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Commuter Challenge Update

by Melanie - 0 Comment(s)

Don't forget to track your green commute this week at commuterchallenge.ca.

If you work for CPL, or other participating workplaces, your workplace is already registered and you can register as an individual. The tracking is really straightforward this year.

If you provide your Airmiles number, you are eligible to win 500 Airmiles!

Hint: An easy way to calculate your kilometerage is to use Google maps "get directions" tool and enter your start and end points. Your one-way kms are displayed. Double it when entering your Commuter Challenge information.

Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food!

by Rosemary - 0 Comment(s)

Foodshed:An Edible Alberta AlphabetNobody knows the local landscape of farmers and sustainable food production like chef and award winning author, dee Hobbsbawn Smith.

Dee introduced Calgary to regional cuisine when she opened her restaurant, Foodsmith, in 1992. Since then she has written three best-selling cookbooks and Shop Talk, a round-up of the best local butchers, bakers and specialty grocery stores, as well as a weekly Calgary Herald column on food. Now dee's back with her latest book, Foodshed: An Edible Alberta Alphabet, which explores local food producers from Asparagus to Zizania (wild rice) and along the way, includes some great recipes and detailed information on sourcing local food.

Dee will be reading from her book and providing a PowerPoint discussion as well as selling copies of Foodshed at the Calgary Public library, John Dutton Theatre (2nd floor), on Friday, June 1, 7 p.m.

If you care about what you put on your plate, this is an event not to be missed!

Commuter Challenge 2012

by Melanie - 0 Comment(s)

Even if green commuting is your routine, track your ecological transit footprint for the week of June 3-9 and see how you and/or your workplace fare in this year's Commuter Challenge.

Don't forget: the week starts Sunday, June 3.

Even if you forget to track your movement for a few days, you can go back in add your information later.

Register now!

Login and record your details June 3-9. See how much fuel and emissions you've saved.

Calgary Public Library staff have participated since the event began in Calgary.

(If you work for CPL, your workplace is already registered. Simply register as an individual and choose "Calgary Public Library" and your location from the drop-down menu.)

The website to watch is www.commuterchallenge.ca

Lagomorphic love

by Jocelyn - 1 Comment(s)

A baby hare raising experience.
Wild babies. They are everywhere – and if not, soon to be. The robins are announcing their presence, and all sorts of birds are now trying to find a suitable place to nest. Our wild jackrabbits have probably already had their first litter of leverets (they are not baby bunnies, but hares, as they are born with their eyes fully open.)

Last spring, a baby leveret was born in our backyard. We discovered him by accident – a tiny ball of fur that sat very still, looking somewhat akin to a rock. It was very important that we left him alone: leverets are born without scent, so they will not attract predators. They almost look as though they are orphaned or abandoned little baby rabbits…and therein lies the problem.

Many, many well intentioned people will make the mistake of interfering with wildlife. Because a baby hare looks like a baby bunny without a mother, they will bring them to either vet clinics or a wildlife rehabilitation centre (or worse, try to make them pets!) This is not the best fate for a leveret, as they can die easily of stress and need their mother’s milk.

Leverets differ from rabbits. Within the first hour after they are born, they have their eyes open and are ready to run. They do not borrow underground, unlike rabbits. They are away from their mothers for most of the day, so it looks like they are orphaned. But the mother will come back to them and feed them at dusk and at dawn, when it is safe. The rest of the time, she is away from her young, as her scent might attract predators.

As for our leveret, we did our best to give him his space. We avoided going into the backyard for the first couple of weeks, and watched out for neighborhood cats and crows that might have harassed him in our yard. We watched him grow, run off, and come back into our yard on many occasions. It brought us so much joy to see him come back again this spring, as an awkward young buck chowing down some of the creeping thyme in my rock garden…I think that thyme was a fair trade to be able to watch such a handsome animal! (But if you don’t want to share the spoils of your garden, you can “hare proof” your yard as well, with raised beds and some mesh wire.)

Our white tailed prairie hares are a native species often called jack rabbits, and an important part of our ecosystem. Both rabbits and hares are mistakenly called rodents; they are actually lagomorphs, a mammalian order that also includes pikas. There are other rabbits in Calgary – many rabbits, which should be pets, have been illegally released and reproduce in the wild as well. It’s a tough life for them out there and they are not meant for our environment. Our family adopted a “Bridgeland bunny” and recommends helping your local lagomorphs by adopting a rabbit from the Calgary Humane Society (and taking rescued pets there), and leaving the truly native species alone.

FYI
Some contacts (in case you find a truly injured/ distressed animal):
Calgary Wildlife Rehabilitation Society: (403) 239-2488
Alberta Institute for Wildlife Conservation (by Madden): (403) 946-2361
Cochrane Ecological Institute (just outside Cochrane): (403) 932-5632
Calgary Humane Society (for pets): (403) 205-4455

May 4 is Bike to Work Day

- 0 Comment(s)

Oil up your chains and fill up your tires, it's Bike to Work Day Friday, May 4th! Curious to know more? Go to http://bikecalgary.ca/

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