Posts Tagged ‘green crafts’

Green Kid Crafts: Help it Grow, and Grow and Grow!

Friday, August 10th, 2012


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Many of you met our Climate Mama Penny Bauder, Founder of Green Kid Crafts a few months ago. Penny is amazing; an example of a mom

Photo used with permission: GKC Founder

being there for her kids, running a business and raising attention to climate change, all at the same time. (Makes us tired just watching!) Help us support Penny and the wonderful company she has founded, Green Kid Crafts, which as been selected by Green America as one of the finalists in the Green America People and Planet Awards. Join us and vote for Green Kid Crafts today. If you let Penny know you could even win a Green Kid Craft box.

I took a Green Craft Kid box with me on vacation this summer. I joined my brother and his family and we spent several weeks in the wilds of western Canada. We had kids of varying ages to entertain. Not a problem on sunny days, when we stay outside, playing in the sand and water

Photo used with Permission

all day, but on stormy days, living in tight quarters with 12 people, we were constantly looking for games, new crafts and new recipes to try! Internet access is spotty and we try to stay away, as best we can, from electronic toys.

I was curious how the Green Kid Crafts would go over with our kids, who ranged in age from 8-12. While the 12 year old won’t admit it, one of the crafts (the scrapbook) kept her and several of her cousins entertained for almost an hour and my 8 year old nephew loved the pirate project. From the packaging down to each of the inputs that goes into each craft, Penny has thought how best to remain mindful of our planet, and help our children play, learn and explore at the same time. Our kids decided the crafts we had would be “best enjoyed” by kids 6-10, but we found the older ones seemed to enjoy helping the younger ones just as much as the younger ones loved creating the projects with their older cousins! Check out the site.

As we acknowledge the realities of our changing climate and look to adapt to these changes, letting our children learn and play, but in a conscious way that shows them they can have fun and be mindful at the same time is extremely important. Helping our kids learn to utilize, create and enjoy items they find around them, make use of recycled materials, and build and imagine things that last and that they can use and come back to again and again, is critical for our future.

Yours,

Climate Mama

10 Simple Tips: Teaching your Child to be Eco-Conscious

Monday, May 14th, 2012


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Guest Post: Penny Bauder, mom of two and owner of the popular, earth-friendly craft subscription service Green Kid Crafts shares some tips with us on raising eco-conscious children.

We know that children learn by example, yet sometimes setting a good example can be difficult for parents. But if you start early enough and follow as many of the ten tips given below as you can, you will teach your child to be more eco-conscious. Teaching environmental responsibility from an early age makes it a lot easier for older children to be more earth-friendly.

You can help your child learn to be eco-conscious in the following ways:

1. Unplug your kid and get them outside. People protect what they know from first-hand experience, and so good environmental practices sink in if a child appreciates what they are protecting. This can be as simple as playing in the yard or taking them on a nature walk. Let them enjoy getting dirty. A love of the outdoors and a dirty kid go hand and hand. As a bonus, a love of nature often brings a respite and a safe haven from an increasingly busy world.

2. Have fun recycling by showing your child how to separate trash. They can tell the difference between paper, metal, glass, and plastic at an early age – it’s like a “memory” game. Explain that there is no “away,” as in “throw it away.”

3. Teach your young child to save energy by turning off the lights when leaving the room or the house by having fun with this money-saving behavior. You can easily make a game out of it – I’ll often “forget” to turn off the lights when I leave a room, so she can feel proud of herself for reminding me. You can also show them that when the blinds or drapes are open, there’s usually enough sunlight to illuminate the room during the day.

4. When grocery shopping, use reusable totes and allow your child to decorate and/or pick out their own bags. My daughter fell in love with a Hello Kitty reusable tote and now we never go to the grocery store without it – she’ll remind me to pack it if I forget!

5. Teach your child that it is important to craft with natural materials and avoid plastics and craft foams, which are costly to produce, laden with chemicals, and not biodegradable. If you are pressed for time and creativity, join Green Kid Crafts and get a box of earth-friendly craft projects delivered each month.

6. For outings, try to carpool with other parents or friends. Tell your child how important it is to conserve fuel by sharing trips when more than one person is going to the same place. If possible, walk or bike to get your errands done.

7. Teach your child that it’s good to shut the water off when brushing their teeth. Not only will you be teaching them good oral hygiene, you’ll be modeling good water conservation habits, too.

8. Instead of buying your child the newest toy, help them learn how to find new uses for their old toys or teach them the value of giving to others by donating toys. By helping your toddler figure out what to do with their old toys, you’re teaching them not only about charity but about recycling as well.

9. Help your child understand where their food comes from. Gardening is the best, because your child can participate in growing food for your family. Let your child help prepare the food you eat, and don’t worry, the mess is well worth the benefit. Describe where meat and dairy products come from and the primary contents of processed foods. Consider a blessing of gratitude before meals for those who grew, harvested, transported, and prepared the food.

10. Model eco-conscious behavior. This is probably the most important way to raise a child that respects the earth. If kids see you being lazy and cutting corners, they will understand that it’s okay for them to do the same. A glass jar once made it into the trash at our house – we are definitely not perfect- and my daughter made my heart swell with pride when she fished it out of the trash and chided us for not putting it where it belonged.

Teaching your child to be more eco-conscious can be really simple, and if it’s done the right way, it can even be fun and save you money. Start instilling good habits in your children early on, and those habits will stay with them for life, giving them a sense of pride and purpose. The health of the planet is in the next generation’s hands!

P.S. Look for Penny’s Climate Mama Profile on our website later this month!


Welcome to Climate Mama

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You are a mother, a father, a grandparent, an uncle, an aunt, a teacher or a child at heart. When you hear the Native American saying, “We don’t inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children”, it makes you stop for a moment and think. You love nature, travel, adventure and believing in a world that is special and unique. Climate change and global warming are words that alarm you, that often seem too big to get your arms around. You care about what’s happening to the world and notice small changes in your own life that seem to point in the direction of a threatened environment. But you wonder if these changes are real, and if they are you can’t imagine what you can do to help change what is happening.

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Climate Mamas and Papas

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Climate Change so often seems too big to get our hands around. We wonder where we can start and how we can actually make a difference. Each one of us has a different path that we will follow. Some of us cut a wider swath than others, but each of us has a role to play. We would like to introduce you to some amazing individuals, Climate Mamas and Papas who are making a difference, who are, through their daily lives, affecting the lives of all of us. They inspire us, empower us, and challenge us to reach for the stars, to strive to do the best we can to help change the crash course we are currently on with our environment. Lets meet some of these amazing people and find out what inspires them. Meet our featured Climate Mama, Desiree Di Mauro today!

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The Climate Reality Project is one of the world’s leading organizations dedicated to mobilizing action around climate change. With a global movement that is more than 2 million strong and a grassroots network of trained Climate Leaders, Climate Reality is "spreading the truth and unleashing the cultural momentum to solve the climate crisis."

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