Earth Day in Tofino, B.C.

 

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VISITING TOFINO?

Earth Day Celebration

Fibre Options and the Raincoast Cafe

Information about 2007 Earth Day Coming Soon...

Fiber Options and the RainCoast Cafe invite you to the 3rd annual Earth Day Pancake Breakfast!

On April 22cnd from 9AM-12PM the Tofino masses will gather together to scarf down stacks of hemp pancakes and gulp mugs of organic fair trade coffee to celebrate Earth Day—a day to rekindle commitments to building a cleaner world.

Earth Day is meant to broaden support for environmental programs and build community activism worldwide through events like the Tofino pancake breakfast and silent auction fundraiser hosted by two local businesses – The Raincoast Café and Fiber Options. Employees are donating their time for the second year in a row to making yummy and wholesome hemp pancakes, topped with all-natural maple syrup for the folks of Tofino. The silent auction will feature natural fibre clothing, body products and items from other local merchants. All funds generated through donations and the silent auction will go to the Raincoast Interpretive Centre – a non-profit centre aimed at educating both children and adults about the natural environment.

Although Earth Day is as much local as it is global, it actually began in the United States in 1977. Wisconsin senator at the time, Gaylord Nelson, was so sick of us politics ignoring the environment as an issue that he highlighted April 22 the day to celebrate the Earth. This same governor, bless his heart, brought bans on ddt and Agent Orange (245t) and introduced mining and car emission controls.

It wasn’t until 1990 that Canada and many other countries hopped on the Earth Day train, marking April 22 as an international day to pump-up environmental protection programs and simply celebrate the Earth. Now 141 nations are on board. In 1992 some of these Earth Day supporting countries pressed others to participate in the United Nations Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro. This summit addressed issues such as species extinction, desertification and climate change. Arguably the most important revelation to come out of the summit was the Kyoto protocol – an agreement to effectively lower carbon emissions nationally and internationally. This movement is one example of what Earth Day is meant to do.

According to the Earth Day Canada website, Earth Day is the most celebrated of all environmental events in the world. This is probably no surprise, considering it is Earth Day. Even so, the numbers are staggering. Over 6 million Canadians join the pack of 500 million people worldwide organizing events for the day to address local and global environmental issues.

Keep your ears open to participate in local events. And as Earth Day supporters say, the point of the day is not just to raise funds but to raise awareness that the Earth shouldn’t just be celebrated one day of the year but all days of the year.

Some ways to reduce your footprint on the Earth are:

Vote with dollars. What this means is if you want to see more organic food being produced as opposed to processed, over manufactured food, then buy organic (that is if you can’t grow it yourself.) Buy recycled toilet paper. If everyone in Canada replaced one roll of virgin toilet paper a year with recycled toilet paper over 42,000 trees could be saved.

Use a reusable coffee cup to reduce the landfill.

Recycle. One statistic shows that a recycled aluminium beer, pop or juice can has the ability to produce enough energy to run a laptop computer for four hours.

Check your car tires once a month to see if they are fully inflated.

Properly inflating tires improves mileage. Poorly inflated tires waste more than two million gallons of gas per day.

Reduce purchases of over packaged or disposable items. Also, reuse more of what you already have.

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Jillian Dickens is a freelance writer currently honing her skills with Fiber Options Clothing Company.

 

We welcome your questions and comments;   E-mail:  info  <at>  tofino-longbeach.com

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