Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Julia Lissau's Story

I am greatly concerned about the global warming crisis and try to do what I can to minimize my footprint on the planet in hopes that there will be some quality to the future of those generations who will follow. We owe our earth for the gift of being able to live here and should act accordingly to protect it – and that means being assertive about climate change. A few personal examples…

I cycle as much as possible for shopping, visiting and meetings – even in winter (as long as roads are not icy and the temperatures are not less than -1 Celsius). I never idle if I do have to drive, and ask vehicle idlers to turn engines off and tell them why. At home, water use is around 4.5 cubic meters every 3 months for 2 of us, except for 3 - 4 summer food garden months. It is not hard to do. All shower and dish water is saved and used to flush the toilet. Except in the heat of summer we follow the “if it’s yellow let it mellow; if it’s brown flush it down” rule as it seems so gluttonous to waste high quality drinking water to flush a toilet. Vernon’s grey water is only re-used once but in Europe they can re-use treated water at least 8 times before returning clean water to the river it came from. We, here, have a lot of rethinking to do on resource waste. An ice cream pail under each tap saves hand washing and veggie washing water for re-use as well. We do only one full laundry load a week using a water efficient machine and use a laundry line for drying all year round. We conserve much of our roof rain water for garden use and when the dry months hit, have a trickle system and heavy mulching to minimize water use for our large, organic, high yield food garden. I scrounge all over town for 60+ bags of clean leaves each year for the mulch. We live minimally, purchasing second hand as much as possible, or not buying if it is a ‘want’ and not a ‘need’. We recycle so much that I could put out garbage once a month and still not fill a shopping bag! Home is small so there’s no need to furnish extra rooms (what a money saver!) and there’s not a lot of time needed for cleaning! (I’d rather read a book!) Having lived and worked in a third world country, I know how little a person can live with and still be happy and healthy.

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Lizanne Chicanot's Story

My first great experience on a bike was when I was in grade 6. My mom signed me up for a bike camp and I got hooked. Instead of singing camp tunes and staying in log cabins, we got to go on a week long bike trip through the Ottawa Valley. After that I just thought of myself as a biker.

When I was in high school in Ottawa I used to commute all year long across town to school. The snow just made it more exciting! My first teaching job was in the Northwest Territories where I would occasionally ride across a little arm of Great Slave Lake on my mountain bike. Now I live in Beautiful BC and as much as possible (OK I've turned into a bit of a fair weather cyclist!) I cycle to work along the Galloping Goose/Lochside trail (probably the best commute to work in the world!).

I'm excited to join up with Mary and crew for a portion of the Wheels for Change trip. I'll start in Hope which kind of has a poetic ring to it.... especially given the climate change situation.... and it's also pretty flat terrain after that which I won't complain about! I'm really looking forward to the bike ride and to meeting all the other cycling folks who are also dedicated to raising awareness of climate change!

Lizanne Chicanot
Vice Principal at Royal Oak Middle School
Victoria, BC