Students Make an Impact in Franklin County

Peaks Mill Litter Cleanup #1 photo

Fourth grade students in Frankfort and Franklin County have been making a big impact in their environment.  As part of a project with Bluegrass Greensource and the Franklin County Solid Waste Administrator, students in seven city and county schools have had the opportunity to learn about litter in their classroom, and then applied that to their own environment.

Students at Bridgeport Elementary, Collins Lane Elementary, Elkhorn Elementary, Good Shepherd School, Hearn Elementary, Peaks Mill Elementary and Second Street School all worked with a Bluegrass Greensource educator in their classroom to learn about pollution and how it affects our local environment.  Using an Enviroscape model to demonstrate a landscape, students first learned what a watershed is and what watershed they lived in.  Students then identified various types of point source and nonpoint source pollutants found within that watershed.  Using items to symbolize litter, animal waste, and oil from cars, students saw where those pollutants came from and where they can end up as stormwater and move through their watershed.  After identifying the various types of pollution in the environment, students then brainstormed best management practices, or ways they can reduce and clean up those pollutants.

Following the classroom demonstration, students then met again with educators from Bluegrass Greensource to do a project on their school grounds.  Using the information they learned, the students made maps of their school grounds, and used the maps to track where they found litter, motor oil and stormdrains around their own school.  Students then put their best management practices into action and collected litter from their school grounds.  While doing the project, students were surprised to find more litter than they expected.  Students also became more aware of stormdrains and how stormwater affects their environment, and many classes chose to display their litter maps in their schools to educate other students and teachers about litter.

Bluegrass Greensource enjoyed this collaboration with Franklin County Public Schools, Frankfort Independent Schools, and Good Shepherd School.  Greensource is so proud of the impact these fourth grade students made in their community!

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Bluegrass Tomorrow Presents Greensource with Vision Award for Green/Sustainability

Award Photo

Posted Monday, November 4, 2013 on KyForward.com

The annual Bluegrass Tomorrow’s Vision Awards Breakfast included more than sticky buns on the menu. Awards were presented to Don Robinson, Ed Burtner, the Kentucky River Thorobred, Knox van Nagell, Bluegrass Greensource, Judy Clabes, the National Park Service’s Rivers Trails Conservation Assistance Program, Kyle Lake and Rebecca Barnes.

Robinson is owner of Winter Quarter Farm and is best known for breeding multiple Eclipse Award winner Zenyatta, the 2010 Horse of the Year. He won the 2013 Josephine Abercrombie Vision Award for his leadership as chairman of the Lexington Fayette Urban County Government Planning Commission which made the motion for a change of minimum lot acreage from 10 to 40 acres in agricultural areas.

Ed Burtner is the mayor of Winchester. He has been a major advocate for Bluegrass Station and the Bluegrass Army Depot and is active in many regional organizations and projects He received the Bluegrass Legacy Vision Award.

Other awards were presented for outstanding service to Bluegrass Tomorrow and the 18 surrounding counties to the Kentucky River Thorobred, a Kentucky State University floating laboratory; Knox van Nagell of the Fayette Alliance; Bluegrass Greensource; and a conservation program run by the National Park Service.

The special Robert Clay Award was also presented to Judy Clabes, publisher and editor of KYForward.com, as Bluegrass Tomorrow’s “most valuable” board member and the one who has done the most to improve the organization over the last year.

Passionate about the preservation and protection of precious Bluegrass soils and the equine/agricultural industry, Robinson is a director and past president of the Kentucky Thoroughbred Association, the Kentucky Thoroughbred Owners & Breeders Association, and the Fayette County Farm Bureau. He is currently chairman of the Fayette Alliance.

Burtner has been a board member of Bluegrass Tomorrow and the Bluegrass Area Development District. He has been very active in the United Way and the regional Public Policy Group facilitated by Commerce Lexington which advocates for many regional issues including education, drug abuse, the Kentucky River, the water supply and others.

KSU’s Kentucky River Thorobred floating laboratory is a unique 52-foot pontoon boat used for research on river ecology and environment, and was honored with the Education Vision Award.

Bluegrass Greensource (formerly PRIDE) won the Green/Sustainability Vision Award for its excellent and continued work in environmental education and sustainability.

Van Nagell of the Fayette Alliance was honored with the Equine/Agriculture Vision Award for her tireless work in protecting precious Bluegrass soils and advocacy on more than 65 major land use policies.

Russell Clark and Alison Bullock of National Park Service’s Rivers Trails Conservation Assistance Program won the Conservation/Preservation Vision Award for their work with the Kentucky River Water Trail Alliance and the Bluegrass Bike Hike Horseback Trails Alliance, important initiatives of Bluegrass Tomorrow.

Kyle Lake of Prosper Productions and Rebecca Barnes of Northwestern Mutual won Young Professionals Vision Awards for their tireless work with young professional organizations and projects in the region and promoting the Bluegrass Tomorrow philosophy of “developing an environment in the region where creative talent, young professionals, diversity and entrepreneurship will thrive.”

From Bluegrass Tomorrow

 

 

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Fall farmers markets still have a lot to offer – including chance to buy locally

I live in south Frankfort, a couple of blocks from the state Capitol building. One of my favorite things about my neighborhood is how accessible everything is. On a typical spring or summer Saturday morning, I walk or ride my bike to the Frankfort Farmers Market, then visit my favorite local thrift shop, and sometimes stop for coffee or breakfast at a local coffee shop. It’s my favorite way to spend a warm weekend morning.

(Photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Now that the seasons are changing and the weather is cooling down, I admit that I don’t pull out my bike or walk as much as I do when it’s warm. However, I still frequent my farmers market during the cooler months. When the much-anticipated tomatoes, corn and peaches end after the summer, most of us Kentuckians tend to forget about all the delicious crops we can still grow and purchase through the fall months.

On my weekly trip to the market this week, the first week of November, I came home with a bag full of sweet potatoes, onions, acorn squash, fresh picked apples and even tomatoes and green bell peppers. If I hadn’t run out of room in my shopping bag, I also could have picked up butternut squash, green tomatoes (perfect for frying), zucchini and pears. Not to mention farm fresh beef, canned items and a jug of fresh apple cider.

One of my favorite things about the fall markets is the opportunity to try new varieties of things I can’t buy at the grocery store. Patty pan squash, pumpkins and different varieties of apples are all available. And my local farmers are always full of suggestions for cooking with these unfamiliar (to me!) items.

Not only will you score fabulous fall produce, but we all know the benefits of shopping local at our farmers markets. It saves precious fossil fuels from transporting all that produce across the country, it helps our local economy, and it ensures you’re eating products that are healthy and free from any extra additives.

In Frankfort, our farmers market is open until Nov. 23, and the Lexington Farmer’s Market is open until Nov. 30. After market season, however, many farmers are happy to provide you with their products that are available by phone call or special order. Some markets even move to indoor locations throughout the cooler months and provide a great opportunity to purchase products for holiday cooking and gifting.

Just because the weather is cooling down and the fun of summer is over doesn’t mean you have to give up eating fresh Kentucky produce. Check out your local farmers market, and add some new and interesting finds to your fall table!

blair hecker

Blair Hecker is an environmental educator with Bluegrass Greensource.  She began her work for Greensource in 2010, after graduating from Georgetown College with a bachelor of arts in religion.  At Bluegrass Greensource, Blair works with elementary students in Fayette and surrounding counties.  She is dedicated to educating Central Kentucky students about environmental issues and loves to watch them become passionate about their own environment.  On any given day, you can find Blair playing with worms, dumpster diving or turning old junk into new recycled creations. Contact Blair to schedule activities with your elementary-aged students.

This article appeared in KY Forward on November 7, 2013.

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A World Series win this year matters less than a ‘green’ ballpark victory

Dodger Stadium in 2011 (Photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Dodger Stadium in 2011 (Photo from Wikimedia Commons)

The Dodgers did not win the World Series this year. I am sure that is not new to you if you pay any attention to sports news, but to me it is the only significant part of baseball since they lost in the post season.

However, while the rest of the baseball fans are root, root, rooting for their “red” team (both remaining teams have a significant amount of red in their uniforms), I decided to see how “green” baseball stadiums can be.

Since I am writing this before the end of the 2013 World Series (it is currently 3 games to 2 in favor of the Red Sox), I thought I would compare what I could find between the Boston Red Sox and the St. Louis Cardinals to see who should win based on their “green” stadiums.

I found out that not only is being environmentally responsible the new “cool” thing, all of Major League Baseball has bought in to the green concept since at least 2005 when they partnered with the Natural Resource Defense Council.

Allan H. (Bud) Selig has been quoted as saying, “Baseball is a social institution with social responsibilities and caring for the environment is inextricably linked to all aspects of the game. Sound environmental practices make sense in every way and protect our natural resources for future generations of baseball fans.”

Sports in general are in a perfect position to excel in environmentally responsible behavior and affect real change.

There is a reason that companies spend millions of dollars advertising at stadiums and through sports celebrity endorsements. We idolize sports figures. If they tell us that a particular shoe can help us jump higher, we buy them. If they tell us to eat at Subway, we do. And if they tell us to recycle, we will. Despite all of the performance enhancing drugs and high salaries, we do what they say.

So now on to the comparison …

Since Boston is currently ahead, let’s start with them. Fenway Park started the Poland Spring Green Team in 2008. They use volunteers to collect recyclables and currently collect 25 tons each season. In addition to collecting recyclables, Fenway Park is committed to closing the loop by using cups, hand towels and napkins made out of recycled paper and plastic.

The Boston park was the first in the Major League to install solar panels. I think that this deserves special recognition since, though still very useful in Massachusetts, solar panels are often more cost effective in southwestern states. Despite that, Fenway Park has realized a 37 percent savings on gas used to heat water in the park.

For the sake of public relations, the Boston Red Sox Players do Public Service Announcement’s throughout the first inning highlighting the green aspects of the stadium. And finally, anyone familiar with Fenway knows about the “Green Monster,” the wall and manual scoreboard which obviously does not use any electricity.

Probably the most notably “green” thing about Fenway Park is that it is the oldest ball park in the Major League.

In an era of bigger is better and luxury box seats, the Red Sox understand that the “greenest building is an existing building.” Or at least for the purposes of this article, that is what I choose to believe they are thinking.

Now St. Louis …

Busch Stadium can host more than 45,000 fans at any one time and opened in 2006. In 2008, the Cardinals started working on sustainability initiatives and have since been able to save 23 percent, or approximately $150,000 annually, in energy usage; 10 percent in water usage; and divert 29 percent of their waste from the landfill.

The stadium has placed over 550 recycling bins throughout the stadium as well as using a 25-plus member green team to collect recyclables during the game. They have also composted more than 500 tons of yard waste.

One hundred and six solar panels have been placed throughout the stadium that account for 32,000 kilowatt hours (an average home uses 11,000 kilowatt hours per month) of electricity saved per year. In addition, there are educational kiosks near the panels describing their benefit.

Since I am an environmental educator, one thing that weighs more heavily for St. Louis is the fact that their green initiatives are proudly positioned on their website. Ok, so maybe “proudly” is not the right word, but you can at least find the initiatives from their home page as opposed to the Red Sox’s efforts which requires some digging.

And last but not least … the Dodgers. I do understand that the Dodgers have lost, but since I am the one writing, I am choosing to ignore that fact.

Dodger Stadium was built in 1962 making it the third oldest in the majors. I feel that they get a few extra points for choosing to renovate rather than rebuild, just as Fenway Park did.

Since 2008, just as the others mentioned above were getting started, Dodger Stadium could already boast a 30 percent energy savings and the installation of water efficient fixtures which resulted in 2.4 million gallons of water saved each year. The water savings are even more important since it is located in a desert (which is not the most environmentally friendly thing to do, but we won’t think about that for now).

Considering its desert location, the Dodger Stadium’s grounds crew is very conscious of what they plant. Their landscape manager is an International Society of Arborists-certified tree expert, and cares for their 300-plus acres using mostly native plants.

Let me remind you that native desert plants can be beautiful, but you have to work a lot harder at getting them to be aesthetically pleasing than you do in Kentucky with a plethora of beautiful native flora.

Dodger Stadium has received numerous press pieces about their environmental efforts including tearing up concrete to plant trees and promoting a landscaped “green necklace” in the area, but they still lose points for public relations.

Their website does not readily point to their green initiatives. Maybe it is because West Coasters think they are already environmentally responsible and don’t need to tell everyone about it. Whatever the reason, I am disappointed that they are not more vocal about their accomplishments.

Now the winner – not of the series, but of the green stadium competition …
It is with unashamed bias that I pick the Dodgers! I have found an amazing number of wonderfully forward-thinking ball parks while doing research for this article, but nothing can compare to my childhood.

I learned to love nature in Chavez Ravine, the area surrounding Dodger Stadium. I grew up in earshot of the fireworks and cheers from the crowd, and adjacent to Elysian Park which was my home during each daylight hour of summer vacation.

I spent each day I could riding my horse through the palm trees that you see when a home run is hit at Dodger Stadium, and comforting my noise-adverse dog after each home run burst of fireworks or Michael Jackson concert. I can still remember the smell of the eucalyptus leaves and the complete freedom I had running across Dodger traffic on Stadium Way to explore my world.

No matter the outcome of the 2013 World Series, the Dodgers will always be winners to me.

 

1 Amy-Sohner

Amy Sohner is executive director of Greensource and a graduate of the University of Kentucky in Natural Resource Conservation and Management. Sohner has worked with Greensource since its inception in 2002 and is a Certified Environmental Educator. She is involved with the Kentucky Environmental Literacy Alliance, the Bluegrass Rain Garden Alliance, the Licking and Kentucky River Basin Teams, and serves as vice-chair of the Keep Lexington Beautiful Commission. Sohner lives near the Kentucky River palisades with her husband, two daughters and a multitude of pets.

This article appeared in KY Forward on October 31, 2013.

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To help endangered monarch butterfly, plant milkweed, create ‘waystations’

This season I enjoyed a plethora of butterflies in my yard and garden, mostly the beautiful tiger and eastern black swallowtails. The feeling seemed to be reciprocated, as they drank the nectar from my flowers and their larvae (caterpillars) chomped down on my dill and parsley. But one species was conspicuously absent – there were no monarchs.

Male monarch butterfly (Photo from Wikimedia Commons)

I am a native and heirloom plant enthusiast, and I have always planted to attract pollinators. But I had not realized that although the adult monarchs drink nectar from a variety of flowers, milkweed is the sole host plant for laying their eggs and feeding their larvae. And I had not planted any Asclepias sp. (milkweed) on the property!

Then I read Barbara Kingsolver’s book Flight Behavior. It is a fictional account but whet my appetite to learn more about the unique, and fragile, life cycle of the monarch butterfly. Monarchs go through four generations each year. The first three hatch and live for about six weeks, but the fourth lives for up to eight months to facilitate migration.

Female monarch butterfly (Photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Monarchs cannot tolerate cold weather, so as the temperature drops in autumn, those living in the eastern half of North America migrate to southcentral Mexico to hibernate in oyamel fir trees (always in the same trees, even though a new fourth generation migrates 2,500 miles each year). In the spring, they begin working their way north again, back to the milkweed plants that sustain them.

Unfortunately, herbicide and pesticide use is eradicating the native milkweed in the United States, and their overwintering sites are threatened as development encroaches on the fir forests in Mexico. We can help save this endangered species by planting Monarch Waystations – sites that provide resources necessary for monarchs to produce successive generations and sustain their migration. You can register your waystation through MonarchWatch.org.

My friend, Joanna Kirby, president of the Garden Club of Kentucky, has made this a focal project for her term. They have partnered with Wild Ones to promote Monarch Waystations in gardens, at homes, at county extension offices, at libraries and at schools. The commissioner of state parks and our state naturalist are also on board.

To qualify, in the spring or fall, plant at least 10 milkweed plants – preferably two species, including the common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca), and another native varieties such as butterfly milkweed (A. tuberosa) or swamp milkweed (A. incarnata) as well as native nectar plants, such as black eyed susan, purple coneflower or coreopsis.

Being pesticide-free is crucial because these are food plants for butterflies and other wildlife. Native plants can be purchased from local nurseries such as Springhouse Gardens, Shooting Star Nursury, Michler’s and Locust Trace AgriScience Farm. For more information, visit WildOnes.org.

As Halloween approaches, I am preparing the garden area for my monarch waystation, but I am taking my mission one step further. My costume this year is – what else – a monarch butterfly with a sign that reads: “I’m Endangered – Plant Milkweed for Me!”

Deborah Larkin joined Greensource in 2010 as an environmental educator. She works with numerous schools in Fayette County as part of Greensource’s partnership with LFUCG and is responsible for outreach activities in Boyle, Clark, Garrard and Lincoln counties. She received her bachelor’s in Horticulture from the University of Kentucky. Before coming to Greensource, Larkin worked for 27 years at the Shaker Village of Pleasant Hill, near Harrodsburg, where she researched and re-established the 19th century apple orchard, herb garden and heirloom seed industry.

This article appeared in KY Forward on October 24, 2013.

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Nature – not pop culture – is top of mind in this children’s reading list

I am a self-proclaimed nerdy mom. Maybe not the glasses-and-pocket-protectors-type nerd (I just had LASIK!), but definitely the looking-under-rocks-to-see-what-fun-bugs-we-can-find kind. One of my favorite PBS Kids shows is Wild Kratts about all of the special powers various animals have and how those powers can defeat the bad guys.

Somehow, however, my oldest daughter has become obsessed with “new fashion” and pop music, not to mention the fact that she is still extremely interested in the Disney princesses.

Audrey is 6 years old (6 and a half if you ask her). I blame day care for her initial indoctrination to the princesses. Sure, I knew who Cinderella and Snow White were, but some of the more “obscure” princesses such as Sleeping Beauty were a mystery to me. Disney characters (and Elmo too, if we are being honest) have to be designed to do nothing but suck in unsuspecting toddlers and make them forever fans and turn their parents to mush when it comes to attempting to teach anything but waiting for Prince Charming and magic wands.

I have to admit that I have been officially sucked in. The biggest evidence of this was our trip to Disneyland last spring, where my heart melted when Audrey met Tinkerbell, Ariel, Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty (I now know her whole story and even call her by her princess name – Aurora).

But there are smaller admissions of my caving to popular culture. For example, when my youngest daughter turned 1, I let Audrey pick out anything she thought Eleanor would like. She picked out “Little People Princesses,” something I would have NEVER allowed to enter my house with my first child.

So I am not sure I can fully articulate my distaste in frilly girly things that my 6 year old covets. Princesses are easy to hate because they embody everything from “let the man rescue me” to “women are only good for housecleaning and singing,” neither of which I was ever good at. I do know that most of my distaste comes from the fact that I never liked them as a little girl – there were always much more interesting things to capture my attention.

Since I grew up in the ’80s and we were allowed to run all over creation with no supervision and barely a curfew, maybe it was easier for me to have expanded horizons. I remember throwing dirt on stink bugs to watch their butts rise in defense. I grew up near a giant park with dirt running trails and trees, and many, many ways to spend the entire day without a thought of television.

Even as I grew to a teenager, pop culture was a bit of a mystery and I gravitated to the more alternative genres; probably because I was intimidated by keeping up with the latest anything. I liked knowing music and movies no one else did so I did not have to be up to date with the billboard top 10. My daughter on the other hand, immediately suctions on to anything her friends are doing and is currently obsessed with pop icon Katy Perry.

I have to admit that I do not hate Katy Perry. For the first time in my life I have found myself a bit shocked at song lyrics, but generally Katy has an upbeat rhythm and fun songs. My 1-year-old even dances next to the television when we play the YouTube video of Katy Perry on Sesame Street.

I guess I have to just make sure that I infuse my own “green” interests in my daughter as much as possible as long as I still can. If any of you are facing the same issues, here is a list of my nature/not-pop-culture reading plan for Audrey. I hope it works!

1. There is a Hair in my Dirt, a Worm’s Story by Gary Larson — This should be on everyone’s reading shelf.

2. Michael Recycle by Ellie Bethel – this is a staple in Greensource’s education library and a favorite by students who like to dress up as their new favorite superhero.

3. Girls Who Looked Under Rocks: The Lives of Six Pioneering Naturalists by Jeannine Atkins — follows Jane Goodall, Rachel Carson and more as they learn they have the power to make a difference.

4. Fancy Nancy: Every Day is Earth Day by Jane O’Connor – Nancy learns that even though green is not her favorite color, it is easy to make small changes that can make a difference.

5. If You Give a Mouse a Cookie by Laura Joffe Numeroff – This is a great book to start a conversation about consumerism.

6. 50 Simple Things Kids Can Do to Save the Earth by Sophie Javna – This is a great starting point to help young kids feel empowered.

7. The Lorax by Dr. Seuss – This one is pretty obvious, but I wanted to include it just in case it has missed someone’s shelf.

8. The Magic School Bus by Joanna Cole – There are many of these that help kids understand how nature works.

9. The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein – This book describes how trees help us in many ways.

10. Do Princesses Wear Hiking Boots? by Carmella LaVigna Coyle – reading this you learn that princesses do play in trees and have bad hair days just like you.

Audrey likes many of these books, and I hope to continue finding more as she gets older. Next I will have to see if she disowns me after I show her a Katy Perry parody video about insects – “Baby, You’re an Arthropod,” as seen here. Wish me luck!

1 Amy-Sohner

Amy Sohner is executive director of Greensource and a graduate of the University of Kentucky in Natural Resource Conservation and Management. Sohner has worked with Greensource since its inception in 2002 and is a Certified Environmental Educator. She is involved with the Kentucky Environmental Literacy Alliance, the Bluegrass Rain Garden Alliance, the Licking and Kentucky River Basin Teams, and serves as vice-chair of the Keep Lexington Beautiful Commission. Sohner lives near the Kentucky River palisades with her husband, two daughters and a multitude of pets.

This article appeared in KY Forward on October 17, 2013.

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When it comes to taking care of the environment, every little bit helps

Before working at Bluegrass Greensource, I truly felt I was doing my part in reducing my carbon footprint and I encouraged my family to do the same. We recycled our paper, glass and cans every week. We used our reusable grocery bags — as much as we could actually remember to bring them into the store. We tried to reduce our waste by using reusable containers instead of plastic food storage bags. We used some green products like environmental friendly laundry detergent and cleaners. We even programmed our thermostat for when we weren’t at home. All of this made me feel like I was really doing something for the environment.

Then I started working at Bluegrass Greensource.

It was intimidating to think of what I may be doing wrong and not doing enough of. The day before I officially started, I remember wondering what I should wear? Will everyone be wearing hemp clothing and Birkenstocks? Will everyone be a vegetarian and only eat organic food and drive electric cars?

Luckily, Executive Director Amy Sohner eased my nerves. She said, “we encourage people to make small changes, not restructure their whole lives. Every little bit helps the environment. Be realistic in what you can do.” Wow, what a relief!

1 fog Screen shot 2013-10-09 at 1.25

With that message, I have been motivated to step up my efforts. This summer, my husband and I installed a rain barrel at our home. Ironically, it stopped raining soon after, but no matter, we have used what water we have captured to save our flower boxes.

Next spring, I will look into adding some native plants to our landscape. I like the idea that they need fewer fertilizers and pesticides to grow and thrive. Plus, their water needs are more compatible with the local climate.

Inside our home, we’ve made more small changes. Before starting at BGGS, I thought FOG was suspended water in the atmosphere that made driving difficult. I didn’t know it really stood for Fats, Oils, and Grease and the picture above shows the effect it has on our pipes and drains.

Imagine what all your neighbors might be pouring down their drains. Can you envision the cumulative impact in the pipes on your street? My disgust has motivated me to encourage everyone I know to put a can with a lid under the sink to collect their FOG and keep it out of the drain.

1 131007 KyForward Article

Speaking of the community, I never really noticed storm drains like the one shown here until I started working for Greensource. And now I see them everywhere! I see some painted, some not. Some filled with trash, some with leaves.

Do you know where all the trash in the storm drains goes? To our local streams. Think of what an impact we could have on the quality of our water and streams if we all took responsibility for our own litter and pick it up when we see litter from others. Do you know that if everyone in Lexington committed to picking up two pieces of litter per day, we would have 610,978 fewer pieces of litter in our area each day?

My family and I will never be Ed Begley Jr. and live completely off the grid. That’s just not realistic for us. I do know that every day we are taking steps, small steps, to be kinder to our environment. I know that in my lifetime, I will make a difference, one step at a time, and I will have passed this commitment on to my children.

If you are interested in making small green changes in your life, contact Bluegrass Greensource to learn more at 859-266-1572 or email us at info@bgreensource.org.

Chris Clabes photo

Chris Clabes is the development and public relations coordinator at Bluegrass Greensource. Before joining Greensource, Chris worked as a consultant for numerous nonprofit organizations across the state, including the formation of Kentucky Philanthropy Initiative and Gov. Beshear’s Commission on Philanthropy. She was Kentucky 4-H Foundation’s executive director and served as the director of finance for the National Association of Home Builders’ Political Action Committee in Washington, D.C. She is a graduate of the University of Kentucky.

This article appeared in KY Forward on October 10, 2013.

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Mark your calendar: Lexington Green Breakfast is November 6th

Lexington Green Breakfast

The 43rd Annual Green Breakfast, Lexington’s longest running environmental awareness event, will be held on Wednesday, November 6th from 7:30 am at the E.S. Good Barn on the UK campus.

Help celebrate Lexington’s unique heritage and bright future by honoring those who have fostered conservation, sustainability and awareness over the past year.

Enjoy a delicious, locally sourced breakfast prepared by UK Ag. Hear from community leaders how Lexington is responding to environmental challenges and opportunities.

Thanks to the generosity of sponsors, admission to this event is free of charge for the first 100 people who register at www.LexingtonGreenBreakfast.eventbrite.com.

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October Newsletter

An example of a rain garden, located at Spring House  Gardens, Nicholasville, Ky.

Rain Garden Workshop Coming to Bourbon County on Saturday

Bluegrass Greensource is hosting the last rain garden workshop for the fall on October 19th at the Bourbon County Library in Paris. The workshop is free and open to the public, thanks to the generous support of a grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under §319(h) of the Clean Water Act.  If  you are interested in attending the workshop, register at: 

https://bourboncoraingardenworkshop.eventbrite.com/.

For more information, click here.


Image courtesy of Snohomish Health District
Image courtesy of Snohomish Health District

Septic Care

Workshop Coming Soon

Did you know that a failing septic system can require expensive repairs, pose a health risk to your family, and have negative impacts on water quality? Bluegrass Greensource is hosting a free septic system care workshop on Tuesday, November 5th from 6 – 7 PM at Maywoods Environmental and Educational Laboratory near Crab Orchard, KY.  

Click here for more information.


KAW logo

Bringing Water Conservation Education to Local Businesses

For the past two months, Kentucky American Water has been partnering with Bluegrass Greensource on water conservation and quality presentations throughout Bourbon, Clark, Owen, Scott, and Woodford counties. The presentations highlighted different ways people can conserve water at work, at home and in their yard.  Did you know the average dishwasher uses 40-55 gallons of water per cycle? Did you know


Zero Waste Recycle graphicHaving a Zero-Waste Event

Just Got Easier

 

Are you planning an event and would like to reduce waste? Bluegrass Greensource can help! We now have a Zero Waste Guide that can help with your waste reduction plan, each step of the way, from recycling to composting.  In addition, are you looking for a fun way to volunteer to help community events reduce their waste?  Find out more...


Dupree Sign photo

Creating Educational Opportunities at Dupree Nature Reserve

It is not every day one gets to be part of a project with the potential to impact generations. In collaboration with The Nature Conservancy of Lexington, Bluegrass Greensource was invited to create educational programming for the region’s newest nature preserve. The Dupree Nature Preserve in Garrard County opened to the public on October 5, 2013 and was a project years in the making… 

 


 

 

Resource Library photoWanted: Teachers/Educators to Check Out our Buckets!

Greensource has a vast library of buckets available for check out through our office. Perhaps you want to teach about animals, camouflage and nocturnal vs. diurnal. Our Animal Pelts bucket would be perfect for that!  That bucket includes native animal pelts from central Kentucky. Beaver, white tailed deer, grey squirrel are just some of the pelts included in this bucket.  Click here for more details

 

For the latest green information in Central Kentucky, “Like” us on our Facebook page Bluegrass Greensource or follow us on Twitter @BluegrassGreensource.  If you have any questions or comments about this issue, please contact us at info@bggreensource.org.

                                             

                  

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Wanted: Educators to Check Out our Buckets!

Resource Library photo

Bluegrass Greensource has a vast library of buckets available for check out through our office. Perhaps you want to teach about animals, camouflage and nocturnal vs. diurnal. Our Animal Pelts bucket would be perfect for that! That bucket includes native animal pelts from central Kentucky, such as beavers, white-tailed deer, and grey squirrels.

Another popular resource library item is the Soils bucket, which is designed to introduce students to soil science and to investigate the characteristics of soil in a given place. Activities in this bucket examine various aspects of soil quality from nutrient composition to plant presence. Finally, soil testing tools from this bucket allow students to explore soils firsthand.

All the buckets are available for check out for up to two weeks. If you are interested, contact Michelle at michelle@bgGreensource.org or (859) 266-1572.

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