Tag Archives | environment

Butterfly Wings


Beautiful and for a good cause.

The butterflies used in my jewellery are sourced from an organisation that manages sustainable farming projects all over the world. Agricultural development has caused the natural habitat of a lot of butterfly species to become threatened, and their populations started dwindling. Farming programs were therefore started to enable farmers from third world countries to keep the rain forests on their land intact, while still providing a livelihood that paid better than mono-cultural crops. The breeding program enables thousands of butterflies to be bred. A portion of the butterflies are caught and sold, and the money generated from the sales ensures that the tropical forests, which are vital to their survival, are preserved.

Via Design Crush

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How to make seed bombs

How to make seed bombs
I may have never been a “plant person,” but I’m very tempted to try this out. I love the mixture of rebellion, environmentalism and, in my opinion, art this is.

Jonathan noted today’s LA Times profile about militant gardening, with Angelenos looking to change the urban landscape one seed bomb at a time. Hidden in the article is a helpful photo instructional how-to, as shown above. Don’t mistake those seed “bombs” above for truffles…they’re the arsenal of the urban gardeners mentioned in today’s LA Times article.

Via Apartment Therapy

1. Caroline Kim takes us through the step-by-step process of making seed bombs that gardeners on the go drop into the soil of barren, forlorn spots. Start with organic earthworm castings. Then add clay soil. Mix dry.

2. Add wildflower seeds to the mixture of clay and earthworm castings.

3. Next, Caroline adds water and mixes together wildflower seeds, clay soil and earthworm castings into a mud pie-like consistency.

4. She scoops up little mounds of the mixture and rolls them into bombs, more like balls.

5. The seed bombs are left to dry for a day outside in a plastic container.

6. With the seed bombs stowed in her red bag, the stiletto-wearing Caroline takes off on her bike in search of vacant patches of public space. To plant the seed bombs, she digs holes with a trusty tool — the heel of her shoe. “Stilettos work really well,” she says, grinning.

Via LA Times

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Ideas, and a new project, Thank you Tree Hugger!

treehugger dot com green logo
This is one of my new favorite sites. Although I’m not seeing an rss option, I’ll certainly be checking back often. I tend to keep ideas filed away in my head, and the bloggers at treehugger have allready helped me to connect several of my favorite dots, which means its project time! Thanks again guys,
Jack

”treehugger

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