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Green Benefits

Earth Day Happenings

  • March 30, 2022
Earth Day Happenings

April 22nd is Earth Day, and as the world is slowly opening up again to the possibility of a time after Covid-19, there are many fun ways to get involved this year and help clean up our planet. From park/forest clean ups to educational opportunities to playdates helping teach the next generation about the care of Mother Earth, Chicagoland is offering numerous events to show support this Earth Day.

Chicagoland Events

Chicagoland Events

There are so many exciting events happening this Earth Day. This list does not contain all of them, so feel free to reach out to your local forest preserve or village hall to ask about local events also. Here are some of the events happening in the Chicagoland area.

  • April 16 (10-12) – Join the Chicago Rotary Club for a morning cleanup of Grant Park.
  • April 20 (4-5pm) – Palatine Library is offering an hour of Earth Day related stories, science and activities for ages 4-7. Sign up begins 4/6.
  • April 21 (10:30-12) – If you have kids that love nature, there will be a Nature Play Date at Lincoln Marsh in the Prairie Patch Play Area with activities and open play. Afterwards, there is a picnic lunch.
  • April 21 (1-1:30) – Come learn how to recycle and create art out of recycled materials at Naper Settlement.
  • April 22 (1-3) – Clean up litter in Schiller Woods – East. We will provide all of the supplies needed.
  • April 22 (11-1) – BackYard Nature Center is hosting an Earth Day Celebration at Erickson Woods in Winnetka. There will be hiking, stick carving, nature play and more.
  • April 22 (3:30-4:45) – Trailside Museum of Natural History is hosting After School Earth Day Activities of planting a tree, making a bird feeder or recycled art.
  • April 22 (10-2) – Clean up litter in Sauk Trail Woods – Central. We will provide all of the needed supplies.
  • April 22 (3:30-5:30) – There will be Earth Day Activities offered at Century Park Pavilion all afternoon for families.
  • April 23 (11-2) – Clean up litter in Beaubien Woods. We will provide all of the needed supplies.
  • April 23 (12-3) – Crabtree Nature Center is hosting family-friendly Earth Day Activities in their three acre nature play area.
  • April 24 (All Day) – There are so many fun Earth Day events happening at Brookfield Zoo.

Other Ways to Love our Planet

Other Ways to Love our Planet

If you are unable to make one of the above events or a local one in your area, there are other ways to get involved this Earth Day. As noted in our Earth Day post from two years ago, attending an event is not the only way you can show love to our planet. Other ways to be involved are:

Start Your Own Compost

Find out how much garbage you can reduce by placing all of your food scraps into a compost bin instead.

Recycle Textiles

Clean out your closets and dresser this Earth Day and donate all items no longer needed to your closest CTR bin or partner resale store.

Pick Up Trash in Your Neighborhood

Simply step outside your front door to help care for our planet. Go on a family walk with a trash bag and gloves and see what litter you can help clean up around your neighborhood.

Plant Flowers to Attract Bumblebees and Butterflies

Look up which flowers attract butterflies and bumblebees and plant them in your yard to promote the longevity of these species and pollination.

To read more about these ideas on caring for our planet, click on the link above. And if you know of any other events happening in your area, please share them by commenting on the social media post so we can add them to our list. There are many simple ways to get involved and if we all work together and do our part, they all add up to big changes for our planet.

Green Benefits

Earth Day is Almost Here

  • April 17, 2020April 9, 2020

Next Wednesday is Earth Day. This year, 2020, marks 50 years of Earth Day being celebrated. On their website about Earth Day, the organizers of the Earth Day movement explain some of the history behind how Earth Day came to be:

 

“Americans were consuming vast amounts of leaded gas through massive and inefficient automobiles. Industry belched out smoke and sludge with little fear of the consequences from either the law or bad press. Air pollution was commonly accepted as the smell of prosperity. Until this point, mainstream America remained largely oblivious to environmental concerns and how a polluted environment threatens human health.

 

However, the stage was set for change with the publication of Rachel Carson’s New York Times bestseller Silent Spring in 1962. The book represented a watershed moment, selling more than 500,000 copies in 24 countries as it raised public awareness and concern for living organisms, the environment and the inextricable links between pollution and public health.”

 

Earth Day was founded by Gaylord Nelson, a U.S. Senator from Wisconsin. It was created to have a day focused on the environment and the concerns of air and water pollution. The very first Earth Day in 1970 had a turnout of 20 million Americans who “took to the streets, parks and auditoriums to demonstrate for a healthy, sustainable environment in massive coast-to-coast rallies.” That first Earth Day “led to the creation of the United States Environmental Protection Agency and the passage of the Clean Air, Clean Water and Endangered Species Acts.” Twenty years later, Earth Day went global.

 

Ideas for Earth Day

Every year there are a wide number of events to attend in celebration and honor of Earth Day. This year, however, with coronavirus creating the need for social distancing, here are some other ways you can help in your own neighborhood, yard or corner of the world.

Virtual Event

On Wednesday, April 22nd, Chicago Park Districts Friends of the Parks is hosting a digital Earth Day celebration. Previously, they had organized a city wide parks clean up day for the weekend prior. However, this has been postponed due to coronavirus. They are planning to reschedule the outdoor clean up day once the “shelter in place” order has ended. Check here to find out more about their Digital Earth Day.

Start Your Own Compost

Composting is great for the environment in that it reduces the amount of waste you are sending to the landfills each week and it is nutrient rich for your flower or vegetable garden. You can buy composting kits from online stores or read information online about creating a hole in your backyard for compost heap. Remember to cover it after adding food scraps to keep critters out.

Recycle Textiles

Another great way to help the environment is to clean out your textiles and donate them to our bins and partner resale stores. Earth Day would be a great day to come together as a family and clean out closets and dressers, but as mentioned in our other social media posts, please keep them at home in storage until the quarantine has lifted so that we can keep our employees safe. Textile recycling is great for the environment because it keeps textiles out of landfills and reduces greenhouse gas emissions.

Pick Up Trash in Your Neighborhood

If you are feeling stir crazy, leave home while also keeping others safe by taking a walk in your neighborhood, local park or preserve that remains open. Remember to continue to  practice social distancing and stick close to your family. While you are out on your walk, take a pair of gloves and some trash bags to pick up trash along the way. Cleaning up your neighborhood and park helps the environment so that animals and other creatures don’t end up eating the trash or getting stuck in it. This also reduces the risk of trash being blown into bodies of water to contaminate lifeforms there.

Plant Flowers to Attract Butterflies and Bumblebees

Butterflies and bumblebees are important to our ecosystems and pollination. They offer natural pest control and provide food for larger animals. They also eat weedy plants. “About one third of the food people eat depends on the work of pollinators such as butterflies.” (Read more here.) According to this site for the USDA, “bees of all sorts pollinate approximately 75 percent of the fruits, nuts and vegetables grown in the United States, and one out of every four bites of food people take is courtesy of bee pollination.” Butterflies and bumblebees are vital parts of the ecosystem and can help in growing flower and vegetable gardens in your yard. This Earth Day, you can choose to plant flowers and other plants that will attract these incredibly beneficial creatures. For information on what to plant, read more here.

 

How CTR is Involved on Earth Day and Everyday

Here at Chicago Textile Recycling, we are ever expanding our efforts to decrease textile waste and we are seeking additional partners.  We are currently seeking resale stores in the Chicagoland area looking to generate funds recycling excess and unsaleable items. We are also seeking communities, businesses or organizations interested in establishing a textile recycling partnership program by hosting a recycling bin!  If you know of any place of business in your area willing to host a bin or expand their outreach for helping the Earth, please reach out to us. 

 

Textiles currently make up 6.3% of the waste stream, which means the average American throws away 81 lbs of clothing annually! So the need is real! We have premade letters and informative fliers you can share with anyone who may be interested and we offer numerous incentives for you in using our bins:

 

  • Get paid for goods collected
  • Provide a convenient service
  • Increase traffic to your business
  • Help the environment
  • Support a local small business

 

Earth Day

No matter what you choose to do this Earth Day, take the day, the week, the month and hopefully the whole year to share with others how important it is to do our part in taking care of our planet. Educate yourself and others on small changes to make in your day to day that can add up to a major difference for the future, and remember to recycle your textiles.

Green Benefits

4 Ways to LOVE the Earth

  • February 12, 2020January 22, 2020

4 ways to love the earth

Two days from now millions in the U.S. and worldwide will be celebrating Valentine’s Day, a holiday marked by LOVE…love of spouse, love of friends, love of pets, love of neighbors, love, love, and more love. Although typically celebrated for romantic love, we encourage each of you, our readers, to add an extra recipient of your love this holiday. When thinking of ways you can love others on February 14th, think also of ways you can love our planet. Here are 4 ideas to get you started…

 

love the earth by educating yourself

1. Love the Earth by Educating Yourself

The first step of loving the Earth is in knowing how to show that love. Knowing ways to take care of our planet and use its resources wisely is a big way to show your love. By educating yourself about the world and pollution and trash, you can know how to do your part in making it cleaner.

 

“In a lifetime, the average American will leave a legacy of 90,000 pounds of trash for future generations.”

 

Leaving that kind of legacy is not a legacy of love and by starting now, you can change that legacy.  Another way to educate yourself is to study how other countries handle waste differently than the U.S.

 

“Americans make up roughly 5% of the world’s population, but generate nearly 40% of the world’s total waste.”

 

As the focus on climate and environmentalism grows, new businesses are popping up that face the problem of waste head on by finding creative ways to recycle other’s waste. By learning more about what can and should be recycled, and other creative ways of offsetting your waste output, such as composting, you can begin to make a difference in your own corner of the planet.

 

love the Earth by spreading awareness

2. Love the Earth by Spreading Awareness

Who in your own area of interaction can you share this new knowledge with? Is there a neighbor you have seen place plastic bags in their recycling? Is there a friend you know who composts that can get you started and teach you how so that you can then teach others? Do you know of a business owner that would be willing to host a textile recycling bin in your neighborhood? Are there coworkers you see that bring plastic bottles to work instead of reusable, and then throw those away? Does your office offer recycling cans next to its trash cans?

 

If the most basic way of loving the Earth is gaining knowledge in how to love it better, the second is to spread that new knowledge by spreading awareness about the importance of taking care of our planet. You can do that in your day to day interactions with people you have relationships with or even strangers you meet along the way. Using kind words, you can help show the Earth some love by inspiring others to also love the Earth better. Spreading awareness also spreads and widens the effects of change making a larger and larger impact in your corner of the world.

 

love the Earth by recycling textiles

3. Love the Earth by Recycling Textiles

“The EPA says that current textile recycling, including clothing, has a greater impact on reducing greenhouse gases than the recycling of plastic, yard waste and glass. The weight of recycled textiles in 2014 (2.6 million tons) was equal to taking 1.3 million cars off the road.” Read more here.

 

By changing your approach to old clothes, towels, linens, etc, you can make a large difference in the contribution of greenhouse gases.  By using this knowledge, and spreading this knowledge, together we can make a huge impact on the future of our planet. 

If you know of any businesses in your area that would be willing to host a bin or know of a large need for a bin in your neighborhood, please contact us. We would love to help you spread awareness by placing a visual reminder and receptacle to simplify the process of recycling textiles.

 

love the Earth by getting out in nature

4. Love the Earth by Getting Out in Nature

This last way to love the Earth can look different to each person. For some, it might be collecting trash along the shores of Lake Michigan, or in your very own neighborhood. For others, it might be volunteering at your local nature or forest preserve, spreading mulch, planting trees and again cleaning up trash, or any other projects they may need help with.

 

Another way you could help is by planting wildflowers to promote bee life in your area, or create a butterfly habitat by planting the right kind of flowers in your yard.  Each creature is vital to our planet and many are endangered. By creating habitats where they can thrive, you are helping to further their existence and continue their very important roles in nature.

 

Also, simply getting out in nature, taking walks and appreciating the vast array of trees and plants, flowers, animals and insects can help us appreciate nature more and better love the planet we live on.

 

how will you love the earth today

How Will You Love the Earth Today?

Loving our planet need not involve grand gestures and completely changing your life. By changing small things in your day to day and sharing these changes you’ve made with others around you, each person can make a difference toward a cleaner and more healthy world. Instead of buying flowers this Valentines Day, maybe we can start some of these small changes by planting flowers instead, and watch your love of Earth bloom over the months and years ahead.

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