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Gil Reviews 'Solar Homesteading Simply,' a DIY e-book by LaMar Alexander

1313722815_7fed790117_mProviding self-sufficient and affordable shelter remains a major challenge for humanity worldwide. Decent and healthy living conditions are still required in many parts of the world especially due to migration to over-populated urban areas, man-made and natural disasters.

Many architects and non-government organizations have attempted to provide local communities in these areas with building skills using local building know-how and introducing low-cost construction methods such as sand bags, mud bricks and bamboo structures.

The ‘Simple Solar Homesteading’ e-book was conceived by the author who lives in rural North America where farms and infrastructures are far and in between.

The e-book provides a hands-on self-help guide for building an autonomous off-grid timber cabin including various sustainable features priced at affordable costs totaling some 4,000 USD. Most chapters provide information about the tools, time and costs required for each stage complemented with various useful energy and cost-saving tips such as use of salvaged building components.

Syria’s Environmentally-Friendly Olive Oil

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olive trees in pots

With its Mediterranean climate Syria is a natural home to the olive tree (read about the history of the olive tree here). It is ranked 5th in the world in production of olive oil, behind Spain, Italy, Greece and Tunisia, with a share of 4.6% of world production.

This makes the olive sector one of the most important areas of agricultural production in Syria. Average annual production of olive fruits is around 880 tons of which 15 – 18 per cent is used for table olives and pickling; the rest is used to extract oil. This gives approximately 175 thousand tons of olive oil each year.

The environmental damage caused by olive oil production has been known since antiquity when the Roman author Varro observed that where water flowed from the olive oil presses to the ground the earth became barren. This is one historical legacy that Syria is working to eliminate.

Kishorit Becomes Organic Utopia For the Mentally Disabled

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(Working on the organic goat farm at Kishorit, the largest organic goat farm in Israel that sells its “fair trade” milk to Harduf, the largest organic food supplier in Israel.)

People born with mental deficiencies, or those afflicted later in life, are usually handed the short end of the stick. Facilities to accommodate needs and to help one cope in society are improving, but they fail to give those in need the advantages that “normal” people just take for granted. But not at Kishorit, a new village built on the ruins of a decaying kibbutz, in Israel.

A new model for treating the mentally disabled based on the Israeli commune idea has emerged over the last decade from the ruins of a crumbling kibbutz.

Called Kishorit, the village in northern Israel has become a utopia for about 150 people with varying degrees of mental handicap, who have all found a home for life.

Some have autism, Asperger’s, or schizophrenia, but as much as they can, they are all steering their own careers, social time, family life, and destiny. They don’t focus on what disability they have, but on what they can do.

Members run and operate a TV station, and create films, they’ve built the largest organic goat farm in Israel, possibly the entire Middle East; they plant, tend to and eat food from their organic garden, and are developing lines of toys, which last year were sold to Baby Gap.

As Turkey's Liquid Assets Run Dry, Something's Afoul With Its Plan To Sell Water

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water-carrier-istanbul-turkey-photoGlobal warming and climate change, which we know is threatening the majestic cedars of Lebanon, is now having a serious effect on water resources in Turkey.

The situation is getting so bad that is really hard to believe that Turkey is the same country that only a short time ago offered to sell water to neighboring countries, especially to Israel.

Now it looks like this Aisa Minor republic may one day not have enough to satisfy it’s own increasing needs; not only for it’s industrial and agricultural sectors, but to it’s population as well.

Tourism ads once promoted Turkey as a country with a lush topography, full of fresh water lakes, and free flowing streams and rivers.

Many of its lakes, including ones like Lake Tuz (now almost a salt water marsh) and Lake Ulubat are either at dangerously low levels or are becoming polluted.

Activists in Lebanon Create Human Chain to Protect Iconic Cedars from Catastrophic Climate Change

350 Activists Cedars

Earlier this year, we saw members of the Lebanese group IndyACT trek out into the snowy wilderness to protect Lebanon’s snow from catastrophic climate change

This week IndyACT members, along with their friends in the Association for Forest Development and Conservation (AFDC) were back in action, putting the heat (so to speak) on decision-makers to protect another important natural resource.

Over 120 activists from both organizations gathered to draw a “human chain” in the Chouf Cedars Forest, Lebanon’s biggest cedar grove. 

Lebanon’s iconic cedar trees are seriously threatened by climate change.  Significant changes could turn Lebanon into an arid desert or replace forests with grassland, creating a new, inhospitable environment to which the cedars will not be able to adapt. 

Vauban, the German Suburb without Cars

vauban-germany-cars-kids-photo vauban car free

Do you ever get the feeling that every time you close your eyes, someone in Europe is doing something brilliant for the environment? Well, the residents of Vauban, Germany live in a suburb where most streets are off-limits to cars and the shops are mixed in with housing. The town’s 5,500 people are packed into a square mile, where they walk and cycle their way through day-to-day life.

The New York Times reports that as a result of this planning, children are everywhere. Vauban, on the French-Swiss-German border, enjoys solid links to public transportation. Residents who want to keep their cars buy parking spaces for $40,000 in one of two town lots, but 70 percent of Vaubanites don’t have their own.

Nitzana's An Ecological Village That Practices What It Preaches

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(Images: Solar concentrator – presents advanced technology for the concentration of solar radiation and various applications of its energy. The Solar Park’s Evaporative Cooling Tower – this exhibit shows how to cool a large space, based on the principles of natural ventilation, evaporative cooling and solar power.)

How does a rural educational community located in the middle of the desert become a model of environmental progress that attracts thousands of young people from Israel and around the world?

Nitzana has the answer.

The Nitzana Rural Educational Community, part of the Jewish Agency’s network of Youth Villages, is located deep in the Negev desert, on the border with Egypt. Driving to the village, it is unusual to see another car in a 50 mile radius. But Nitzana has transformed itself into an ecological village that practices what is teaches.

Israeli Sperm Count Drops A Whopping Forty Percent

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(Israeli hightech entrepeneur Yossi Vardi delivers a TED Talk about the dangers of blogging for men. An inconvenient truth called Local Warming.)

It could be something out of the worst nightmare of a Woody Allen flick like “Everything you wanted to know about sex but are afraid to ask.”

But there may be truth in some recent findings about a radical reduction in male sperm count by Dr. Ronit Haimov Kochman from Hadassah Hospital’s Mt. Scopus campus in Jerusalem.

The study was conducted between 2004 and 2008, and found that the amount of sperm in Israeli males who took part in the study has dropped by a whopping 40% over a decade earlier. Environmental factors, including cell phone use, are to blame.

ZenithSolar and 10 Israel-Related Cleantech Headlines, From Week of May 3, 2009

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During the week of May 3, 2009, Israel’s two biggest cleantech stories were about a BusinessWeek feature, which provided an overview of the sector and the attention it is drawing from the international investment community, and ZenithSolar’s technology, which Shimon Peres stated can [indirectly] “help fight terror.”

Other stories included B-Solar raising $3 million, Leviathan Energy introducing a new device to “boost wind power by up to 30%,” and Agri Projects new water conservation project to help communities in India. For more on these stories and the rest of this week’s ten headlines, check below.

A Leaky Faucet Can Save You Money

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faucetI noticed a drip coming out of the base of my kitchen sink faucet. It was only a few drops, so I procrastinated. Over time it grew more and more. I thought: “it’s just a few drops, it can’t be too bad.”

Finally I went out to the store to get a new faucet. When I saw the prices I blanched, and put it off some more. But finally, my conscience got to me and I bit the bullet and got the new faucet.

My next water bill was 1/3 what it had been, saving more in that month than what I had paid for the new faucet…

“Just a few drops” can add up a lot!

Oprah, What Are You Thinking With Your Free KFC Chicken Giveaway?

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kentucky-grilled-chickenEver since American talk show host Oprah Winfrey announced that her website www.oprah.com would be giving away coupons for free chicken dinners, KFC or Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurants around America have been literally inundated with people coming with coupons in hand for a free chicken dinner, including two side dishes and a farm biscuit.

The situation has gotten so bad that many stores either ran out of chicken or had to turn people away without honoring the coupon.

Why America’s most popular female talk show host would offer such a deal is beyond the comprehension of most sane people, including those who are against the killing of millions of innocent fowl to satisfy the hunger of these people. The following piece, taken from a website, called www.Kentuckyfriedcruelty.com  sums it up well: KFC suppliers cram birds into huge waste-filled factories, breed and drug them to grow so large that they can’t even walk, and often break their wings and legs.

At slaughter, the birds’ throats are slit and they are dropped into tanks of scalding-hot water — often while they are still conscious. It would be illegal for KFC to abuse dogs, cats, pigs, or cows in these ways.

In addition, it’s now becoming evident that many of these factory farms feed their chickens arsenic, mixed in with chicken feed, as both a growth stimulant as well as to kill parasites.

Yediot Acharonot: Beer Sheva is Rebranding Itself

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train-buildings-beersheva photoAs mentioned earlier this week on Green Prophet, Beer Sheva’s new mayor Rubik Danilovich has big plans for this city of 200,000 on the northern edge of Israel’s Negev desert.

He hopes to rebrand Beer Sheva through hiring a major architect to introduce common planning language, street furniture and greenery.
(Above: One of Beer Sheva’s trademark “train buildings,” photo from Yediot Acharonot).

The Israeli daily Yediot Acharonot ‘s Ilana Kuriel covered the ten-year development plan on Friday in Hebrew. Here is a summary of the piece in English.

“Presently, in some of Beer Sheva’s neighborhoods there aren’t even trash cans, the sidewalks are cracked, the roads are ridden with pot holes and the traffic circles are filled with undistinguished statues that uglify the landscape,” Kuriel wrote, before launching into a summary of the plan to improve the city.

Noi Positive Food is Tel Aviv's Newest Positively Organic Bistro

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noi organic cafe tel avivWhen it comes to organic and environmentally conscious dining, Tel Aviv definitely has a reputation for getting with the program.  The white city (which is currently celebrating its 100th year) already has a vegan burger joint, organic hummus, organic falafel, organic coffee shops, and an environmentally friendly food festival.

We realize that dining out has its negative environmental effects, but for those moderate environmentalists out there – or for non-environmentalists who want better tasting food and a little bit of a cleaner conscience – its good that these places are sprouting up.  A moderate alternative is better than no alternative at all.

Joining the list of eco-healthy eating in Tel Aviv is Noi Positive Food near Rabin Square.  Located on tree lined, beautiful Sderot Chen (Chen Boulevard), Noi offers a relaxed atmosphere for busy Tel Aviv urbanites to slow down, enjoy some slow food, and take advantage of the shade.

While the menu is not completely vegetarian, there are lots of veggie options and the meat items are free range.  Eggs are also free range and organic, and whipped up into delicious sounding herb omelettes and Balkan cheese shakshukas.  Noi’s ingredients are preservative-free, and they also insist on slow, light cooking which is healthier for eaters and healthier for the environment.

Israeli Activists Urge Pope To Help Clean Up Jordan River

baptism-pope-israel-water-jordan-river
(Thousands of Christian pilgrims get baptized in Israel’s Jordan River every year. Are they risking their lives by immersing in the polluted waters?)

It’s the highlight of any Christian’s trip to Israel – a dunk in the Jordan River, the way Jesus did it thousands of years ago. But with increased pollution in Israel’s waterways, Israeli activists are using the Pope’s visit to Israel tomorrow to urge action on cleaning up the Jordan.

It is Pope Benedict XVI’s first visit to Israel, and as many as 15,000 Catholic pilgrims are expected to descend on Israel to see the Pope in action. 

According to Christian belief, the Jordan River is the site of Jesus’s baptism; when pilgrims come to Israel (including my mother), they not only immerse themselves in the water, but take samples of it home for souvenirs.

But Zalul, Israel’s water  protection association, says that the water is extremely polluted. They said so in an open letter to the Pope this past Friday.

Is Israel on the Brink of a Suburban Sprawl-a-Thon?

tract-housingAs the Green Prophet’s resident suburbs commentator, I read with interest this week that part of newly elected Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s economic plan includes privatizing the Israel Lands Administration. The ILA was established in Israel’s first Basic Law (1960) as the keeper of the land of the Jewish people. To date, 93 percent of land in Israel is under the jurisdiction of the ILA, which historically has given this government body a tremendous say in how the land is developed.

Netanyahu heralded the change, saying it “will end the dependence on inefficient and burdensome bureaucratic mechanisms,” and also “reduce the price of land and, correspondingly, the prices of apartments, putting them within the price range of young couples and newly discharged soldiers.”

But the privatizing the ILA will likely trigger a suburbanization free-for-all, as has-been farmers rush to cash in on their lands that are suddenly worth a great deal of money.