eat Local month.

It's an attempt to promote local farms and locally grown foods.

But as NHPR's Mark Bevis reports, the governor does not have to do a lot of convincing.

The state is witnessing a surge in local vegetable gardens.

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The Cities Swarm With Bees

By Virginia Prescott on Wednesday, July 29, 2009.

Beekeeping is the latest buzz in big cities.

From the rooftops of Manhattan to Chicago’s empty lots, hives are swarming with honey-making bees. Urban beekeeping combines revived interest in locally-produced food, the do-it-yourself movement. Hives may be popping up in response to colony collapse disorder, in which bees are abruptly and mysteriously disappearing from several parts of the world...or it could purely be the allure of sweet, delicious honey.

Whatever the reason, the bug has bitten. Even the White House has a beehive for the very first time. As part of our ongoing Next Green Thing series, we talked to two veteran beekeepers about the trend. Michael Thompson has been keeping bees in Chicago since the 1970s, and today he’s the farm manager of the Chicago Honey Co-Op. Jim Fischer is the beekeeper for the Bronx Zoo in New York, and a founding member of the Gotham City Honey Co-Op.

The New York Times: Beekeepers Keep the Lid On and Hoping to Generate a Bit More Buzz

The Christian Science Monitor: City bees are all the buzz

(Photo courtesy of oceandesetoiles )

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Greening Your Mail

By Todd Bookman on Tuesday, July 28, 2009.

Neither snow nor rain nor heat could stop the U.S. Postal Service from unveiling a new two-and-a-half acre green roof last week.

Cash For Clunkers Seems to be Working in New Hampshire

By Mark Bevis on Tuesday, July 28, 2009.

The CARS program is up and running.

The 1 billion dollar federal rebate program officially got into gear last week.

It offers car buyers up to 45 hundred dollars when they trade in an older car for a new one that gets better gas mileage.

And as NHPR's Mark Bevis reports, the program seems to be getting a good response in New Hampshire.

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Air Pollution and IQ in Children

By Virginia Prescott on Tuesday, July 28, 2009.

Researchers have for the first time linked prenatal exposure to air pollution to lower IQ scores in childhood. The results support growing evidence that smog and urban pollution may harm the neurological development of children. The study was published in the Journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics. Dr. Frederica Perera is lead author of the study and director of the Columbia Center for Children’s Environmental Health. She joined us as part of our Next Green Thing series.

Associated Press: Air Pollution in Womb Linked to Low IQ

Journal of The American Academy of Pediatrics: Prenatal Airborne Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Exposure and Child IQ at Age 5 Years

Most people think of their home as a sanctuary from toxic air, a place where smog and exhaust from buses and cars can’t permeate. But according to a 2005 state study, Californians spend 45 billion dollars a year on the health effects of indoor air pollution. Similar expenditures have been seen across the country, causing some people to worry about the harmful pollutants lurking in their homes. KQED asked an air quality specialist to sniff out the air pollutants inside a typical San Francisco home and to explain what can be done to mitigate their effects.

You can listen to Amy Standen's piece at the Public Radio Exchange.

(Photo by Ben Amstutz via Flickr/Creative Commons)

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Sustainable Prisons

By Virginia Prescott on Monday, July 27, 2009.

There are three million prisoners in America. Many have little contact with the natural world. Sure, there are jobs on the prison farm or picking up litter, but lasting interaction with the environment is rare. Until now, conducting environmental research was pretty much unheard of. The Sustainable Prisons Project in Washington state is working to change that. It’s a joint project between the state’s Department of Corrections and Evergreen State College. Inmates at Cedar Creek Corrections Center are involved in researching lifeforms from moss to endangered frogs. The center also has an organic garden, a composting center, and its own beehives.

It's part of a growing movement to reduce the environmental impact of America’s prisons and train inmates for jobs in the green economy. As part of our "next green thing" series, we speak with Nalini Nadkarni. She’s the co-founder of the Sustainable Prisons Project and faculty member at Evergreen State College.

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In Case of Emergency

By Virginia Prescott on Monday, July 27, 2009.

Author and music critic Neil Strauss grew up in a 70-story apartment building in Chicago. He’s what you’d call an urban hipster, a description reinforced by his best-selling book The Game in which he teaches hapless men how to pick up women. Nine years ago Strauss began to look at the world differently. First the Y2K scare, then 9-11, and later the unraveling of New Orleans after Katrina.

These events shattered the illusion of invincible America and were a bulwark against disaster or social breakdown. Neil wondered how he’d live if the system broke down. He began to learn some of the survival skills that generations before us took for granted. To those he added getting a Swiss bank account, flying a plane and escaping from handcuffs in the locked trunk of a car. Neil Strauss shares his newfound skills in his new book Emergency: This Book Will Save Your Life.

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Here's What's Awesome: Desert-Blocking Bacteria, Implantable Telescopes

By Brady Carlson on Sunday, July 26, 2009.

SaharaThis week's edition of Here's What's Awesome has some pretty heavy-duty items - in fact, they remind me of something Margaret Mead might have said: "A small group of awesome links could change the world. Indeed, it's the only thing that ever has."

That's next time, on This Old Desert

How can we teach our kids to be green?

By EarthTalk on Sunday, July 26, 2009.

EarthTalkTM
From the Editors of E/The Environmental Magazine

Local Food to Local Fuel

By Erik Eisele on Thursday, July 23, 2009.

A family in Tamworth has started a business they expect to take off over the next year.

They're banking on the public's demand for renewable energy.....and the growing movement to buy local.

NHPR correspondent Erik Eisele has this report.

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