Archive for the ‘Sites We Love’ Category
Eco Beautiful Weddings Magazine has just launched a blockbuster Spring Issue, and just in time for Earth Day. With green fashion offerings that range from eco fabulous mineral cosmetics from Youngblood to adornments from Juno, tomes from my bestie, Chronicle Books, and my new addiction, We Wood Watches, I’m figuring out what I lust for/must have vs. and what I can happily peruse and adore from a distance (trust me, it’s not easy!). As well, our new green Nokian baby, GreenGlamGo gets a green light on page 92.
Had I do do it all over again, I would take a page from Katie and Peters wedding (Page 82) the hippest, low fi Surfer/Farmer Santa Cruz wedding we’ve ever seen, beginning with a wedding parade and ending with a swim in the Pacific. Katie channels an ethereal Cali girl dressed in green and festooned in sunflowers, Peter, her dashing groom rocks the pinstriped shorts. If you’ve ever entertained the notion of skipping the big downtown shindig, this wedding offers a compelling argument for the great outdoors and hippie luxe style.
GreenGlamGo, our recent Nokia App launch, featured on page 92, offers up the back story on what went into the creation of our little green baby. It’s a mobile site, smart phone application, and social platform that aggregates the most creative, under the radar, green, handmade, sustainable designers and retailers, bringing them to a wider audience with curated offerings, engaging content, and the ability for eco-fashionistas to shop ethically and stylishly.
Eco-Beautiful Weddings mag has been paperless until recently, and now you can get your hands on a coveted edition of it here (don’t let it out of your sight!).
Credits:
Photography courtesy of Eco Beautiful Weddings Magazine.
Get the App! GreenGlamGo can be downloaded to your Nokia phone by visiting the Ovi Store
Follow: Facebook: GreenGlamGo
Twitter: @GreenGlamGo
Ovi Daily App Review
Happy Holidays from Puerto Rico! Thanking Destination I Do Magazine, and La Concha Resort, I’m enjoying a glorious view of waves crashing on the beach Christmas morning, with a cup of strong local coffee, and thinking of those in a different part of the ocean wondering how they are spending Christmas morning. I hope they had a nice, hot breakfast, good coffee and laughter all around. If I could airlift freshly baked croissants, Eggs Benedict, mimosas, and Arabica espresso, I certainly would! I hope they are taking the morning to connect with each other and aren’t missing the families they left behind too much. Whatever they are doing, that one thing is clear: they are there for a reason. Operation No Compromise is a showdown in the Southern Ocean that could affect the way governments and private industries treat the rightful inhabitants of those seas for years to come.
The commitment of the 88 members of the Steve Irwin Sea Shepherd crew is unassailable. They are committed, brave, courageous, and most likely, very cold! If you still haven’t made up your mind what to get your loved one for Christmas, are looking for a non-profit to love, or the couple who has everything and wants to give the gift of change (instead more gifts you don’t need), here’s a great place to make that happen: Donate now.
Merry Christmas and happy holidays to every heroic member of Neptune’s Navy, you inspire us every day.
Dispatch Captain Paul Watson
Excerpted from Seashepherd.org
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
At length did cross an Albatross,
Thorough the fog it came;
The ship drove fast, loud roared the blast
And southward aye we fled.
And now there came both mist and snow,
And it grew wondrous cold:
And ice, mast-high, came floating by,
As green as emerald.
-Samuel Taylor Coleridge
It is Christmas Day down here in the Southern Ocean, Christmas Eve in North America and Europe. This is the seventh holiday season that I have spent here at the bottom of our beautiful planet in the Southern Ocean. Christmas for me is becoming more and more associated with icebergs and penguins rather than reindeer and Christmas trees.
We have three ships scattered across this blue grey vastness called the Southern Ocean and they are now actively searching for the arrival of the Japanese fleet, anticipated within the next few days. It is an ocean of immense size, our search area is profoundly expansive, and the whaling fleet is not operating in their usually predictable pattern. They could easily be to the east of us, or they could be to the west. The job of finding them is never easy and especially this year when they have compromised their so-called scientific survey area by announcing they may kill whales anywhere in the Southern Ocean instead of their designated survey zones.
What we certainly do know is that this Christmas no whales were killed and that is a very encouraging start to our search. Gauging their speed and their departure time, we estimate it will be another four to five days before they are in any position to kill whales.
Captain Paul Watson and crew aboard the Steve Irwin for the 2010-11 Antarctic Whale Defense Campaign, Operation No Compromise.
It is also very encouraging that we have 88 crew from 22 nations that have chosen to be on a ship in rough, cold waters, in a remote and at times deadly sea, searching for whalers instead of enjoying a Christmas dinner with friends and family, warm and secure on land. It is these passionate volunteers that make Sea Shepherd an effective organization. We are what we are and we do what we do because of their passion, their dedication, and their commitment.
Our ship crews, our onshore support team, and our supporters, are an inspiring trilogy of passion for the whales, and it is inspiring to see and benefit from all of their efforts by people coming from all over the world joining together for this noble endeavor.
The Japanese whalers are a stubborn bunch and although massively in debt, the Japanese government continues to subsidize their illegal operations in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary. It is always amusing to see so-called capitalist countries practice corporate communism by granting welfare to losing enterprises.
Will this be their last year? I certainly hope so but if it is not, we must be prepared to return again next year and the year after that if necessary. Our resolve to defend the whales must endure over their resolve to kill them.
Today, the ship is rolling and bucking violently under assault by heavy winds from the west. The air is bitingly cold and the salt spray has been whipping our faces mercilessly. As unpleasant as that can be, it is also exhilarating to be down in these harsh but awesomely immense seas with the swells rolling the ship beneath our feet. The skies are a bleak grey but the accompanying albatrosses with their impressive wingspans glide back and forth before us, as if to herald our progress southward.
The crews of the three ships represent a diversity of concerned people from around the world. On board the Gojira we have a member of the Victorian Legislative Council, Nathan Murphy, a sitting member for the state’s Labor Party. The Gojira crew also includes electrician Kevin McQuinty who is the brother of former Western Australia’s Attorney General Jim McQuinty. The rest of the Gojira’s crew, commanded by Locky MacLean from France, are nine men and two women from the United States, Australia, Canada, France, and Great Britain. There are forty crewmembers on the Steve Irwin and the balance of the “Crazy 88” are onboard the Bob Barker under the command of Captain Alex Cornelissen of the Netherlands. Alex is also Sea Shepherd’s Galapagos Director.
All three ships have incredible crews combining experience, skills, abilities, and most importantly, a deep passion for defending the whales of the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary. We have crewmembers from North and South America, Asia, Europe, Africa, and Australia. All six continents are represented as we work to defend the ecological integrity of the seventh continent of Antarctica.
I’m proud of every single one of my crewmembers and I am also proud of the fact that these 88 passionate people are backed by hundreds of equally passionate onshore volunteers and thousands of supporting members. The ships cannot operate without crew, the crew cannot operate without onshore support, and the onshore supporters cannot operate without a solid support base. It is this trilogy of our combined ship crew, onshore crew, and supporters that makes what we do possible.
Now on Christmas Day of 2010, we are in the Southern Ocean once again, stronger and better organized than ever before and with a single goal – to stop the slaughter of the whales.
I can’t think of a better place to be on Christmas Day than where we are right now. I also can’t think of a greater gift to thank all of our supporters with than the lives of the whales that we have already saved and those that are to come. I am confident that this will be a very dramatic but very successful season for Sea Shepherd Conservation Society.
On behalf of my crews on the Steve Irwin, Bob Barker, and Gojira – Merry Christmas and thank you for supporting your ships at sea!
Credits:
Dispatch from Captain Paul Watson, Barbara Veiga photo, and No Compromise logo all excerpted from Seashepherd.org website.











