Posts Tagged ‘Environment’
One Day, two goals, all good…
Wednesday, May 27th, 2009The first goal was to collect some video content to be used in promotion of the new Sea to Sky trail. The second was to shoot some photographs in Pemberton with Margus Riga for Norco and Mace.
So, part one. Picked up Margus in North Vancouver and blasted to Squamish in time to help with an interview of David Suzuki. The world renown scientist was kind enough to offer some thoughts on the environmental benefit of a good multipurpose trail through nature (in this case, from Horseshoe Bay to Lillooet). He was a real pro in front of the camera, not surprising considering his television resume; he arrived, made his on camera spiel perfectly on the first take, and was off to his next appointment in a flash. The key to his message was that humans protect and preserve what they love; so if they have increased opportunity to ‘get out in nature’ with a trail such as the Sea-to-Sky, they may be more likely to adopt a sustainable lifestyle.
Photo Credit: Margus Riga
It was a pleasure, as always, to work with Jack Christie who was the director/personality for the shoot. He promotes the outdoor lifestyle in myriad charismatic ways, whether on TV, in print, in books, or most importantly one on one with full authenticity. Margus asked me if there was anything he didn’t know about the outdoors becauseas he was constantly sharing stories and spewing out unique facts about the area. Be sure to check out his website and perhaps purchase one of his quality books. He’s good people.
A couple youngsters, Evan and Shawn, came down from Pemberton to be in the video shoot. Photo Credit: Margus Riga
Robin Harvey, the marketing/promotional gal behind the Sea to Sky Trail has been busy coordinating this day of filming, and she was able to squeeze it all in for us by the early afternoon so Margus and I had time to blast off to Pemby to get our ride/shoot on. We rode up and then down a trail called (can’t remember right now) and took photos along the way. It was glorious, except for the onslaught of giant Pemberton Mosquitos!
Photo Credit: Margus Riga
Photo Credit: Margus Riga
We got back to the truck by 9pm. Grabbed some snacks for the drive home quite content with the days efforts.
I picked my trailer up on the way home, switched my gear and bikes for the trials variety, ready to head out the next morning for some shows! Good times all around!!
Conflict of our times, a comedic perspective
Friday, May 8th, 2009I saw this episode of the Stuart Davis Show about a year ago because I subscribed to Integal Naked, which is now called Integral Life. It has just come up on Vimeo for free, and I think everyone should check it out because I think everyone can relate in our day and age. Love it!
Stuart Davis is a genius…
The Stuart Davis Show – Episode 12 – A Foothill in the Mouth from integral ecology on Vimeo.
Also, check out Davis’s new song Deity Freak, it’s got a great ring to it…
Tea Freak and a note about Meat
Friday, April 24th, 2009I’m on Vancouver Island right now staying at a friends house. I have some extra time this morning before my school presentation, so I was reading a little, and enjoying a nice cup of tea. Caryn and I just bought some new loose leaf teas, so I snagged a bag of Irish Breakfast tea (stronger than English Breakfast) to take along; however I forgot to bring a strainer for the loose leaves. Hmmm. Yesterday at the B&B I stayed at I carefully tore the top off of a red rose tea bag, emptied it, then filled it with the Irish Breakfast tea; I then scewered the opening of the bag and hung it in the boiling water off the top edge of my ‘to-go’ mug. That was a good cuppa! I repeated that process this morning. As I said, I’m a tea freak. But for good reason, they fill those red rose bags with the sweepings off the floor! Well, perhaps that’s exaggerating, but there is just no comparrison! Okay, I’m a tea freak slash tea snob. Anyway….
I’m not a vegetarian, but I have vegetarian tendencies. There are many reasons to eat a vegetarian diet, but my main reason is environmental. When I have a really busy string of demos, I tend to add a little extra meat to my diet, usually in the form of chicken or fish, not so much in the red meat department (although I did have an In&Out burger while I was in California). I have slowly been collecting stats and stories on the impact of our western cultures mass meat consumption habits; the video below is an excellent summery of some of those points.
Like most environmental videos, it is quite one sided—so take it with a grain of salt. I don’t agree with the overall scare-tactic-tone of the presentation, but the stats are pretty spot on. It’s incredible how powerful a worldcentric perspective can be for change, and it is only in todays day and age that we have access to the knowledge that is needed to create a worldcentric vision. So if some of the stats resonate with you in some deeper way, perhaps order something vegetarian next time you eat out or cook. If not, that’s all good too!
RL
Green Short
Wednesday, September 24th, 2008Airtime – (the airplane kind)
Monday, September 15th, 2008Sept 11, (forgot to get this posted when I landed in Vancouver from Europe)
Airtime…what do I do when sitting for ten hours on a plane? Some may think it’s a huge bore, a waste of time, which pretty much makes it a countdown to the future. This ironically and unfortunately is how many of us conduct our daily lives, always looking forward to the next moment impatiently. But the present holds tremendous opportunity no matter where you are, and it doesn’t even matter whether you have an iphone in your pocket with wi-fi reception!
So what did I do on the flight? Here’s a quick list:
- Finished reading “Zen in the Art of Archery“
- Started reading another Ken Wilber book
- Listened to some Xavier Rudd music
- Listened to the Thom Hartmann Podcast
- Listened to the Living Dialogues Podcast,
- Ate a couple specially requested vegetarian meals (a free option for any flight with food)
- Watched “The 11th Hour” on my computer (because of course no on board plane entertainment would feature such an important film)
- Had a couple short naps
- Had a bunch of silent ‘zone out’ sessions while watching the clouds below
- And did a little writing on the computer, as seen below…
I don’t want to be entertained for the sole purpose of passing the time. Time is the most precious resource we have, though most don’t take advantage of it due to the wicked consumerism cycle. What we choose to do with our spare time (and money) is more important today than ever before. Like one quote from “The 11th Hour”, and it was actually the closing quote from film, “The Earth has all the time in the world, but we don’t”, – Oren Lyons.
How do you want to spend your time? Stuck in traffic, working long hours to pay for the car that’s bigger, the house that’s bigger, the extra stuff you have to put in it not to mention the time it takes to find and buy all that stuff. Do you want to spend the down time you do have worrying about all the stuff you have accumulated and the possibility of losing it? How do you want to spend your time? What is really important and do your actions reflect it? Maybe you’ll have “time” when you retire, if you can just make it another 3, 10, or 30 years, then it’ll all be good – big house paid off and time to travel and finally enjoy life. Yes? …NO!!!!
I am increasingly becoming tired of our cultures rampant material lifestyles and the negative effects it has. I have been as guilty as anyone, but coming to terms with the charge is the first step, and owning this truth encourages automatic right choice.
We have to move from the black hole of Well Having to the light of Well Being!!
Watching “The 11th Hour” has really rattled my heart, and in a great way. I can’t say how many times this happened recently as I learn more about our human predicament. My goals are being re-shaped quite rapidly, and the more I learn, the more sure I am of the direction I would like to go, and the more I am convinced that the role I play can make a difference, as can everyone in their own unique way.
Viewing this film may be scary to some, as it was for me at times, but the feeling I have is one of elation and excitement; it’s a sense of purpose I feel that I think we all can join in on. Our generation will decide what life will be like for generations to come, and it can go either way; is there a mission that is any more important than that? Where do we start though?
I would suggest simplifying and reducing our material consumption so we can afford to buy the products that are necessities, and to use that consumer power we have to send the message that we as individuals are serious about change (buying smaller houses), serious about our health (buying organic), and serious about the planet (not buying disposable ‘stuff’ we don’t need). The majority of the stuff we buy has a cradle to trash lifecycle, instead of a cradle to cradle lifecycle which needs to be the new goal.
We do have power as individuals. The power to vote when we go to the store…and of course the power to vote politically. We have an election going on here in Canada which requires great attention, as does the roller coaster American Presidential race. The potential new American V.P., Governor Sarah Palin, denies that humans have anything to do with climate change, she is as far right as it gets; can you imagine if McCain gets elected? Scary. Please do the research and don’t rely on the media because they’re poised to gain financially if the republicans win. Yes this is a rambling post, and yes I’m battling to write this all before my battery dies, but I think we’re living in a very exciting time with huge possibilities for some beautiful transformations. There is reason for optimism, but we have to start acting now.
Our way of thinking must change before action is taken, that’s the challenge we face; action based in old paradigm thinking, no matter how well intentioned, could just make the situation worse (this is a confusing concept). Pico Iyer articulated it nicely with this quote, “Action without reflection is what got us into this mess in the first place, and the only answer is not action, but, first, clearer reflection.”
Another example might be those acting out of fear, this has been a common response for many after “An Inconvenient Truth” was released. In a recent audio program, I heard Ken Wilber say “one of the strange paradoxes is that eco-centric thinking is often ego-centric thinking, and unfortunately Gaia is the One that suffers.” So we have to be careful. Perhaps more time needs to be devoted to expand on these concepts, so I’ll save it for another time.
In conclusion though, I will be doing everything I can to help raise that awareness and educate (both myself, then others), I will strive to spread the good word of hope. It is an important time to be alive, but we must act with intelligent haste.
Much love friends
Some Green Clips from EuroBike 08
Friday, September 12th, 2008Affluent Change
Thursday, August 21st, 2008
While cycling in some brilliant sun shining weather, I started to ponder our cultures material lifestyle. The relationship between the amount of money one makes and the amount one thus consumes materially seem to be almost inescapably linked; and in a day and age where so many are financially prolific (and soon to be in China and India), it is no wonder that consumption seems to be growing despite dire warning signs from scientists that this has to change. For those capable now of entering a fabulous material lifestyle, the excuses to justify these personal standards are completely owned and justified. What is it going to take for affluent individuals to voluntarily alter their decadent desires?
This thought process started with the awareness of a shift in my own consuming habits and patterns; now by no means am I part of the growing league of elite rich, but I can draw a parallel in my own consumption desires and what my salary is capable of consuming, they are no longer par with one another; so the question comes, what has changed for me? I still have much work to do, but the needing and wanting of things like a big fancy house, fast car, and the best weekend toys money can buy have lost their grip on my mind, same with having the latest electronic gadget and fancy camera. I believe that the more citizens that can curb this material yearning voluntarily, before they are forced to by mother nature (which is inevitable), the smoother and less violent this transition to a sustainable culture will be.
Now perhaps you might think I’m idealizing things, because after all, it’s just wise for me to reduce my material aspirations to below my income level, at least that is what all financial planners preach; they say you have to plan ahead, invest and save your money, live below your means and you’ll have a happy future. That’s all good and true, and I have always been decent at following that plan; but on average, the stats clearly show North Americans live well beyond their financial capacity due to this craving for material status. Financial planners may also warn of job stability, and not to over spend if your job isn’t secure. My income is tied heavily to my physical well-being, so it’s also wise not to go overboard, but unfortunately, most jobs these days are dependant on all sorts of variables; but still those blind, deep, material desires has now lead to, for example in America, the worst mortgage and lender crash since the depression. Most of these victims’ are smart people, and hold good jobs, so how could things go so wrong, how could we be so disillusioned with our spending, and how might we reframe our conditioning to gain some perspective?
One suggestion would be to think back to when you were a young teenager, before you had a license (or in the case of some readers, think ahead to this point). For me, if there was a particular place that I wanted to ride my bike, I would ride for as long as needed to get there. My bikes were often quite Frankenstein like (especially my rear derailleurs); but did these material limitations affect the level of enjoyment and happiness I experienced? No. Now that I have unlimited fancy smancy bikes, do I enjoy my riding experience more than I did back then. No. So will the house on the hill provide you with more happiness than the apartment in the city, absolutely not! Sure there may be a temporary high, but it’s not lasting; if anything the journey to acquire and maintain this material landmark postpones the crucial realization of our inter-connectedness to the earth. It seems human nature to continually want more and more (thanks to the western white man anyway), and no matter what level of finance you reach, the greatest lie our culture maintains is that more will be even better. We tend to unconsciously propagate this materialistic story to our young, and then wonder why there is so much dis-ease in our society.
Let us say I am just being smart about my financial future, and I haven’t had some magical shift in my consumeronciousness, the theoretical question still remains, how would my consumption change if I won the lottery today and my financial future was secured? Please ask yourself this, what would you buy!? Or what if you became a successful businessperson that makes more money in a year than most in their life? How would you change your lifestyle? Where would you travel? I just glanced through a magazine article showing the indulgences of the owner of Tommy Hilfiger, the cars, mansions, and helicopters…at one point, I would have thought it was pretty cool to have all that, but with the knowledge of the world I now possess, I see it as a gross sin for one human to be responsible for so much consumption of the worlds resources. Watching a show like cribs for instance makes me sick to my stomach most of the time. But then again, so does my consumption, the same gap between me and Tommy is similar to the third-world and me; I consume way more than my one world limit.


Typical third world neighborhood vs typical suburban mansion.
As the first-world population slowly (too slowly) comes to terms with the fact that our lifestyles are killing the planet, and hence our children’s future, a powerful emotion will set in and wreck havoc on our minds, guilt. Once we are able to stare this guilt in the face, we can do a few things:
1. Quickly look the other way before it notices us.
2. Give up, decide you can’t make a difference, and return to business as usual.
3. Turn this powerful emotion in to a positive signal to wake up and take action!
At this point the discussion can get pretty complicated, so I won’t sink too deep. If we ignore the emotion, it will just keep re-surfacing more forcefully, and scarily. Giving up may work temporarily, but what about your children? My own incubation period between reading the scientific stats and studies (an upcoming article will focus on this specifically), and actually doing something about it is shockingly slow and lame, and I even consider myself above average in this regard, a bit scary really.
Modern scientific revelation (or Gods word if you like) has made it immanently clear we are not merely humans living on the earth as was once thought back in the flat earth epoch, but are humans grown from the earth, just like a fox or a tree; the key difference is that we have developed the unique capacity to not just know, but to know we know. This is consciousness. It is through us that the earth is now able to consciously see herself. When you look at the moon, the moon is literally seeing itself through your eyes! Coming to terms with this sacred truth was what brought about the shift in my material desires, and of course, much more. It would take an infinite number of pages to describe this realization fully, precisely because it is indescribable. Point is, that inherent within this emerging worldview comes the inability of harming the earth for personal gain. Ignorance was once material bliss, but true bliss, it turns out, is immaterial.
More Pro Bicycle Ideas
Monday, August 18th, 2008Check out this list of interesting reasons to ride your bike. A few unique ideas are listed. The bottom line formula with all this pro bike stuff is: Bikes + Environment = Good News.
Joni Mitchell – A Big Yellow Taxi
Thursday, July 31st, 2008Caryn and I were hanging out cleaning the kitchen last night after chasing our nephews all day (well, she was cleaning the kitchen and I was surfing – thanks love). Through the ipod speakers came the Counting Crows cover of A Big Yellow Taxi. Now this is a song I have grown up hearing, but it wasn’t until I heard it last night that it struck my environmental chord…Are we going to wait until it’s gone until we realize what we’ve done to this planet? (yes that’s an oxymoron). Or are we finally coming to terms with the message Joni MItchell shared in this song that she wrote some 38 years ago? I sure hope so!
They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot
With a pink hotel, a boutique
And a swinging hot spot
Dont it always seem to go
That you dont know what youve got
Till its gone
They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot
They took all the trees
Put em in a tree museum
And they charged the people
A dollar and a half just to see em
Dont it always seem to go
That you dont know what youve got
Till its gone
They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot
Hey farmer farmer
Put away that d.d.t. now
Give me spots on my apples
But leave me the birds and the bees
Please!
Dont it always seem to go
That you dont know what youve got
Till its gone
They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot
Late last night
I heard the screen door slam
And a big yellow taxi
Took away my old man
Dont it always seem to go
That you dont know what youve got
Till its gone
They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot
Frontline-Hot Politics
Sunday, May 4th, 2008I had this open in my browser for two weeks until I finally had time to watch it. PBS is such a fantastic resource, and since I rarely watch TV, having access to programs like the one I link to below is perfect.
Much of what was in this documentary is what Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was pointing toward in his speech last week.
I hope you can make some time to watch this documentary, click here then on “Watch the Full Program Online”. Yes it’s US politics, but it is truly a global issue…Go Barack!!







