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With Bees Dying by the Billions, Teens Protect Pollinators

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making-butterfly-homes.jpgMillions of Monarchs will begin arriving in Mexico this week in an annual migration that includes thousands traveling through Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and some of the butterflies can thank Marquette and Native American teens for their future survival.

The Zaagkii Wings and Seeds Project in Marquette was created to protect pollinators like butterflies because billions of honeybees are dying across the world – especially in the Midwest – in a syndrome called “Colony Collapse Disorder.”
(Photo by Greg Peterson)

Marquette teens and youth from the the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community (KBIC) spent this summer building the first of dozens of butterfly houses that will be created over the next three years. The white cedar butterfly houses were erected this fall in the two Upper Peninsula (U.P.) counties of Marquette and Baraga. Lined with bark and slimmer than birdhouses, the shelters offer protection, rest and reproduction safety to Monarchs and other butterflies.

While bees are the best known and possible the most effective pollinators, butterflies are a close second in transferring pollen from one plant to another.

Experts are unsure why honeybee colonies are collapsing but pesticides, climate change and other man-made impact are among the suspected causes. Experts say the loss of the honeybees is alarming because without pollinators the world food supply will dry up including fruits, vegetables, flowers, other plants and trees.

The three-year Zaagkii Project (Zaagkii is an Ojibwa word that means: “The Earth’s gift of plants”) was founded this summer by the non-profit Cedar Tree Institute (CTI) in Marquette whose other environment projects have included Earth Day hazardous waste collections and wild rice restorations, which brought together teens sentenced to community service, tribal elders and volunteers.

The “seed” portion of the Wings and Seeds Project is the propogation of native plants. Marquette teens planted over 26,000 native species in seed trays, many of which will be transplanted next spring along Sand Point, a barren Lake Superior beach once polluted by the waste from an old copper mine.

The KBIC Summer Youth Program teens built and painted butterfly houses at the tribal hatchery with help from a Natural Resource Department (NRD) Water Quality Specialist and other environment specialists.

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Saving the Monarchs

As birds chirped loudly along the shores of Lake Superior, 17-year-old Ethan Smith and 15-year-old Janelle Paquin measured, hammered and painted the cedar houses.

“We put the bark on the inside for the butterflies to rest on,” said Smith while showing the strips of bark that line the house. “We put on the top so the sunlight doesn’t get in and they can get a good night’s rest.”

The butterfly houses sit on 10-foot poles. Butterflies with folded wings enter through seven tiny slits.

“Butterflies use the houses to rest while migrating,” said 16-year-old Dylan DeCota of Baraga.

14-year-old Jorey Cribbs of Baraga said plants reproduce because butterflies “transport pollen from flower to flower” and the butterfly houses offer “shelter in bad weather.”

Each fall “hundreds of thousands” of Monarchs “stop and rest” on the Stonington Peninsula in the southern U.P. before joining three million Monarchs from across North America in their annual migration to Mexico, said Jon Magnuson, CTI executive director and founder of the Zaagkii Project.

“A lot of people think butterflies are just pretty but they do important work,” the teens were told as they built the butterfly houses.

About 32 years ago, the group Monarch Watch first discovered the annual Monarch migration and began tracking the butterflies, said Zaagkii Project volunteer Tom Reed.

Reed, who has a bachelors degree in social work, informed the kids that monarchs converge in one small area in Mexico on the same few trees, which makes them very vulnerable to extinction.

From Toxic Brownfield to Shoreline of Native Plants

 

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At the Hiawatha National Forest greenhouse in Marquette, local teens planted about 26,000 plants seeds that are native to the U.P. Those plants will winter in the greenhouse and be transplanted next spring across northern Michigan.

“Native plants play a vital role in insect populations,” said Angie Lucas, greenhouse manager at the national forest in which the seeds were collected.

“For example Monarch caterpillars are specific to milkweed plants and without milkweed plants we have no Monarch caterpillars,” Lucas said, adding that at least 17 Monarchs tagged on the U.P.’s Stonington Peninsula were discovered in Mexico.

“The milkweed provides food for the Monarch caterpillars – once the caterpillars mature and turn into a butterfly that pollinates the milkweed plant,” said Lucas describing the symbiotic relationship between butterflies and native plants.

Restoring indigenous plants is vital to U.P. wildlife “so our native species don’t get overruled and extinct by predator species,” said Justin Fassbender, 16, while planting columbine and monarda seeds.

“There are a lot of invasive species,” said Devin Dahlstrom, 15, who is proud to be ensuring the future of native wildlife.

Adding plants will be one of the crowning final steps in the clean-up of Sand Point Beach on Keweenaw Bay, polluted 90 years ago by the Mass Mill copper refinery operation four miles to the north along Lake Superior.

The indigenous plants will return a wide range of wildlife to the 35 acre site designated as a brownfield by the Environmental Protection Agency. Plans for Sand Point include a nature tail, restoring a historic lighthouse, swimming, camping, boating, picnic areas and fishing ponds.

Protect Pollinators in Your Area

honey-bee-eye.jpg The USFS says the public can help protect pollinators by being careful about what type of insecticides are used and reducing the amount of  “chemicals used for gardening and lawn control,” Schultz said.

“The chemicals many times are not very discriminant,” she said. “They will kill these beneficial pollinators as well as the undesirable species.”

“It’s really important for people to think ‘Gee, do I really need to use that?’ Try to get pesticides that are more discriminant to what the offender is.”

“Apply the pesticide either really, really early in the morning … or at dusk when the pollinators aren’t active,” Schultz said.

The Zaagkii Project contributors include the Marquette Community Foundation, the Negaunee Community Fund, the Negaunee Community Youth Fund, the M.E. Davenport Foundation, the Kaufman Foundation, the Phyllis and Max Reynolds Foundation, with assistance from the Upper Peninsula Children’s Museum in Marquette and the Borealis Seed Company in Big Bay. The project was also supported by the Marquette County Juvenile Court and the United States Forest Service (USFS).

All photos by Greg Peterson, Earth Keeper volunteer, media advisor and reporter

Solar “Balloon” Creates 400x More Energy Than Solar Cell

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solar-balloon.jpgThe new Solar “Balloon”  by Cool Earth is a concept that creates an “inflatable plastic thin-film balloon, which acts as a solar concentrator that, upon inflation, focuses sunlight onto a photovoltaic cell. The design produces 400 times the electricity that a solar cell would create without the company’s concentrator.” Liverpool is the site for the new prototype’s production plant. (Clean Technica.com)

Government Expands Geothermal Energy Leasing

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geothermal-plant-in-iceland.jpgGeothermal energy, which harnesses steam and hot water from beneath the earth, is a major source of renewable energy for the US.  This week, the Interior Department is announcing plans to make available 190 million acres of federal land in a dozen western states for development of geothermal power. Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne says the federal leasing program, which will receive a final ruling in two months, could produce more than 5,000 megawatts of electricity, enough to power 5.5 million homes. (Details from the Washington Times)

Here Comes the Green Brick

Bricks have an enormous energy footprint. A new process will reduce the energy content in bricks by over 90 percent, according to CalStar Cement, which will soon begin to ship a green brick that takes almost no energy to produce. (GreenTechMedia.com)

Soldier’s Dog Brought to the U.S. From Iraq (Video)

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iraqi-dog.jpgA black puppy decked out in a red, white and blue bandanna jumped out of his crate and wagged his tail at the airport Monday, three flights and two days after leaving Iraq en route to his new home with a U.S. Soldier, whom he helped get through the worst of times.

Dunkin’ Donuts Opens Its First LEED Certified Green Restaurant

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dunkin-donuts-logo.jpgDunkin’ Donuts unveiled its first LEED certified restaurant in Florida. The St. Petersburg LEED certified store broke ground in May 2008, and will serve as a prototype for the company’s future green construction projects. (Full story in Environmental Leader)

Thanks to Silbatron, for the tweet!

Kashmir Foes Reopen Trade Route After 60 Years of Fighting (w/ Video)

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kashmir-border.jpgIndia and Pakistan opened a trade link across Kashmir for the first time in six decades. The move is a ground-breaking step celebrated by merchants who see it as a means to ending the hate and creating peace. (BBC print story here Thanks to Bill F. for sending the story tip!

Reuters video below may take time to load…

Hiker Rescued After One Week (Video)

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rescue-dog-owner.jpgA rescue dog found granola wrappers which lead him and his handler to an injured hiker who had been missing for one week. CBS speaks to both the hiker’s father and rescue team led by a trained rescue dog.

New Cancer Meds Offer Real Hope (Video)

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cancer-meds.jpgDoctors are investigating cancer cell mutations that can be targeted by new prescription medications. The drugs have offered real hope for patients with these mutations, such as Kate Robbins, who is surviving stage 4 lung cancer. (Read full text at CBSNews, or watch their video)

Drivers are Ecstatic as Gas Prices Drop Significantly (Video)

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gas-station.jpgGas prices haven’t been this low since last October. The Energy Department said the national average is now $2.91 after oil prices plummeted 50% in the past month. As CBS reports, drivers are doing double-takes.

A Different Kind Of Healing for Vets (Video)

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wounded-vet-dinners.jpgTwo wounded veterans of the Iraq War started a weekly dinner five years ago for fellow veterans who lost limbs in the war. Every Friday they find healing and camaraderie.

(Read full text at CBSNews, or watch the video report below, w/ 30-second ad)

Elderly Woman Charged After Taking Boy’s Ball (Video)

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mean-neighbor-arrest.jpgPolice near Cincinnati, Ohio arrested and charged an 89-year-old woman after she refused to return a neighbor’s football that ended up in her yard.

I’m not claiming this is literally good news, but I wanted to get your thoughts on the story. (I can’t post videos in the Forum yet,  otherwise I would have put it there for discussion!)

Video Games Support School Lessons and Learning

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video-gamers.jpgOnce shunned as a brain-rotting activity, video games are now winning over many teachers of teenage students as a way to inspire kids to learn: Games are a way to develop 21st century skills, such as collaborative problem solving, multitasking, and networking.

Academy Uses Hip-Hop to Spur Creativity

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breakdancing.jpgThe Urban Arts Academy started four years ago as a Saturday program to give young people in the notorious Benning Park community opportunities to express themselves creatively through hip-hop. Now it is a full-time program that has become a catalyst to change lives. (Full report in the WashingtonPost.com)

Britain Releases UFO files, Dispels Some Mysteries

UFO Files book jacket by David Clarke

UFO Files book jacket by David ClarkeThe close encounter between an Italian airline pilot and a flying object is one of many reported UFO sightings among 19 files that Britain’s National Archives posted Monday to the Web.

While the 1,500-page batch of documents debunks a host of UFO sightings filed between 1986 to 1992, some of them, like the near-miss with Air Alitalia remain unexplained.

More files can be viewed at the National Archives here: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ufos.

(READ the story in the Chicago Tribune)

Breakthrough Fuel Cells Powered by Hydrogen from Sewage

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wastewater.jpgResearchers at Oregon State University have discovered an efficient way to produce hydrogen power using biowaste like municipal sewage. The innovative process uses 75% less energy than the traditional method of producing hydrogen, and can be done at a much lower cost.

The new approach could utilize several types of biowaste, including manure, wood waste, or sewage, to produce hydrogen at a much lower cost than the traditional “electrolysis” technology, making it attractive for use in hydrogen fuel cells that could power the non-polluting automobiles of the future.

Top Tips For Surviving Today’s Financial Challenges

File photo by Michiexile, CC license

Your pocketbook, your bank account, even your job and home may be caught up in the sweeping panic, but that doesn’t mean you have to be swept along as well.

In order to survive the fast changing, complex and worrying world of finance, you need to realize that there are sound principles to follow on both the financial side and emotional side that will likely allow you to do much better than those who give in to fear and panic or make rash moves with their retirement accounts.

Here are some tips for navigating the the new financial reality.

On the Finance side:

  • Avoid the temptation to time the market
  • Pulling money out of your retirement accounts to be safe can wind up costing you big time
  • Manage your asset allocations
  • Avoid exposure to any one asset class and maintain a balanced portfolio
  • If you don’t understand it, don’t invest in it
  • You can wind up in big trouble if you don’t know the business or investment vehicle you are investing in
  • Live within your means
  • Overextended credit can expose you to not only high interest rates, but lock you into an unending cycle of debt
  • If you want to engage in active trading – first practice on a demo account

On the Emotional side:

  • Be wary of using terms like “crisis,” “meltdown,” “disaster,” etc
  • These terms tend to create emotional reactions (energy follows thought)
  • Know the difference between who you are and your bank account
  • Who you are is not defined by your bank account, house or job
  • The universe rewards action, not thought
  • You can think about it until the cows come home; results only follow action
  • The stability myth
  • Life is a process of growth and decay, but never stability – attempts at stability breed instability

Financial Impact: Market Timing Just Doesn’t Work

You have probably heard advice against trying to be a market timer. What is “market timing?” Market timers are people who hope they can sell at the absolute highs and buy at the absolute lows. A financial advisor once suggested to me that for the average individual investor, trading your own account and trying to predict market moves is a bit like putting the average person on the street inside Yankee Stadium and asking them to hit a major league fast ball out of the park. Most would be lucky just to hit the ball at all!

On the practical side, if your 401 (k) has been slammed like just about everyone else’s, about the worst thing you could do would be to panic and withdraw those funds. Why? Most people who are withdrawing their retirement funds are putting them in cash, or other “safe” places, not unlike the mattress. The problem is that you have to sell the underlying securities or mutual funds in order to move to cash. Clearly, those securities and mutual funds are selling at depressed prices right how.

stocks-graphic.jpg If your plan is to buy back later, when things are better, you certainly will be able to do so. However, let’s say you originally bought into your mutual fund at $100 per unit. It is now down roughly 35%, so you sell for $65, guaranteeing a loss of $35. Now you park it in cash somewhere, maybe earning 3-4%, and you wait for the market to turn.

By the time you buy back in, you may wind up paying, say, $85 for that same share you sold for $65. So, now you have lost the original $35, and you also missed the $20 upside move. That means you missed out on $55 of value!

Here’s a related scenario: let’s say you are someone who contributes monthly to your 401 (k), adding a little bit each month. You may be tempted to stop contributing, because you want your money to be “safe.”

Why is this a bad idea? Well, if you are contributing each pay period right now, you are buying those mutual funds at “nicely” depressed prices. So what happens when they rebound? Those shares you bought at lower prices move up and become worth more – much more than you are going to make in a 3-4% cash return scenario.

Conventional wisdom and actual research show that the stock market provides better returns over time, typically 10 years or more. Several studies covering decades of history point out that the person who sold their holdings hoping to time their way back into the market and then wound up missing out on the best 10 days ended up with a portfolio worth about half what the person had who just sat tight.

If you can be patient, and follow the second piece of advice which follows, you will probably do much better than those who panic and make rash moves with their retirement accounts.

Emotional Impact: Be Wary of Fear Based Language

The press is full of stories with lead lines about crashes, recessions, depressions, meltdowns, bubbles bursting, and panic. While there is no question that we are going through a period of big swings and those swings are likely to be with us for a while, you don’t have to get caught up in the emotion of it and wind up becoming volatile yourself.

In fact, if you do let your emotions swing with the rise and fall of the markets, you may become part of the problem you are trying so hard to avoid. How is that?

The more you tell yourself that something is scary, the more some part of you listens and starts to produce scary feelings to go along with what you are telling yourself. Last week, I wrote about this with the notion that energy follows thought. The primary problem with negative feelings is that, well, you feel them. Right there in your stomach, or wherever your fear feelings show up.

Once you feel them, they become very real. If you keep reminding yourself that you are in the midst of a meltdown, financial crisis, etc, the feelings may become so strong that you just have to do something. The growing sense of panic may lead to the decision to exit the market, park your money somewhere “safe” and you then wind up becoming victim to your own choices to behave like a market timer. And, even if you are on the sidelines, you may still wind up feeling scared! russell-bishop.jpgAnd now you have the double whammy of probably missing upside moves as well as still being scared.

You can find out more about Russell Bishop at www.lessonsinthekeyoflife.com

The author of Lessons in the Key of Life, Russell is an Educational Psychologis, professional life coach and management consultant, based in Santa Barbara California.  (A version of this article was originally posted on HuffingtonPost.com)

European Professional Football Against Hunger

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Soccerball.jpgThe European Professional Football Leagues joined the UN Food and Agriculture Organization this week to launch a campaign to raise funds and awareness for world hunger.

Professional Football Against Hunger brings together former Italian football star Roberto Baggio and other famous names in European football with the Ministers of Sport from Austria, Italy, Spain and representatives from seven Members of the European Professional Football Leagues (EPFL).

The Revolution of Paperless Newspaper (w/ Video)

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plastic-logic-news-tablet.jpgMake way for a new electronic newspaper, explains British engineer Dean Baker. There’s no paper – though it’s as light as a magazine. It is an electronic device coming to market next year that looks just like a large mouse pad. (BBC News w. video)

Disco Tune “Stayin’ Alive” Could Save Your Life

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cpr-symbol.jpgCPR can triple survival rates, but research has shown many people do chest compressions too slowly, or are reluctant to do it at all, because they are unsure about the proper rhythm. Now, doctors have found the Bee Gees 1977 disco classic “Stayin’ Alive” provides an ideal beat to follow. (Full report at Reuters News)