Thursday, December 29, 2011

Much Like Gravity...


Renewable energy that's what's like gravity. I believe many people will think someone has pulled a fast one (Fox News) on them when they realize the current (pun intended) state of solar electricity technology is affordable and effective. So come on America! Plant the seeds of change and get amped!

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Blog That Got It Goin' On 

Lindsay's List

Miami Conservancy District Seeks Groundwater Guardians

(Originally posted on 1greenseed.tumblr.com/ June, 2011)

From Groundwater Guardian Green Site workshop flyer:

Groundwater is important in so many ways. Over 90 percent of our region (Dayton, Ohio) utilizes groundwater as a source of drinking water. Industry, agriculture, and recreation also rely on groundwater to help their businesses thrive.


Theresa McGeady with the Miami Conservancy District talks about the Groundwater Guardian Green Site program during a workshop June 9, 2011 at the Aullwood Audubon Center, Dayton, Ohio.


I paid a visit last June to an old stomping ground from my youth, the Aullwood Audubon Center. It could be said that I grew up there as I have many fond memories of field trips away from grade school and weekends attending events to learn about nature and exploring the outdoors. I remember the early ‘70’s when I would ride shotgun as my mother drove to the center’s parking lot with a trunk-load of newspapers to be tossed into a semi-trailer for recycling. 


The center was the location for a workshop June 9thhosted by the Miami Conservancy District (MCD) to promote the Groundwater Guardian Green Site program which honors those who practice good groundwater and environmental stewardship. The workshop attracted 27 people representing 19 local organizations and groups with an interest to learn about the program and how to participate. After opening remarks by MCD’s Michael Ekberg, manager, water resources monitoring and analysis, Theresa McGeady, program coordinator, delivered a presentation on the application process.


The Miami Conservancy District was awarded with a Groundwater Guardian Green Site designation in 2009 by the Groundwater Foundation based in Lincoln, Nebraska. The designation applies to more than 1,780 acres covering all dams and their respective flood protection features. How many dams are there? Glad you asked. The MCD is a system of five dry dams – Germantown, Englegwood, Lockington, Taylorsville and Huffman – and levees that protect the Miami Valley from flooding by the Great Miami River.

At present, in addition to MCD, there are five Groundwater Guardian Green Sites in our region. They include the city of Tipp City protecting prairies and wellfields; the Sports Complex in the city of Vandalia; the Historical Covered Bridge Park of Concord Township in Miami County; the MillerCoors Trenton Brewery (mmm, beer); and the Wright State University.


For more information about the MCD and the Groundwater Guardian Green Site program, contact Theresa McGeady by phone at (937) 223-1271 x3239 or email tmcgeadyATmiamiconservancyDOTorg.


Monday, December 26, 2011

Shh, Do You Smell Somthing

I believe fast food should be called fat food however there is one advantage to all of that artery clogging goo. Biodiesel!

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Fossil Fuel IS Expensive

What is the true price of oil? In the U.S. it's embedded into the tax code to pay for things like Medicare and Medicaid for health issues caused by pollution. To pay for a military to ensure uninterrupted access to oil. If all forms of energy production were given a true unsubsidized and fair playing field then the market would decide winners and losers. The oil industry would collapse overnight. When was the last time you heard a report about a military intervention to break up a cloudy day or to start the wind?

Monday, November 21, 2011

Everything Is Fine

Oh, I doubt this really happened. Because there has NEVER been any reported problem from fracking. EVER!

Monday, November 14, 2011



I have watched this many times. Each viewing leaves me blown away.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

I Own the Air


I have always known I am capable of great things and I have finally had the breakthrough of a lifetime. To increase my wealth and eventually become the richest person on the Earth, in an effort to clean dirty air, water and land I claim ownership of AIR!!!

My terms of use are simple and not very complex. If you want to breathe you must pay a reasonable fee of $3 per hour for as long as you want and for that hour you are welcome to inhale and exhale as many times as you can. Everyone on the planet, who is alive, and seeks access to air, call my people and they will draw up a contract. However, there is one person who I feel I just cannot do business with. Party Majority Leader in the U. S. House of Representatives Eric Cantor will have to find his own source of air which will be neigh impossible since I own it all.

If Monsanto wishes for pollen from its Genetically Modified Organisims to be carried aloft then they will have to contact my people and negotiate a fair price of say, $10 per grain of pollen. Otherwise they must move swiftly to eradicate all of their "Franken Crops" across the globe.

Polluters? You are not exempt from this rule. Cough up the cash or close your doors. It's that simple. Automobile manufacturers would pay a sliding scale price based on my mood for that day. For example the number of cars that rolled of the assembly line times 100 equals beaucoup bucks. Muwhaha, muwhaHA, MUWHAHA! Hopefully they will then find the impetus to switch fully their line of vehicles over to hydrogen or electric.