Victoria Scanlan Stefanakos is a wife and mother, a homesteader, a writer. When she’s not gardening or cooking or picking up wooden toys, she writes stories for national magazines and Web sites about living simply, naturally and well. You can read several of late in Martha Stewart Living and Real Simple.
So Victoria and her family to live lightly and pitch in: growing, making, putting by, selling and sustaining themselves with whatever they can on seven rugged acres. You can follow her chronicle of their adventure at Project Homestead
Lauren Mangion is a writer, engaged citizen, and an eco-coach from Calgary, Canada. Lauren’s personal life and work are intimately intertwined, both being experiments in more sustainable, lower-footprint urban living.
Through Conscious Home, an eco-coaching service, Lauren educates and inspires her fellow Calgarians with tools and resources toward reducing the individual ecological footprint.
Denise founded, designed and manages a national childbirth education program and movement called BornClear — empowering scores of women and couples. Preparing them for the ‘new addition.’ Her work has been reviewed in The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Vogue and NBC's Today Show to name a few. Her clients include: Google, Ogilvy&Mather, Conde Nast, Credit Suisse, Citibank, BBC, Tishman Speyers.
Her first book will be out in early 2009 with Wiley Publishing.
Latham is the founder of a boutique holistic lifestyle practice called- Tender Shoots Wellness. Specializing in maternal and child wellness, Latham served as Program coordinator for the Healthy Moms-Healthy Babies project for the B-Healthy organization. She has been featured on Fox 5 news as an expert on organic foods and kid’s health. She is the co-founder of Panela Productions, a company that educates parents and children about food, through cooking classes, and events.
Latham teaches plant-based culinary classes at Whole Foods Market and Natural Kitchen Cooking School, where she is a part of the guest faculty, and for a host of private clients. She gives lectures on plant based nutrition at Laughing Lotus Yoga Center, North American Vegetarian Society's Summer Fest, and Excellence Charter School, to name a few.
She currently teaches prenatal yoga classes at Om Factory, Golden Bridge Yoga, and Yoga Sutra.
Latham contributes to Working Mother Magazine, Naturally Savvy, and Yoga Mom Magazine.
A freelance writer specializing in environmental and health topics, Linda recently was part of a core team of writers who developed content for GreenYour, a website devoted to greener living.
She wrote an environmental column for five years for Good Housekeeping magazine called Green Watch. You can find her articles in Plenty Magazine’s online newsletter, Fit Pregnancy, Good Housekeeping, Arthritis Today, Profiles (Continental Airline’s in-flight magazine), and Microsoft’s Encarta.
She served on her town’s environmental commission for 15 years and remains an active volunteer. Her personal essay column for the local newspaper offers her take on the natural world and on environmental topics in her neck of the woods.
Lynn Fantom’s commitment to eco-travel is in direct proportion to her passion for Acadia National Park in Maine, where she hikes, climbs, bikes, and kayaks with her daughter Luisa. Lynn is publisher of OUR ACADIA. a Web site devoted to exploring, eating, and relaxing on Mount Desert Island.
Lynn posts on www.mdislander.com range from where to find great lobster rolls to what to do with kids on rainy days.
When not in Maine, Lynn lives in New York City, where she is an executive in the media industry. In 2008 her company was named one of the Best Places to Work in New York City in Crain’s New York Business.
Loretta White is a writer, educator and scholar who gained huge diversity of experience within varied industries; energy, government, high tech and more. The last fifteen years she brokered deals with the top multinational companies globally, her Rainmaker skills are unsurpassed and she remains an authority on BD, BI, sustainability and the Global Marketplace.
Frugality was the voice of her elders who endured wars, rationing and Depression, raised to respect, love and to co-exist with nature through sustainability, self reliance, need and RRR practices. Loretta’s juxtaposition of ideas, deep love for the planet and her Yankee sensibilities are the foundation of a lifestyle that is in partnership with nature. Loretta indulges her passions for renewable energy, organics and being green on her 17.5 acre farm in central Massachusetts.
Recently Ms. White has lead an Assoc. of Caregivers providing support to those caring for parents, disabled, and others.
Loretta is invested in the community of our species and our planet and her diverse background in technology and green living gives her a unique perspective on how to live with nature and with our own gifts of technology.
Ms. White’s work has been published by Corporations, magazines, readers digest and many others.
Heather O'Neill is the founder of Eco to the People, a green living blog.
Before founding Eco to the People, Heather O’Neill wore so many hats in the field of journalism that even the Queen Mother would envy her collection. She has worked as the managing editor of a beauty trade magazine; as a copy editor for an online tech magazine; as the associate editor of a city magazine and as a newspaper reporter and columnist, and as the senior editor at the popular online newsletter ecofabulous.
Her work has appeared in many publications, including Parenting, Alternative Medicine, Natural Solutions, Marin Magazine, Greenwich Magazine and HOME.
Heather earned a Master of Fine Arts in creative writing from California College of the Arts. She lives and works in San Francisco.
Marie Oser is a best-selling author, columnist, and host/producer of VEG TV. A vegan lifestyle expert, and environmental advocate with a focus on nutrition and its role in disease prevention, Oser specializes in creating original gourmet recipes with a solid nutritional bottom line.
Many prominent medical and nutrition professionals endorse her work, including Dr. Colin Campbell, Professor Emeritus, Cornell University and principal researcher of the groundbreaking CHINA STUDY, and Neal Barnard, M.D. founder and president of Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine in Washington, DC.
Marie is president of VEGTV, Inc., a video production company producing content for TV and new media. VEGTV streams hundreds of lifestyle videos to more than 1,000 sites globally. In her role as Director of Product Development at Smart Planet Kitchen, she has created, Marie Oser’s Lean & Green, a new line of vegan and Fair Trade Certified products. Marie has appeared on CNN, ABC, National Public Radio, QVC, WUSA, WNBC, KCAL, KOVR, Home & Garden Television (HGTV), FINE LIVING, TECH TV, and Discovery Channel.
Vegetarian since 1971; vegan since 1990, Marie left a career in TV advertising to pursue her interest in food, health, and nutrition. Born and raised in Philadelphia, PA, she studied psychology at St. Joseph’s University. Marie is a gourmet cook and organic gardener living in California, writing her 5th book and hiking every day with Travis, her Yellow Lab companion.
Ted is always looking for ways to minimize his ecological footprint. Professionally, Ted is working to gain the skills necessary to turn his passion for sustainable development into action, as an entrepreneur or financing sustainable businesses.
Ted studied economics and international business at Saint Louis University’s campus in Madrid, where he graduated Magna Cum Laude and was honored as the Distinguished Student in International Business for his class. As the founder and president of the SLU Madrid Business Club, Ted focused the club’s activities on sustainability.
While working for commercial real estate multi-national Jones Lang LaSalle’s Madrid office, Ted strove to implement sustainable practices both within the firm and for its clients. He proposed and designed an Environmental Sustainability Action Plan for JLL Spain. Green Building and Environmentally Sustainable Development remain a passion for Ted: he believes that the intersection of sustainable infrastructure and sustainable attitude is where we’ll find a sustainable society.
Ted currently works for a private equity firm in Madrid, learning skills that he hopes to apply to finance Environmentally Sustainable Development in the United States and around the world.
By now, you’ve probably seen the grim statistics about water bottles. The issue seems to be getting more and more media coverage lately. In case you haven’t heard the case against bottled water, here’s a brief summary:
Pollution: 38 billion plastic water bottles are thrown out each year, contributing to a frightening “plastic stew” in the Pacific Ocean twice the size of Texas.
Health: Bottled water is not necessarily more “pure” and “healthful” than tap water, despite what water packaging may have us believe. Plastic bottles leach harmful chemicals such as PET and BPA (see below), and 40% of bottled water is merely filtered tap water anyway.
Value: Even though 90% of tap water in the United States is proven to be as clean or cleaner than bottled water, manufacturers charge (and we pay) 1,900 times what it costs them to make their product.
Yikes. So, you’re ready to move on to a convenient, stylish, eco-friendly, and economical reusable water bottle. But with many brands and varieties on the market, and so much recent debate about the pros and cons of each, how will you choose which bottle to go with?
Here’s the latest on the healthy water bottle debate, and the bottom line on the best bottle options:
Brief Primer on BPA
The crux of the issue today is a chemical called bisphenol-A, or BPA. According to dozens of independent, peer-reviewed studies, BPA mimics the hormone estrogen in the human body, leading to numerous problems in developing children as well as fully-grown adults.
BPA has been linked to prostate and breast cancer, infertility, obesity, diabetes, ADHD, and practically everything in between. BPA can be found in (among other things) plastic baby bottles, canned food linings, aluminum beverage cans, and, as it turns out, water bottles. A recent study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found BPA in 9 out of every 10 Americans.
Despite the wealth of condemning evidence, however, and the fact that many countries have already banned the use of BPA, the FDA has yet to acknowledge the problem—to the great dismay of health experts across the country. Several states have already enacted legislation to outlaw BPA in products designed for children and babies.
Your Best Bets: Recommended Bottles
Since any reusable water bottle will provide the environmental and financial benefits that disposable plastic bottles do not, the choice of the best bottle primarily comes down to health, durability, and style.
After Nalgene’s BPA scandal in early 2008, water bottle lovers made a big push for aluminum and stainless steel bottles. One company in particular, SIGG, seemed to rise to prominence for selling a highly functional, durable, and fashionable product that was environmentally friendly and (purportedly) “chemical-free.” Recently, however, SIGG confessed that the liners of their aluminum bottles made pre-August 2008 do contain traces of BPA.
While there may be some traces, keep in mind that both of these brands of bottles leech significantly less BPA than disposable plastic water bottles and are a much safer choice.
So put all worries aside, below are a few of the best, BPA-free choices on the market today. Maybe the bottles are a little on the pricey side, but with all the scandal lately, many health-conscious consumers think the extra cost just might be worth it.
And, “pricey” is relative when it comes to reusable water bottles, since the $10-$25 spent on a bottle will only buy you a few weeks worth of disposable bottles of water.
Visit the sites, browse the products, and choose for yourself from these high-quality options:
Klean Kanteen
Klean Kanteen’s trick: the bottles are made of stainless steel, not aluminum, so they don’t require any kind of inner liner. Therefore, the bottles are completely free of BPA and other toxins. Kleen Kanteen bottles are very well reviewed. They have a large selection of cool-looking styles, and the smart, convenient design promises to be durable.
Camelbak
Camelbak also sells stainless steel bottles. For those of you who still love plastic bottles or worry about a stainless steel aftertaste, Camelbak also sells a guaranteed BPA-free plastic bottle. Camelbak was the first major water bottle company to offer a completely BPA-free hard plastic bottle.
Earthlust
Earthlust has very trendy and unique stainless steel bottles. Their plastic caps are guaranteed BPA-free, and their awesome designs are sure to make a statement.
Born Free
Baby bottles are particularly a problem since babies are so susceptible to chemicals. Born Free offers a nice selection of all-natural glass and plastic baby bottles free of any harmful chemicals for your child.
Another great reusable water bottle is Kor One. It’s pricey, but a great conversation starter. Check out the video if you’re interested in how it was created. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UkxlM5LmM_o
Jake Pedersen
September 21, 2009 8am EDT
Thank you! There is so much hype and marketing out there for the different bottles I didn’t know what to listen to anymore.
Tureya Yoga Online ( ) is probably one of the most comprehensive free online video, audio, and article databases the reviewer has found. While there are other paid services like My Yoga Online which have a wide variety of teachers and lessons, Tureya Y…
Stay current on easy ways to parent green, keep children entertained and active, plus ideas on how to raise your children in a healthier environment. Get parenting advice and exchange stories.
Another great reusable water bottle is Kor One. It’s pricey, but a great conversation starter. Check out the video if you’re interested in how it was created.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UkxlM5LmM_o
Thank you! There is so much hype and marketing out there for the different bottles I didn’t know what to listen to anymore.
san diego yoga classes…
Tureya Yoga Online ( ) is probably one of the most comprehensive free online video, audio, and article databases the reviewer has found. While there are other paid services like My Yoga Online which have a wide variety of teachers and lessons, Tureya Y…