Monday, July 16, 2007
Ian Weniger 's Story
I don't have a photo to upload until I load my camera with fresh batteries, but I'd rather spend the money on antlers for my commuter bike. My road bike is in the shop, so I can't rely on its readiness. I'll try to bring my family along (wife and two boys) from Trout Lake to Moody Park.
I must congratulate you for picking the Central Valley ride, since the start and end points are accessible by Skytrain. Since bikes are permitted on the train all weekend, riders need not travel more than a couple of kilometres from Moody Park to one of two stations in downtown New Westminster to get home. This works for me very well because my family will be able to take the train back home instead of relying on a car ride to shlep the bikes home... I think of the silliness of driving our family car from Vancouver to New West at 5 am, then coming home, preparing the bikes and then riding out to New West.
Thanks for being here!
--
Ian Weniger
Vancouver, BC Canada
Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Marguerite Laliberte's Story
My story is a short one: my name is Marguerite - Cree/Metis culture and I have always had concerns about the welfare of "Mother Earth". I bike as much as possible, eat organic, recycle and try to live as minimal as possible. I am in good physical shape, look forward to the tour and meeting like minded people.
Thank you,
Marguerite
Tuesday, June 19, 2007
Nonie Jackson's Story
From a very young age, I was very passionate about nature. My earliest and happiest recollections were playing outside, in a garden, wood or field, investigating anything that had life--bugs, birds, flowers and trees. I would walk or cycle off for miles into the countryside searching for birds nests etc. and would challenge myself to climb up to the highest branch of a tree and hang upside down!!
After training as an elementary teacher in England, my (then) husband and I bought a 130 acre farm in Hereford England, and built up to 90 pedigree Guernsey cows which we milked---and I built up my flock of sheep, from a few baby pet lambs, to a flock of 200 ewes, over 15 years. I must say, that I was a dab hand at being a sheep midwife!! Our three children were fortunate to have the opportunity to grow up in such a beautiful environment, and to be shown the values and lifestyle of a family run farm. We were virtually self-sufficient, and produced most of our own food, grown organically on the farm. During my farming days i was often torn and dismayed by the impact that the chemical corporations were having, and changing many of the old traditional organic ways of farming. Chemical sprays, pesticides and herbicides, polluting the countryside and poisoning the rivers ,and drugs and hormones administered to cows, etc.
We sold our farm in 1988 and emmigrated to Vernon. B.C. where we bought an old established orchard, which we decided to run as certified organic. After five years of helping to run the orchard and building a new house, my husband and I separated. Since then I have become very involved in the local community, volunteering at my local school, the St John Ambulance Therapy Dog programme, Komasket Music Festival, Children's summer camps and now the Wheels for Change campaign.
I feel that it is imperative for us all to wake up and become accountable for our actions and effects upon global warming. We all need to think about the choices we make--to grow our own food organically or support the local farmers markets and buy locally!!!
AND TO REFUSE, REDUCE AND REUSE !!!
As my mentor David Suzuki says---
Monday, June 18, 2007
Steve Loo's Story
How did you become involved in environmentalism and climate change? I spent much of my childhood not really understanding my role within community and environment. I had my share of experiences involving 20 minute showers, driving and idling a gas-guzzling car, etc. My first great leap into environmentalism (beyond collecting cans and bottles for recycling) happened while in
At one point, I hiked through part of the desert near
For example, now I am:
1. Using my bike as my main form of transportation including winter time (I still drive once a week through carsharing)
2. Using less paper (in fact, I haven't bought any new paper in 3 years);
3. Having not just shorter showers but also having staggered and fewer showers; recently we bought a dual flush toilet. Woohoo!
4. Creating my own artistic notebooks reusing old materials
5. Becoming more integrated with my local economy – not just local foods but also locally made products and services (yay Calgary Dollars)
6. Organizing and promoting documentary screenings focusing on social justice and environmental issues, and showcasing local activists working on local causes
7. Gardening (with mixed success but still trying)
8. Questioning and challenging our politicians, journalists, teachers and other “professionals” (along with fellow students) regarding government policy and media portrayal of all the issues
9. Encouraging my friends to take up more sustainable lifestyles while emphasizing that this is progression rather than perfection.
Why do I want to be a part of the Wheels of Change bike tour? I was planning to take a vacation and wanted to experiment with biking as the key means of transportation. Obviously this is cheaper and less emissions than flying or driving. I'm hoping that this experience will allow me to better absorb my surroundings and the communities that we will pass through on the way to the coast. Also, I will meet some really cool bikers along the way. Oryx the Black Stallion (my trusty bike) and I are proud to be part of this bike trip.
Sunday, June 10, 2007
Ann, Sjeng and Oscar's Story
- We’ve planted lots of trees in our lot and grow some of our own food.
- We run a High Efficiency washing machine and hang our clothes to dry.
- We live in a small community, so drive very few commuter kms. to work, school or shop.
- We buy local and organic as much as possible.
- We live in a small, very well insulated house with double glaze windows.
- We burn a renewable heat source in the winter (wood from fallen trees).
- We compost and recycle like crazy.
- We buy second hand goods and clothes.
- We don’t (or at least very rarely) use any chemical cleaners.
- We always (well, almost always) reuse shopping bags or baskets.
- We don’t flush every time.
- We use rechargeable batteries.
- We use an electric bike as a second vehicle.
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Femke Woud's Story
I grew up in the Netherlands and remember biking to school was the most normal thing to do....I don't even remember anybody ever being brought to school by car. In a country the size of Vancouver Island with about 14 million people, bikers and bike lanes are everywhere. However, after an accident in Toronto (where I broke my wrist in two places getting stuck in tram track) I lost confidence in biking through Toronto's busy streets and only biked 'for pleasure' on the bike paths along the lake. Here in Victoria I have regained some of my confidence, and enjoy biking with my daughter, on the back of my dutch bike, through Victoria.
Still, I have to admit that I do drive my daughter to her Waldorf preschool, but carpool with another mom. My partner takes the bus to work everyday which takes him about an hour. He enjoys it.
I feel good about only using natural cleaning products for my house (water and vinegar works wonders and some essential oils for the smell), using organic fertilizer for my new hobby gardening, community composting, using plastic crates for my shopping supplies (or cotton bags, which by the way is 'normal' in Holland...you actually pay $0.25 cents for every plastic bag you purchase and has been like this since I was little in the sixties), eating locally organic foods whenever possible, wearing an extra sweater indoors in the winter, and recycling clothes and toys. My next project is to get our house assessed for energy conservation/loss. Kari, you inspired me!
My own personal passion is in studying and using the power of 'energy medicine' (acupuncture, shiatsu, homeopathy and quantum healing) as the medicine of the 21st century, and exposing the truths about pharmaceutical companies and their questionable goals in true health. I feel honored to be part of this great initiative here in Victoria.
Femke Woud (Shiatsu Therapist)
Monday, May 28, 2007
Kari Jones' Story
Kari Jones, Co-author of Hiking Adventures for Children
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Julia Lissau's Story
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.
Sunday, May 20, 2007
Lizanne Chicanot's Story
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
Saturday, May 12, 2007
Gordon Forsyth's Story
Monique Richoux's Story
I have realized that climate change is not some kind of possibility. It is not something that my children can spend their lives trying to stop. It will be too late if we haven't taken serious measures by the time they are old enough to vote. I used to think that by living as sustainably as I possibly can (consuming less, buying only organic food, growing what we can, driving as little as possible, etc.) that I can do my part and make a difference. And yet when I watched An Inconvenient Truth and saw the ice falling away, I realized that my actions alone are not enough. They are important and they are good, but they are not enough. I have been aware of and worrying about environmental devastation for 20 years now - and it is not enough. (The warning cry was first shouted in 1962 by Rachel Carson, and 45 years later we still aren't "getting it" in any large-scale way). Some people worry that attending to climate change will cause a massive loss of jobs in Canada. I say this is an illusion. Climate Change itself will cause job loss, along with massive life loss. When all the trees die from bugs that start multiplying exponentially (as the pine bark beetle already has been doing) there will certainly be a loss of jobs, not to mention all the other losses that accompany that. The oil fields won't last forever either - why not phase out that form of power now before our very lives are threatened?
There are plenty of ways in which we can all live sustainably with our needs met, through industries that perhaps we haven't even invented yet, industries that support a restorative form of commerce rather than the destructive form that we currently operate under. For those of us dependent on our cars - lets remember that we are an ingenious species - very intelligent, very creative. We CAN start re-imagining our world, while there is a livable world left to re-imagine. Consider our dependence on oxygen alone: "Oxygen has hovered around 21 per cent of the atmosphere, a propitious level, since 25 per cent oxygen could well ignite the atmosphere; if the atmosphere contained only 15 per cent oxygen, it would be lethal to life." David Suzuki, The Sacred Balance, p. 49. So what will happen to this balance as we keep releasing carbon into the atmosphere? I don't want to find out. Realizing that I actually have to do something about it has been hard for me - I have shed tears and lost sleep. Denial is so much easier. Easier but deadly (ala The Matrix).
Here is one last quote that really hit me, that has moved me to go on the actual ROAD on my little bike, with my child:
"Author Ivan Illich has pointed out that the average American is involved with his or her automobile - working in order to buy it, actually driving it, getting it repaired and so on - for sixteen hundred hours a year. This means when all car mileage in a given year is divided by the time spend supporting the car, the average car owner is traveling at an average speed of five miles per hour. To attain the speed of a bicycle, we are devastating our cities, air, lungs, and lives, while bringing on the threat of global warming." Paul Hawkin, The Ecology of Commerce (1993),
One last note - I think it's important that we not be fooled by the Conservative government's "green plan". They had in their hands a not-too-bad plan, Bill C-30 which was drafted up with the input and cooperation of all parties. When they backed out of it I protested to my MP. He replied that the opposition made it too hard to implement. That is rubbish. The current plan is a smokescreen, one that people such as David Suzuki and Al Gore have seen through (and stated so publicly). We need to see through it as well. It is not enough. So let's get on our bikes and see how big a statement we can make, together, as Canadians.
(And if you haven't seen An Inconvenient Truth yet - go watch it now!)
Helen and Patricia's Story
A few years ago, we moved to Hornby Island to get off the grid, but only lasted 2 1/2 months. That's another story. We've been in Brentwood Bay for four years, about an hour's bike ride from Victoria.
Our response to Climate Change is a booklet called Recipe for a Cool Planet: How to be Happy & Healthy on a Low-carbon Diet.
http://www.recipeforacoolplanet.com
Writing it inspired us to sell the SUV we were gifted, and travel exclusively by bike and car-share. Here's one of the drawings illustrated by Patricia.
Looking forward to meeting everyone. - Helen
PS - if you know of any potential advertising sponsors for the book, please let us know:
Tel: (250) 544-2064; Email: patriciahairdesign@hotmail.com
Friday, May 11, 2007
Joyce Henderson's Story
My time living in Kenya and Ghana have made me aware of the need to conserve water and electricity – so conserving those two resources, recycling and using cloth shopping bags have been a normal part of my life. Lately I have been consciously using my car as little as possible and eating local foods when possible.
I am involved in Wheels for Change because it is an opportunity for citizens to become informed and involved in climate change – and to make an impact with municipal and provincial governments re what needs to be done to influence climate change.
Thursday, May 3, 2007
James Skwarok's Story
Climate change is the most pressing issue of our time. We may not be fully aware of its effects right now, but why wait until it’s too late? Just look how a warmer climate has allowed the pine beetle to ravage BC’s forests. Since our federal government is moving at a snail’s pace to reduce greenhouse gases, we have to get together to show them we want action now. Our children deserve courageous decisions by our leaders, not promises of “intensity based targets” which actually allow overall greenhouse gas emissions to rise.
Tuesday, April 17, 2007
J.D. Gibbard’s Story
"Hajimemashite! J.D. Gibbard desu. Yoroshiku onegaishimasu."
“Hello! I’m J.D. Gibbard. Let’s treat each other in good regard.” This brief self introduction is one of the first things I learned in Japanese. Although I grew up in an eco-aware family in
Among my own daily efforts: I’m letting my car insurance run out now that the weather is warmer and won’t renew until the fall, until now I have been driving at the speed limit instead of the usual inefficient 10 km/h faster; I have reduced my consumption of animal-based foods; I reuse old photocopies in my printer; I reduce heating and lighting as much as reasonable; I’m choosing organic and local foods more often.
Larger campaigns like Wheels for Change can help make it easier to do the right thing by showing government and industry that we want more eco-friendly choices. Too many people feel they can’t afford to make good choices because marketing and/or subsidies make damaging options appear cheaper than cleaner options. Let’s get on the path to greater efficiency and sustainable alternatives!
Friday, April 13, 2007
Jon Corbett's Story
My story is about some recent work I have done with students at UBC O to discuss issues of sustainability on the campus. My students interviewed university administrators, faculty members and other students to try to get to grips with what it means to be a sustainable campus. They then created short films outlining the steps that UBC O needs to take to be a truly sustainable institution.
Wheels for Change is an open and encompassing initiative that encourages everyone to express their feelings about climate change, share their hopes and fears with others, and ultimately to bring about positive change. I am very excited about the Wheels for Change ride in July. I am encouraging my students to take part in the journey. I look forward to meeting many others, and perhaps even you, on this journey.
Judy Stockdale's story
I have felt strongly about environmental issues since Rachael Carr's "The Silent Spring" in the early 70's. I have had cloth shopping bags for thirty years, and I remember teaching school kids the 4 "R's" in the 1980's: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Reclaim. I remember thinking the most shocking thing about our misuse of Mother Earth was species extinction. Once they are gone, they are gone forever, whereas pollution, deforestation, ozone depletion, population explosion could all be fixed over time. Global warming is different.
Facing this issue will require a combined effort and commitment from everyone in every corner of the globe, and it all starts with each of us taking one small step. My wish is that we could have community stores that only sold local produce, or at least shops that indicated local produce. Maybe we could reduce our impact in this way and get more trucks off the road. Maybe others could express their wish for a more sustainable future, and who know where this might lead. A huge wish list for sustainability. Yeah! Meanwhile my husband and I farm and garden organically (Certified Organic), and we try to encourage wildlife and biodiversity through planting native flora. We carefully select who we donate our money to and who we support politically.
We try to maximize the effect we have politically, environmentally, and socially. There is lots more we could do, and that will be our challenge!
Thursday, April 12, 2007
Robin Genthon's story
Celia Auclair's Story
If we remain passive, a runaway warming trend is unavoidable. I choose to take action; it's only by our collective action that we are going to create a good future for future generations. I also choose to promote sustainable living, as it is the ensemble of solutions that are needed to address climate change. I am full of enthusiasm about getting on the road on my bike this summer, and about the people, ideas and projects that we are going to encounter along the way.
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Mary Stockdale's Story
In recent years, I have come to the belief that climate change is the most important issue of our time - what a responsibility it is to know that we only have a few years to act before irreversible and 'run-away' warming trends are set in motion. I have decided to stop pursuing my career full-time in order to do whatever I can on this issue.
We try as a family to reduce our impact on the environment by living close to downtown, cycling everywhere we can, buying local food, maximizing energy efficiency in the house, hanging our laundry up to dry, and so on, but I am convinced that the solution lies in collective as well as individual action. A major shift in our society will be needed to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions to the recommended level, and this will require us to get together and let our politicians know that we want them to take whatever action is necessary, now. This is why I am co-organizing this Wheels for Change campaign, as one means of keeping the momentum growing locally, provincially and nationally.
I also keep myself busy trying to effect change locally by co-editing a biweekly column on sustainability issues in our local newspaper; involving myself in local organizations such as Vernon's Sustainable Environmental Network Society and the Vernon Cycling Advisory Committee, and teaching a course at the University of British Columbia - Okanagan branch on applying traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) to developing a more sustainable way of living in the Okanagan region.
My final, inspirational, comment is that I believe that moving towards sustainability can be a positive change for all of us, for so many different reasons - better health, more meaningful work, improved diet, increased creativity, stronger connections to others, and more. Let's take this immense challenge on with everything we've got - this beautiful world and our children deserve it!
Wednesday, March 28, 2007
Please Send Us Your Stories for Wheels for Change !
Please send your stories to wheelsforchange@gmail.com, with a photo, if possible. Please include your name, age, town, any other details, and one or two paragraphs on what you are doing, or planning to do, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.