On this site I want to share my knowledge and experiences about the myriad of ways on can protect the environment, tackle global warming and "green your wallet"...and so much more.
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TWO THUMBS WAY UP!
Sweden and Austria stopped using coal
to produce electricity.
👍😎😃😊👍😎😃😊👍😎😃😊👍😎😃😊👍😎😃😊
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More Trees Please Often when residents are concerned or upset about plans to cut down mature trees, they are reassured NOT to worry because all the trees will be replaced. Basically, they’re trying to convince us that the benefits provided by newly planted saplings or young trees is equivalent to the ecological benefits of an established mature wood lot. But, I beg to differ- Newly planted trees will NOT provide much needed habitats for birds, like cardinals and mammals, like chipmunks, raccoons, and squirrels. Newly planted trees will NOT provide food sources for birds, like blue jays, pollinators like butterflies, and mammals like chipmunks. Newly planted trees do NOT have a massive network of roots which prevent light soil from being blown or washed away, leaving behind a barren wasteland. As well, roots that grow far and wide filter out pollutants and mitigate the impacts of flood...
You can contact me at 705-309-7452 Aesop's Fables (5-9 year olds) A great number of teachers and TL's are buying Aesop’s Fables for their classrooms andthe school. Aesop's fables have been specifically rewritten to address the variety of reading levels found in primary classrooms. This is an ideal book to be used for the whole class from grade 1 to grade 3. The book is a great buy as it contains 20 fables with lessons that resonate with decision making when it comes to appropriate behaviour. Perhaps one of the most quoted fables by parents and teachers is the one from the Grasshopper and the Ants - f irst, you work and then you play. A Wish for Haidan (7-9 year olds) This fairy young boy who is granted 3 wishes on one condition. Trying to meet this condition brings astonishing changes to his environment and his life. This book will inspire young readers to become more engaged i...
Canadian Carbon Tax info from Peter Bursztyn from Barrie, Ontario Here’s how the carbon tax worked for us in 2023. On home heating, hot water and cooking (all gas) the carbon charge was $200.45. Fuel for our car is harder to work out because we travelled in USA and Quebec. Assume our driving (11,179km) was in Ontario and fuel bought here. Our average consumption was 5.56litres per 100km, so we burned 621.5 litres of diesel over the year. The 2023 carbon charge on that was $108.03. (If our car had used gasoline, the carbon charge would have been less per litre [$0.143/litre instead of $0.174/litre], but a gasoline-powered vehicle would have used more fuel.) Adding the two together, we paid $308.48. There is a carbon charge embedded in many goods representing fossil fuel used to make and transport these and the tax paid by a retailer to heat their premises. I have no way to calculate these, but this would be a much smaller number than what we paid directly. I will s...
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