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August 04, 2009

One More Reason to Avoid Plastic

For those of you who do not know how much plastic is accumulating in our Ocean, please check out the following story http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090804/us_nm/us_ocean_plastics

Disposable plastic has become such an accepted part of modern living that most people don't give it a second thought. 

For those people who are trying to decide why they should care about tossing a plastic water bottle aside, consider this - the "Great Pacific Garbage Patch" is a collection of floating plastic debris about the size of Texas and growing.

One idea to solve this problem would be to redirect Hawaiian bound cruise ship traffic through the Patch for a month or so and see what kind of outcry would result.

Wishful thinking I know, but awareness is the first step in resolving environmental issues. 

April 07, 2009

Green Inspiration

Make no mistake, being green is gaining ground.

New stories are emerging every day about concerned citizens who have had enough of the way things used to be and are demanding changes.

Awareness is rising, inspired by everyday people doing extraordinary things to point out the serious environmental challenges our Planet faces.

We were recently introduced to a dedicated young woman who is literally going the extra mile to help address one of the growing problems of our time - access to safe drinking water.

This December, Katie Spotz is embarking on the adventure of a lifetime - a solo row across the Atlantic Ocean.

The 2,500 mile journey will begin in Senegal, West Africa and finish in French Guiana, South America.

After 70-100 days at sea, Katie will become the youngest person and the first American ever to row an ocean solo from mainland to mainland. 

Katie has partnered with the Blue Planet Run Foundation, whose mission is to help the billion people around the world in need of life's basic necessities.

We applaud everyone who does their part to help make things better out there, but Katie's story goes so far above and beyond what most people do that we felt compelled to bring it to everyone's attention.

Spending a Saturday afternoon cleaning up a local beach is a great way to contribute, but rowing across an Ocean is in a class all by itself.

We encourage everyone to take a look at Katie's website, www.rowforwater.com and consider making a donation to support her journey.

At greenboatstuff we are honored to know that some of our products will be accompanying Katie on her voyage, hopefully making her adventure a little more comfortable.

While we believe any support of an environmental cause is a good thing, there is something special about knowing that, in an indirect way, you are actually in the same boat with someone as inspiring as Katie Spotz.

September 22, 2008

The China Syndrome – Considering Asian Made Goods

 

 

We recently received an email from a customer who laid into us for carrying products made in China.

With all the bad press out there about tainted toothpaste, leaded kid’s toys, poison pet food, and so on it is easy to see why many people have a hard time purchasing Chinese goods. We too are sick and tired of the proliferation of cheap crap coming out of Asian factories. The vast majority of the low price plastic products found in boating supply stores are manufactured in this part of the world.

Anyone who tuned into the Olympics this summer saw images of smog and pollution that even the best Politburo image consultants couldn’t convince us were simply “mist.” There is no denying that China today suffers from intense environmental degradation, and in much of Asia this pattern of 19th century industrialization is causing terrible harm. A look at the statistics on water and air quality over there is straight out of Dickens.

Much has been said about the consequences of the unabated growth   in China, most of it accurate and reason for concern.

At the same time, however, we take exception to the idea that everything coming out of Asia is bad and should be avoided at all costs. We don’t expect everyone to agree with our reasons for this stance, but as an environmentally conscious company we feel that a little explanation is a good thing. We welcome your comments, either in agreement or dissent.

For one thing, as patriotic as we are, we have trouble with the blanket thinking that essentially argues that all goods produced in the USA are good and everything from China is bad. For anyone paying attention to history, it is important to recognize that the vast majority of toxins that modern industry has dumped into our waterways were originally synthesized in American laboratories by American companies. The post World War II boom in chemical production is well documented as being driven by American industry. We could go on and on here, but before we throw rocks at other countries for the pollution they cause we might want to look in the mirror first.

Granted, great strides have been made with environmental policy here at home, however, there is still a very strong argument to be made for American culpability in the proliferation of compounds linked to cancers, genetic abnormalities, and countless health problems in human beings and other life forms.  As much as we detest the oppressive and misguided policies of the Chinese government, they didn’t bring the world PCBs, PVC, plastic, and so on, we did.

Since any discussion on China vs. America inevitably leads to a review of our different political systems, let’s get this one out of the way right now. We love America. This great nation has done more to secure and promote liberty than any country in the history of the world. We hate communism. The damage done to Mother Earth and mankind in general under communism is immeasurable. At the same time, though, we believe America has made her fair share of mistakes.  Our point here is simply that to base a decision about buying, or not buying, goods made in China by exalting our great country over theirs’ might be a bit hypocritical.

Moving beyond the historical and political issues brings us to the current state of affairs we find ourselves confronted with when dealing with suppliers who use Chinese factories. We will not carry goods made in China unless we are certain that the manufacturing facilities involved meet strict criteria.

One of our favorite examples of the oversight we require comes from the apparel supplier we deal with, HT Naturals. Based in Vancouver, British Columbia, HT Naturals designs and produces high quality clothing made from such earth friendly materials as organic cotton, hemp, bamboo, and so on. Given the economic realities of profitably manufacturing these items, HTN made the decision to locate their main manufacturing facility in China. Unlike many old-school apparel companies, however, HTN established rigorous and verifiable standards for the operation of their factory.

These common sense provisions include strict environmental standards for air, water, and overall facility operations, banning child labor, implementing an anti-discrimination policy, establishing a living wage, offering affordable health care and maternity leave, and so on. These programs are overseen by managers whose livelihood is tied to their enforcement. HTN executives perform routine inspections and employee interviews to verify everything is proceeding according to plan.

While no system is perfect, we would argue that conditions in the Chinese operations of HTN are vastly superior to what the majority of the world’s textile workers experience.

The point here is that it is possible to do business in China, or any other country, while still occupying the moral high ground. Consumers should boycott companies that abuse their workers or intentionally pollute the planet. The only way real progress will be made in the efforts to clean up the planet, however, will be if all companies adopt the type of policies HTN has put in place, whether in China, America, or anywhere else.

Consumer choice is one of the most powerful means of executing change. As you make your buying decisions we would urge you to consider the many factors that go into producing an earth friendly product, not just the geography of its’ origin.  

March 24, 2008

What This Blog Is Not

 

             Anyone who came across this blog looking for a politically charged, blame forum about whose fault this environmental mess we have found ourselves in is going to be disappointed.  I am not above going off on a rant once in a while, but in my humble opinion, healing the waters of this fragile planet is a lot more important than wasting precious time pointing fingers. For sure, bad guys need to be held accountable, and in a more environmentally conscious world they will be, but solving the problem is literally a life and death proposition. If your craft is sinking you bail, you don’t call your lawyer to sue the manufacturer. 

 


            This blog is not perfect. I have tried to examine every angle of the topics discussed here. When describing practices and products every attempt is made to look at how such things affect the environment on several layers. Whether you are exploring the creation, distribution, use or disposal of boating equipment, or just trying to weigh the pros and cons of fueling practices, cleaning procedures or a walk on the beach, it gets complicated. 


            Like most things in life, environmental issues are anything but cut and dried. As much as you may enjoy your organic tomatoes in January, what did it cost the planet to fly them from Chile to your local supermarket? Get the picture? 


            My point is simply that the ideas you will encounter here are meant to be a step in the right direction. I look forward to the input from conscientious readers who may call me to task on what they find.  While I certainly do have an ego, I will gladly stuff it away for a while if it will help further the cause of a healthier planet. I encourage anyone with opinions, insights, or criticism to contact me at www.greenboatstuff.com.
 

Thank You
 

Eric Allen

March 22, 2008

Why This Blog Is Self-Serving

 

 

Let’s get this little issue out of the way up front.  In addition to deciding to write a blog about green boating I decided to start a company committed to selling environmentally friendly boating supplies. Our store greenboatstuff.com sells a lot of the products discussed in this book.

            Before anyone accuses me of being an opportunistic capitalist let me proudly admit that I am.  Government regulations and sound public policy are essential to steering the ship of environmental reform in the direction it needs to go.

Real change, however, usually comes from the ground up.  Maybe I am naïve, but I believe that once the education process takes hold, and consumers become aware of the environmental consequences of their purchasing decisions, the free market can solve many of our problems much better than someone telling us we must do this or buy that.


            At least I hope so.


            In any event, as an author, a merchant, and a citizen of planet Earth I hope you do buy some of the green boat stuff we sell.  As this blog is meant to change the way boaters enjoy their time on the water, the items sold at www.greenboatstuff.com are meant to allow boaters to pursue their passions without inflicting any environmental harm. Hopefully one day soon you will be able to find a wide assortment of truly green products at your local boating supply store. 

March 19, 2008

Why It's Not Easy Being Green

Kermit the frog got it right. It’s not easy being green.


 

Several factors will most likely confront you should you choose to adopt green boating.


 

Probably the biggest challenge to being green these days is cost. A jug of the cheapest generic cleaning product will be cheaper to buy than organic soap. But will it really be cheaper to use? I’m not talking dollars here, but rather the true cost of using a product that will shine up your boat for a few days only to linger in the water, infiltrating the aquatic food supply and possibly leading to algae blooms,  dead zones, and even genetic mutations in fish? I know this sounds extreme, but according to numerous scientific experts this may be exactly what happens when traditional household cleaners build up in our waterways.


 

If, instead of just looking at the dollars and cents your store receipt says your petroleum-based boat soap cost, we could look at the big picture receipt, what would we find? What is the real cost to the environment when the toxins in that soap go over the side once you rinse down your decks? What are the true energy costs - both in actual production and shipping charges as well as greenhouse gases created - to manufacture and distribute that soap? What are the medical, social, and moral costs associated with the health problems the 12 year old Asian kid has from working in the factory where it was made? What damage was caused producing the plastic bottle your soap came in and how many generations will deal with that same bottle?


 

Now examine what it really costs for an adult worker to make a highly effective boat soap from chemical free, organic ingredients in a fair-labor factory in the USA, using renewable energy and recycled packaging material.


 

Which costs more? You decide. Unfortunately, organic soap will force you to open your wallet a little wider than if you buy the harmful stuff. In so many meaningful ways, though, the organic stuff is a real bargain.


 

Another reason Kermit was right involves the emotional cost of being green. If your experience is anything like mine, you will very likely pass through three distinct phases on this journey.


 

First, you are going to feel a little weird if this stuff is new to you. Carrying your own grocery bags into the store, asking your waiter if the salmon is wild or farmed, and trying to explain your new way of doing things to your ultra conservative friends or family members will take a bit of a toll. Remember though, it is time to act like grown-ups.


 The second phase may leave you overwhelmed.

If you care enough to read this blog, you will probably read other stuff, or you already have. Once you educate yourself about what is really happening in the Ocean and elsewhere it is easy to become consumed by feelings of dread and hopelessness. Species extinction, fisheries collapse, climate change, babies –both human and not- born with compromised immune systems, and increasingly toxic food supplies are just a few of the heavy topics you will likely encounter if you choose to go green.


 

Getting past these harsh realities requires a simple do-what-you-can approach.  It is just not realistic to expect that anger and education will solve these problems on their own. The key to lasting change lies in modifying the behavior of those causing the trouble. If, after starting down the sustainable path you find yourself adopting some of the ideas put forward then you will be part of the solution. One person in a marina doing the right thing that leads to three others and then ten more following suit really can make a difference.


 

Finally, once you get past stages one and two something remarkable starts to happen. Now I don’t mean to get all new age here, but there really is an emotional reward from being green.


 

The look my teenage daughter gave me when I told her I had joined Greenpeace was priceless. At first I think she thought the old man had lost his mind, now our dinner table conversations routinely turn to the environment - how cool is that?


 Reconnecting with Nature is powerful stuff. Whether our logical minds want to admit it or not, there is a direct correlation between how alive you feel and how much you help or harm this planet. I know this might be a big eye-roller for some, but once you go green, magical moments await you. Seeing an eagle at sunset, barking back at the seals lolling on a channel marker, or laughing at the dolphin riding your bow wave, brings on a whole different feeling when you know you are living in harmony with the wild instead of trying to rule over it.
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

March 18, 2008

Why Be Green On Your Boat?

 

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You would think that boaters would be some of the most environmentally conscious folks out there. After all, we spend time and money to be on and in the water, we eat food that comes out of the water, and most of us claim to really love boating.  

 

And yet, look between the slips in an average marina and what are you likely to see? Floating plastic, oil slicks, and any number of things that aren't very green.

 

 

While it might be tempting to blame someone ashore for all the junk floating around out there, the fact is most of this crap comes from boats, big and small. While shoreside industry and land-based litter bugs certainly contribute to the mess, this blog is about what we boaters can do.

 

 

 

A short list of what green boating can do might include the following -

 

-Reduce or eliminate the toxins that are in almost every recreational waterway, from your favorite fishing hole to the Pacific Ocean.

 

 

-Increase the plant and animal life in these same areas.

 

 

-Save endangered species and lead to the reestablishment of sea life that has abandoned the region.

 

 

-Improve the quality of drinking water everywhere.

 

 

-Reduce the growing amount of plastic particles entering the food chain.

 

 

-Reduce or eliminate the toxins your body absorbs when you are in the water.

 

 

-Reduce or eliminate the toxins you body absorbs when you are in your boat.

 

 

-Reduce or eliminate the toxins and hormone altering compounds that are in many of the seafoods we enjoy and feed to our kids.

 

-Encourage boating related companies to offer more green products and become better corporate citizens.

 

 

-Promote sustainable environmental policies where producers and consumers give back as much as they take from the planet.

 

 

-Ensure future generations enjoy a healthy, clean and biologically vibrant time on the water.

 

 

-Make you remember how good it feels to do the right thing.

 

March 11, 2008

Why Being Green Matters


    

Up until about 150 years ago most of the world was clean and beautiful. Sure there are horror stories of people dying in the cities from primitive toxins like coal dust, lead poisoning,  and so on, but by and large the lakes and rivers were clean and the Ocean was full of life.  Stories abound of settlers in New England dropping buckets over the side of their ships and pulling them up full of cod. Native Americans in the Pacific Northwest thrived for generations by living in tune with the salmon runs.  The biggest creatures in the history of the world, whales, lived long simple lives in the ocean deep.
           

 Look at the world today.
 

Cod are rarely if ever found in Boston Harbor anymore, and if you are lucky enough to catch the one salmon allowed per fisherman each day in Puget Sound you need to worry about how much mercury it contains. Iceland still kills plenty of whales while the Japanese hide behind ridiculous claims that they need to murder these magnificent creatures in the name of science. All the while whale meat is for sale in downtown Tokyo.
           

How we treat the natural world says a lot about ourselves. If you believe, as I do, that our most distant ancestors came from the sea, then we should be ashamed of how badly we are treating Mother Ocean. Remarkably, most people who cause pollution, either on purpose, or not, give very little thought to how badly they are actually treating themselves and the generations yet to come. I don’t know anybody sane who would bathe in gasoline, eat plastic, or force their children to ingest poison, yet in a very real way, every time an old outboard spills fuel over the side,  a $3.00 bundle of grocery- store toys gets left at the beach, or a tidy mom tries to shine up the galley with some cleaner full of toxins, this is exactly what happens.
          

Aside from our own health, what does it say about modern society when every resident Killer Whale in Puget Sound is so full of industrial toxins that the entire group is dying a slow death, unable to reproduce enough healthy offspring to keep the family growing. Or how about the dead beluga whales who are so full of toxins that disposal crews must wear haz-mat suits when removing their carcasses from the beach? Industrial defenders would like you to think occurrences like these are one in a million, but the sad truth is that similar problems can be found all the way up and down the aquatic food chain, from plankton to polar bears.
         

Take a peek at what is happening beneath the waves in Chesapeake Bay, the Mediterranean, the Caribbean, the South Pacific, or in almost any large body of water, and the scene is bleak. In almost every commercial fishery around the world, the current population of marine organisms is over 90% less than it once was.     90%!      Most of this decimation has been caused by overfishing of course – a topic we won’t be delving into very much here – but a good deal of the problem lies in the unhealthy water marine animals are now forced to occupy. 
         

 This blog is not going to try to solve all the world’s problems. Plenty of great books exist that can enlighten you on these big questions. What we will try to do, however, is point out why you should be green in your little hole in the water. 

No matter how you look at it, this planet we live on is a closed system. The only thing that gets in is a life- sustaining dose of sunlight. Other than some of this light bouncing back into space, a little heat, and some upper atmosphere gases, everything else that is made, used, and disposed of on Earth stays on Earth.

Mankind is the only member of Nature, and yes we are animals after all, that has created an unsustainable way of life. Everywhere else in the natural world organisms live and die in harmony with the planet. Non-human organisms grow, nourish themselves,  create recyclable waste, reproduce, and in death, release their vital elements back into the sytem.

The circle of life works - it has allowed life to flourish on this planet for millions of years. And yet, human beings have somehow forgotten the rules. We produce an overwhelming volume of toxins and wastes that harm the system. More on this later, but how advanced can we really claim to be when we alone are poisoning everyone and everything around us?

Being green can take many forms, but at the heart of it all, being green means trying to live our lives as members of the circle of life. While we may try to convince ourselves that Man has evolved beyond the necessity of adhering to these basic rules, in the end, the logic and processes of a closed system are bound to catch up to us if we don't. 

 
 
 

March 06, 2008

Why Greenboatblog and Greenboatstuff Exists.

When I first heard the term “green” associated with anything I had visions of my wonderful hippy Aunt Wendy, dancing through her garden in a homemade dress and thanking the pagan gods for her fresh vegetables. 
For most of my adult life I have been a pretty clean cut, rational taxpayer who never thought a lot about the environment unless an oil spill was front-page news. Sure I enjoy a good summer day at the lake, but until recently I took Mother Nature for granted.
            Like most boat owners, I want my boat to look nice. I want my engine to run smoothly. I want my family to enjoy our time on the water with good food, comfy clothes, plenty of fun things to do, and a clean cabin that doesn’t smell. When I started fooling around on boats I figured the easiest way to have all these things was to think of my boat as a house.
            At home we had jugs of cleaners, bottles of bleach, boxes of laundry soap, rolls of plastic bags, and every other convenience available to supposedly make life better.
Most of these products found their way to our boat without any real thought on my part. If a cleaner said “biodegradable” on the label I might buy it as long as it wasn’t too expensive. I never thought to question what “biodegradable” really meant, I just assumed it meant a product was harmless if it got in the water.
In the spring I joined most folks in our marina by scrubbing and polishing and using all those nifty cleaners to try and outshine my neighbors.
Every fall I changed my diesel engine’s oil and usually got most of the gunk cleaned up. When it came time to fill the fuel tanks I tried to be careful but more than once some fuel spilled overboard. As the colorful slick spread around my boat I was much more worried about what my fellow boaters thought than I was about the pollution I had just let go. After all, the lake we are on is huge-those few drops of fuel wouldn’t cause much harm would they? After a day on the water we hauled our trash to the marina dumpster like everybody else, all three bags of it.
            Then one day I read a book.
            Quite by accident I grabbed a copy of Carl Safina’s “Song for the Blue Ocean.” The cover looked cool and since I like to read, I thought I should learn a little about the Ocean. As the plight of the majestic blue fin tuna, the incredible Pacific salmon, and numerous coral reef inhabitants unfolded I began to question my beliefs about the environment. Carl’s book led me to Rachel Carson’s “Silent Spring” and beyond.
            As I began to question my beliefs about the true state of the environment two real life experiences opened my eyes even more,.
            Being a devoted sailor I long dreamed of cruising in the British Virgin Islands.  Several thousand miles and several thousand dollars later my family and I found ourselves chartering a sailboat in the BVI over the Thanksgiving holiday. Here we were having the time of our lives, overcoming my daughter’s fear of sharks and my fear of looking like I might not know what I was doing. The weather was perfect, the sailing terrific, all in all, paradise. Then one day, as we were lounging in the bay that supposedly inspired Robert Louis Stephenson to write “Treasure Island”, a plastic shopping bag floated by our stern.
            I almost cried. In that moment I completely connected with the old Indian chief in the 1970’s commercial who cried after canoeing through garbage and having litter thrown at his feet.
            A few months later the family was on Maui.  On an afternoon getaway my wife and I took the windy road to Hana to see “Old” Hawaii. Driving just south of Hana the beaches are beautiful - from a distance. This is one of the first spots in all of Hawaii where the waves from the mainland come ashore.
Unfortunately the breakers carry with them all sorts of junk. Like the commercial just mentioned, a walk on these beaches also took me back to memories from my childhood - memories of climbing through garbage at the dump. Plastic water bottles, soap containers, what I mistook for sea-foam but was actually millions of tiny pieces of Styrofoam, nylon nets, poly ropes, junk, junk, junk, littered the beach.
It soon dawned on me that if these beaches were so littered, even though there were plenty of people who routinely try to clean them up, how awful it must be on those countless shorelines without a “Friends of the Beach” committee.
            These experiences, a mountain of books, countless articles, website after website, and plenty of nights at my desk until 3 AM led me to start greenboatstuff.com and launch this blog. I am just an ordinary guy. I claim no particular brilliance and I have no fancy letters after my name. While I may lack “official” credentials, I do believe I possess enough common sense to make a case for why we should take better care of our rivers, lakes, and Ocean. It is my sincere hope that through this blog I can shine a light on the true state of the waterworld we boaters too often take for granted. 

March 05, 2008

Here We Go

Welcome to greenboatblog.


Through this site we hope to share information, ideas, and solutions with everyone  who wants to see our waterways returned to their healthy, natural state.


For too long now our rivers, lakes, and Ocean have been treated as the dumping ground for mankind's waste. 


Unless we change our destructive ways by embracing a common sense, sustainable approach to how we treat our aquatic treasures they may be lost forever.


Regardless of your politics, nationality, or economic status the facts cannot be denied.


Based on every sensible measure taken - from fishery stocks to mercury levels, the health of our coral reefs to the amount of plastic you find on any beach, there is no doubt that Mother Nature is in trouble.


Will the generation responsible for creating the golden age of toxic petro-chemicals, nuclear waste, and genetic engineering apply the same brilliance to cleaning up this mess?


Or will the Industrial and Technology Ages lead to the Age of Extinction?


Please join us as we look at such questions and what those of us who spend time on or near the water can do to leave our Blue Planet better off than we found it.


Eric Allen

Owner