Saturday, September 29, 2007
Miami Herald's mislabeled story
Read the full story: Ecotourism adventures abound in northern Australia's Queensland
Friday, September 28, 2007
LA Times tells where to view fall folliage
Read the full article: The hunt for Red October
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
CSM answers question about cruise's eco-consciousness
Read the full story: Is it possible to take an ecofriendly cruise?
Monday, September 24, 2007
West Africa's new eco-lodges
Read the full story: Hope floats in Africa
Sunday, September 23, 2007
Sharing bicycles in Paris
"Here's how it works: Velibs can be picked up and dropped off at any of a thousand stations around the capital, where users insert credit cards into a machine to sign up for a day (one euro, or about $1.40), a week (five euros) or a year (29 euros). A fee of $205 is taken from your account if the bike is not returned. Caveat: At this point, only smart-chip Visa cards and America Express cards are accepted.
The system is designed to encourage short journeys: After paying your subscription fee and picking up a bike, the first half-hour is free. The second half-hour costs one euro, the third costs two euros and a fourth would cost an added four euros, to encourage people to stick to the half-hour system."
So using a bike to get around is a green way to see Paris.
Read the full story: Free wheeling: Paris's new bike system
Saturday, September 22, 2007
National Public Lands Day
visit their website to see what you can do in your state: publiclandsday.org
Tuesday, September 18, 2007
Maine corn mazes
Read the full story: Get lost
Saturday, September 15, 2007
Badger state promoting ecotourism
Read the full story: Wisconsin's sights are set on earth-friendly tourism
Friday, September 14, 2007
Seeing stars at Joshua Tree
Read the full story: Star-gazing parties light up Joshua Tree's low desert
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
How to enjoy chilly fall kayaking
Read the full story: Fall kayaking
Monday, September 10, 2007
Bear attack reminds about nature's unpredictability
Read the full story: A hike into horror
Sunday, September 9, 2007
Heli-hiking, ruining the environment you're supposedly enjoying
Heli-hiking is for people who want to pay exorbitant fees (excerpt from article: "You also don’t have to be rich: not counting the airfare, I paid $2,400 for my trip," says writer Joe Nocera. Not sure how much the NYTimes pays him, but last time I checked, $2,400 for a joyride up a mountain wasn't just change lying around in my pocket...) to be helicoptered to the top of a mountain because they are too out of shape to actually hike up it from the bottom. These are probably the same type of rich out-of-shape idiots who go up Mount Everest and expect that their wealth will protect them from death.
In any case, enjoying nature is one thing, but to actually go out of your way to take a carbon spewing helicopter to the top of a mountain to claim you are hiking is absolutely ridiculous. Thanks Joe for having another one of those environmentally irresponsible articles all in the name of fun. And to think that you actually felt sore muscles by going hiking which is a physically exerting sport, that's absolutely amazing.
Read the full article: Five-star wilderness
Thursday, September 6, 2007
Surfboarding's environmental nightmare
Read the full article: The next big wave
Wednesday, September 5, 2007
Mt. Whitney trekkers leave nothing behind
"The 19,000 or so hikers who pick up Forest Service permits each year to hike the Whitney Trail are given double-sealed sanitation kits and told how to use them - just as they are told how to keep their food from the bears along the way, and how to find shelter when lightning storms rake the ridges."Read the full story: No more privies, so hikers add a carry-along
Tuesday, September 4, 2007
Vatican to be carbon neutral
"In so doing, the Vatican announced, it would become the world's first carbon-neutral state. 'As the Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI, recently stated, the international community needs to respect and encourage a "green culture," ' said Cardinal Paul Poupard, head of the Pontifical Council for Culture.
Planting forests is only "a partial solution, and a temporary one. [It] will only compensate for a small fraction of emissions, even if you cover all of Hungary in young trees," said Laszlo Galhidy, forestry officer for the environmental group WWF Hungary, although he praised the [Vatican] project as a useful step."
Read the full report: Vatican agress to a carbon offset scheme
Monday, September 3, 2007
Miami Herald's Earth & Man section
Their latest story about cruising Greenland's icecap shows firsthand reactions to the obvious melting:
"Nearly every [Greenlander] local has a story of warming temps: a noticeably shrinking icecap, shifting fish populations, a dog-sledding season cut short by three months. This much seems certain: As ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica warm and glaciers worldwide thin, the sea will rise significantly. Coasts will shift. Though it won't happen quickly -- not in this lifetime, or perhaps the next -- that scenario seems all the more reason to trade in the gas guzzler, change to energy saver light bulbs."Read the full story: Greenland: Cruise explores harsh universe - in comfort