One Square Mile is the work of Carl and Betsy Crum, a husband and wife team traveling America and making these amazing short documentaries on single square miles and the people that live within them. The first episode of season two happens to be on Hanalei, HI, which is but a scant few miles away from where I type these very words.
Hey, you! The SuperForest Sundae is an end-of-the-week wrap up of miscellaneous tidbits that SuperForester April thinks you might like. With a cherry on top.
Talented artist you may not have heard of Renee Anne Baker is an artist/illustrator who’s been generating lots of buzz here in Australia of late. Check out her Flickr for more samples of her work.
A song you might love Mishka’s reggae-fused Guy With A Guitar.
A secret society you’ll want to join The Secret Society for Creative Philanthropy (SSCP) started in 2006 and its premise is this: Giving $100 to creative folk who think up original and fun ways to hand this money onto others. Following this, the giver shares the story of the giveaway. Past examples include handing out umbrellas to those without them on a rainy day. An idea put forward by someone was to “pay the bill for people who are angry and impatient in line, to remind them not to sweat the small things. We have all been stressed out and in that place before.”
Check out this video of the SSCP offering people $1 to chat with a stranger.
Cycle for your meal A Danish hotel has introduced a scheme where guests are given a free meal if they produce enough electricity on an exercise bicycle. Watch the Reuters news report here.
Documentary you should check out I received an email from Greenpeace this week encouraging me to watch The End Of The Line – a film about the devastating effects of overfishing. The film offers simple solutions that will help restore oceans and keep them healthy. Watch the trailer below.
A huge win today for dolphins and all sea life! As Carla pointed out, apparently the dolphin hunting activities in Taiji have ceased, and the Japanese media is covering the cove intensely. The film and the actions of Ric O’Barry and Co. have achieved a cultural tipping point, and now the entire world is paying attention.
I had mentioned my plans to go to Japan and sing the Dolphin Rap, but now that the show is apparently over, it seems excessive. The plan now is to stay in the USA, translate the Dolphin Rap into Japanese and work to spread it virally. Ramp up the pro-dolphin media campaign in order to keep the momentum going.
That said, if dolphin hunting were to resume, I’d be ready at a moments notice to fly down and spit hot fire. :)
A huge congratulations to Ric O’Barry, the team that made The Cove, and to the people of Japan.
Let’s continue this excitement for conservation and work to extend it to include all sea life.
SuperForester Aaron’s impassioned post last week stuck in my head, and when a friend asked me if I’d go and see the Cove, I jumped at the chance to not see it alone.
It is powerful, moving, inspiring. Beyond words.
Go and see the Cove, and then lets figure out the most fun way to stop what is being documented in the film. I for one am a big fan of music. I’m going to try writing a song in Japanese about how dolphins are our friends.
“More than 70,000 advertising professionals have lost their jobs in this Great Recession. Lemonade is about what happens when people who were once paid to be creative in advertising are forced to be creative with their own lives.”
Lemonade looks amazing! Very hopeful and wry. It was written by Erik Proulx, and directed by Marc Colucci. Nice going dudes! Way to focus on the positive.
From the looks of the trailer, No Impact Fam might be a more apt description as the film follows Colin Beavan, his wife, and their infant daughter as they attempt to live a year in Manhattan with no net-environmental impact.
I love how the trailer pulls no punches. It makes the No Impact Year experiment look appropriately grueling and stressful, but the flip-side of the stress and effort seems to be a closer family, healthy weight loss, and spending waaaay less. Plus the all-local food diet looks really tasty.
If a lot of folks see and talk about this movie, and the No Impact ethos spreads awareness the way An Inconvenient Truth did, Colin Beavan will have to change his name to Massive Impact Man.
SuperForester Jackson here. I just got back to my apartment after the premier of Fuel, Josh Tickell’s new film about the mess we’re in and how to clean it up.
Beginning with a bio of Josh, his Australian birth and upbringing, it then follows him as he is transplanted into Louisiana, where many of his relatives are being curiously sickened, clearly by the oil refineries surrounding them…
The biggest shock to the young Josh and his brother is the contrast between Australia, where you can swim in any water hole and eat any fish you catch, to the bayous of Louisiana, where the waterways are clogged with waste and not fit for humans.
He describes how the shock of the alien culture and the hostile environment drove him inward, leading young Josh on a path of discovering the natural world through science. He began his career as an enviro-scientist by testing the waterways around his home county, finding dangerous levels of multiple toxins. Such was the severity of his findings that an official from the EPA threatened to disqualify his science project, on the grounds that Josh’s numbers were so different from the “official” levels released by the oil company funded EPA.
While he was living abroad, Josh discovered the work of Rudolph Diesel, whose engine was originally built to run on peanut oil. Seeing that farmers in Germany were already using biodiesel to run their tractors, Josh had an epiphany: He’d return to the United States and get evangelical about the wonders of biodiesel!
And that’s just what he did. Josh and some creative friends sketched out a rudimentary biodiesel station that could convert waste veggie oil from fast food joints into fuel, and be towed behind Josh’s new diesel Winnebago.
Josh then spent the next several years touring around the country, giving lectures, showing off his technology, answering questions, getting interviewed, all while slowly snowballing biodiesel awareness.
As Fuel puts it very bluntly, oil is over. Fossil fuels are finished.
And since what we need is not a magic bullet, but magic buckshot, the answers to our problems are various and delightful.
But there is one word that you should know, for this simple word will be a major part of the transition away from fossil fuels. That word is algae.
Check this:
Ironically, it’s algae that we have to blame for getting us into this mess, as it was ancient algae and phytoplankton that became oil in the first place. But algae-fuel technologies will be able to step in and provide us with the crutch that we need to hobble through this mess, but only if enough people know about it and believe.
The amazing thing about algae is how many problems it solves at once! Its main food sources are sunlight and carbon dioxide. You can produce it on land that can’t be farmed, with water that can’t be drunk. Because it grows so fast you can make it as fast as you need it, in as big a system as you can imagine.
The oil extracted from algae can be used to make diesel, regular gasoline, plastics, fertilizers, and because this algae-oil can be made from waste it is a negative carbon producer.
That means, for every tank of algae-diesel pumped, you’d be removing multiple tanks of fossil fuel damage from the lovely equation we call life here on Earth.
Algae, folks. The future is in algae.
But remember, no magic bullets! Magic buckshot is the new way.
So in addition to algae tech, we’re gonna need solar, wind, geothermal, bicycles, and good old smart engineering to use less energy.
Collaboration and idea-sharing are our way out of this.
Josh describes how the anger from the injustices around him were his primary source of inner fuel for many years… That is until he decided to stop fighting and start forming partnerships.
When Josh and I spoke today he said two things that encouraged me greatly: The first was that we could now easily run our entire planet solely on the waste we’ve produced. And the second thing he said, and bear in mind that this is a man who has spent better than a decade working on this issue, was that the answers to the energy crises, the bright lights to shine our way out of this quagmire, are all there.
We don’t need anything new to fix the problem. We have all the answers.
Now is simply a matter of implementing them…
No, says Josh, (I’m paraphrasing) the really interesting question is not how we solve the energy crises. We know the answers to that.
The really interesting question is what we do now that we can so easily play god.
I’d like to thank Josh Tickell for soldiering on so bravely for so many years on behalf of us all, for his undying dedication to being a decent human being and creating effective communication, and for taking the time to chat with me today.
Your movie is a great one, Josh. I hope the world pays notice.
Thank you very much to All
-SuperForester Jackson
p.s. I was extended the invitation to the screening by SuperForester Julia and I’d like to give her my hearty thanks.
Biodiesel guru Josh Tickell is in NYC tonight to screen his solution-tastic new film “Fuel”
Here is the trailer:
Josh was kind enough to spend a few minutes chatting with SuperForest today, and the audio is being transcribed as I type these very words! So stay tuned…
The situation that the world faces right now is that oil is the lifeblood of our very existence, so changing over to renewable resources is much like performing a full blood transfusion on a runner while they’re in a full sprint. A very tricky situation…
Josh says that Fuel is about positive solutions for continued survival. We’re very excited to see!
Here’s a quote from today’s interview:
“Every single energy loss in this country is a potential energy gain… Do you want to consume? Or do you want to live prosperously”
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