Tuesday, January 21, 2014
Aquarium Bound
About 2/3rds of our planet is covered in water and only a fraction of that water is fresh. There is so much life that lives under water and all of them are so amazing since their environment is complete different from ours. All the different adaptations these creatures have made makes life under water so incredibly diverse. As well, do to our physical and technological limitations we have been able to explore very little of the ocean, so who know what lurks in the depths below!
I'm super excited... if you can't tell.
Friday, February 11, 2011
Food Share Inspirations
The first thing I saw when I walked in and thought would an amazing and simple crafty activity for the Eco-Club students to do would be to build bee houses. These aren't for honey bees, but would be for miner and other native bee species. I'm thinking that I can head down to China Town and get some bamboo to bundle together (the bees would nest in the hole) and we could build frames out of some old clementine boxes that I have kicking around in my classroom and at home. The student could then bring them home to hang in their backyards. The idea being that you'd be able to attract more bees to your garden and they would inturn help to pollinate all of you plants. I think that this would go a long way to help the plants in our school garden too. As well, bee populations are on the decline so giving them more habitat will at least give the little guys a bit more of a chance. With out bees food production on this planet will become very difficult and expensive.

Friday, May 28, 2010
Bike Month

Download the pdf or visit your local bike shop (LBS) and pick up a brochure filled with all the events going on. There is a lot of stuff going on from group rides to workshops, so check it out!
It all kicks off on Monday (May 31st) with a group ride down to city hall for a free pancake breakfast and a free t-shirt (while supplies last). Here are some pics of some sweet custom rides that showed up at last year's group ride. You can also stop by the CBC between 5:30-8:30am for coffee, muffins, and watch a live broadcast of CBC's Metro Morning, click here for more info.
I'm going to try to hit up one of these events before making my way to work. Hope to see some of you there too!
Garden Links
Here is just a few links that I thought you might be interested in:
Toronto Balconies Bloom - Toronto has acres of untapped growing space on its balconies, and an opportunity for creating a peaceful and pleasurable living environment while at the same time improving the air we breathe. Just because you don't have a backyard doesn't mean you can't be a gardener.
The Locavore's Garden - Here you'll find some great tips on starting and maintaining a food garden.
Growing for Green - A Ward 21 garden blog group that offers various workshops and volunteer opportunities.
Green Neighbours 21 - A grass-roots, action-oriented group of people who live in ward 21 (and beyond) who are working together on solutions to climate change and other environmental problems.
Green Garage - This private company specializes is green roofing, keeps your house cool in the summer and warm in the winter.
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
How To Eat Fried Worms
The plastic shoe boxes that we used had these three circles on the top of the lids that were perfect for marking the spots for drilling the large holes. We put the lid under the box to make sure the holes would line up when they were all stacked. The heat from the drill will melt the two piece together so we had to carefully pull them apart so as to not break them. We used a smaller drill bit (1/8") to drill some ventilation holes in the top lid.
[Red wigglers and some melon rind]
Right now I only have the first level of my tower working, but in about 3 months it the other four levels should be operational and I'll have double the worms I started with. The fifth bottom box is for collecting the compost tea (it does not have holes in the bottom of it). Once the box I'm filling with organic food scraps becomes full I'll add the next box to the top and so on.
This is totally going to be a project for Eco-Club next year. I had considered doing it this year, but I'd like to make sure it works and become a bit of an expert at it before I go sharing my knowledge.
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Tree Workshop
You should be able to find our school's tree tour if you type the school name into Google with the words "eco-schools tree tour".
I'm hoping to come back from this workshop with more activities to get students outside. I think that we're also going to get a tree cookie (a cross section of the trunk)
