Archive for September, 2006

wine-in-a-box

Thursday, September 21, 2006

wine.jpg  My friend, salmon, recently informed me that wine-in-a-box can be purchased in individual portions, like jumbo juice boxes for grown-ups.  I keep meaning to tell my grandmother this.  For a short time after they retired, she and my grandfather had a small vineyard in New Jersey.  They made and bottled their own wine, mostly drunk by our immediate family but also tasted at local get-togethers with other farmers struggling to make grapes happy on the East Coast.  Grandma has told me more than once that wine-in-a-box, or more specifically wine-in-a-bag-in-a-box, is a better way to store wine over a long period of time without losing flavor. 

It appears that vintners in Canada agree with her as several wineries have foregone traditional glass bottles in favor of the box.  Usman Valiante, a contributor to Canada’s Solid Waste and Recycling Magazine, weighs the environmental and viticultural pros and cons of this decision on the blog he keeps off the magazine’s Web site.  Aside from trashing the taste of the wines he sampled, Valiante explains that the materials used to store the drinks aren’t as green as the vineyards imply.  He also points out the irony in the label “Recyclable–where facilities exist.”  I guess I’ll have to stick to sangria in a thermos at picnics. 

kinda like an ant farm

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

rats.jpg  At the Brooklyn book fest this past weekend, Rats author Robert Sullivan informed the crowd that the clear plastic garbage bags favored by downtown establishments post 9-11 now allow the casual observer an unobscured view of rats eating dinner and therefore a better understanding of the rodent’s relationship with trash.

high return on renewable energy

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

report.jpg The World Watch Institute at the nonpartisan Center for American Progress released a new report today on American investment in and consumption of energy. The document states that: “Next to the Internet, new energy technology has become one of the hottest investment fields for venture capitalists.” Investment in ways to use vegetable oil and waste as fuel has quadrupled over the last several years; and more people seem to be recognizing the potential of harnessing the gasses found in much of what we landfill.

iTunes and AOL give rise to CD Coasters

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

various_aol_cds_with_packaging_removed.jpg I remember in college when the show Futurama came out, many people I know were very excited. Some of them even convinced me to watch the first episode of the cartoon to see if, indeed, it was as funny as The Simpsons (I will refrain from live-linking here on the assumption that most readers are familiar with the show).

Not being a huge fan of The Simpsons, it’s not surprising that I didn’t end up following Futurama. I will never foget, however, a brief flash in one scene to a planet piled high with thousands of AOL CDROMs (and nothing else) as a nod to the fact that 1) everyone throws them away and 2) that’s where all our trash might end up some day.

So imagine my amusement when, years later, I came accross this CD coaster craft project on About.com. It’s one of hundreds of “Trash to Treasure” projects compiled on the site ranging from corny (avoid the “blue jean” section entirely) to inspired (see above). In fact, an entire section is devoted to ideas for those soon-to-be-obsolete disks once used to store music in the Global North and still used to ship research at cheap rates to the South.

Starbucks and fashion stigma

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

tupperware-lady1.jpg An article over at Groovy Green (the sidebar, folks, it’s all about the sidebar) caught my eye with the catchy headline “How Starbucks Could Have Saved the World“. It’s about disposible coffee cups and incentives not to use them. While discounts for reusing mugs and encouraging people to drink from real cups while in the store are nice gestures, what we really need are some superstar style mavens to declare reusable “in” and disposible “out”.  A friend and I were discussing the other day that while it’s one thing to refuse a plastic bag at the deli and tuck your groceries into a Brooklyn-chic tote, it’s another thing entirely to carry your own tupperware to avoid take-out packaging.

Mavens at London Fashion Week

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

eve.JPG And speaking of style, the fashionistas at style.com, treehugger, fiftyRx3 and fabulously green are all raving about the green garments on display in London this week. If two points make a line and three blogs make a trend, then this eco fashion must be some hot shit.

Weekly Compactor

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

coted.jpg  This week in trash news:

amero-canadian trash accord

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

canada2.gif  The city of Toronto held an emergency meeting on trash today to draft a “contingency plan to handle the city’s garbage and sewage sludge in the event of a border closure.”  You see, the U.S. and Canada have been at war, or at least at skirmish, for years over which country is the other’s dump.  Michiganders in particular are angry that companies like Waste Management can import foreign trash and deposit it in landfills in their state.  In response, the House of Representatives recently passed a bill that would grant states the right to ban garbage from other countries.  The bill is a long way from becoming law and will likely undergo many changes along the way. 

Meanwhile, Michigan’s senators are brokering deals with Ontario officials to slow the flow of trash from our neighbor to the North.

waste fest 2007

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

waste.jpg If you blog it, they will come! Today has been a great one for comments (new ones are peppered throughout the blog, so check out the archives). The gold star goes to the trashie who alterted us to an upcoming, international, artistic, trash-related event called WASTE and organized by a Czech collective known as CESTA. Applications are due November 15th, so you creative types might want to start your plotting ASAP.

Thanks for the tip, Stephanie!

where my trashies at, yo?

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Garblogging can be a thrilling pastime, but I couldn’t do it without your encouragement and active participation. Thanks to all who have been clicking through as I’ve launched everyday trash these past couple of weeks, thanks to the artists whose work I’ve been reposting and thanks especially to the peanut gallery for the snarky commentary. Please, please, keep it coming!

A reminder on the rules of the game: comments are very welcome, as are tips, feedback and suggestions for future items, new entries are posted at least daily and all posts relate to trash.

radical reuse

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

coyote-lg.jpg While searching for material for a ‘trash on the radio’ post, I came across this entertaining and informative transcript in which Terry Gross interviews Peter Coyote, an actor and a member of the now-defunct street theatre group The Diggers. In it, Coyote says that during his era “the feeling was: there’s more than enough to go around and that you could build a creative and even elegant life off the garbage.”

umbrella extravaganza

Monday, September 18, 2006

umbrella4.jpg  Phase II of the Umbrella Inside Out competition starts today.  If you thought the winning fashion design was impressive, prepare to be amazed by these durable and biodegradable umbrellas of the future.

women in trash

Sunday, September 17, 2006

women.jpg  While reading through the latest newsletter from DSNY, New York City’s trash authority, I came across a tiny item in the congratulations section that mentioned the recent promotion of two women to the rank of deputy chief.  I guess the city of New York felt the story was bigger than garbage, because the mayor’s office issued a press release, not the department of sanitation.

I don’t have much commentary to add to this story.  It’s a mid-level administrative rank and not surprising that women have not yet surpassed deputy chief given the staunch old-boys-club nature of both sanitation and New York City. 

It is interesting, though, that garbage collection in our country is such a male-dominated industry given the widely-held cultural belief that wives should pick up after their husbands and sons and not the other way around.

A cursory Google for international comparisons reveals that:

  • In India, garbage-free village initiatives offer job opportunities for women;
  • Women in Jordan used a Global Fund grant to go door to door collecting trash, then turned their local garbage dump into a community greenhouse;
  • Egyptian women sort trash and sell what they can to fund women’s health programs;
  • And local teams of women environmentalists in Mozambique spend their mornings getting rid of cesspools of trash and their afternoons educating their neighbors on how to avoid malaria and cholera by coming up with new ways to dispose of household waste.

It would appear that women the world over are taking the tidyupper sterotype and, if not rejecting it entirely, at least turning it on its head.

Famous trash in American history

Sunday, September 17, 2006

bargeinthenews.jpg When I mention to people that I have a trash blog, I am often told the story of a garbage barge that circled the world looking for a place to dump its contents.  I guess I shouldn’t be surprised that people remember this tale from the late eighties.  After all, who could forget a story that involves a standoff between a tugboat hauling Long Island waste and the Mexican Navy?  Today, while looking into the Marbro barge and the tugboat Break of Day (the dynamic duo that star in the infamous tale), I discovered that a set of paper recycling principles has since been named for the barge.

The tugboat captain, incidentally, was from Louisiana, a state which refused to let in the trash and which, today, suffers more than ever from garbage problems of its own.

toxic slop smells like rotting eggs

Saturday, September 16, 2006

abid.jpg People living in Abidjan are angry and turning violent over the hundreds of tons of shipping sludge illegally dumped near their homes. In the past few days they have beaten up the minister of transport and burned the home of the port director. Twenty-six thousand Ivoirians have sought treatment for headaches and vomiting and difficulty breathing. The BBC took this powerful photo and reported that burning barricades have been set up around the city.

Meanwhile, Côte d’Ivoire’s President Laurent Gbagbo is un-rsvp-ing to a UN meeting on the future of his country next week. His opposition to the meeting seems to be that he 1) doesn’t want peace and 2) doesn’t like the part of the plan that calls for open presidential elections within a year.

Related posts:

update on Côte d’Ivoire

death by trash