Save Money, Save the Earth

Spring is finally here! It’s time to start gardening. Check out these three tips to save money in gardening.

1. Free compost and free mulch

Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago offers free Exceptional Quality (EQ) Compost. According to their website, the EQ compost is a sustainable and environmentally beneficial product derived from wood chips collected from the City of Chicago’s routine tree trimming programs. They then process them with biosolids in open windrow machines. 

Photo Courtesy of Caroline W

The website lists six pick-up locations in Illinois. My favorite one is at 3500 Howard Street, Skokie. It is very easy to do BYOB (Bring Your Own Bucket). After the big “Free Compost” sign, you can park your car and then fill up your bucket(s) with as much compost as you have buckets for. 

Chicago Departments of Streets and Sanitation also offers free mulch that is derived from the debris of trees and branches removed by the Bureau of Forestry. Their website lists four pick-up locations. My favorite BYOB location is at 5333 N. Western Ave. The mulch is available on a limited basis for pick-up during working hours of 6:30 am to 2:00 pm Monday-Friday.

2. Free used gardening supplies from Freecycle.org

If you need gardening supplies and you don’t mind using previously owned ones, sign up to freecycle.org, an online community for bartering. You can list “WANTED” items or items you can “OFFER” for others. Everything must be free and picked up. 

I have been a member of this wonderful grassroots movement in Chicago for many years, and obtained lots of useful stuff and even shared my own items that I no longer needed.

Last year, I posted my WANTED items: shovels and medium sized flower pots. Not only did I get two shovels and multiple pots, I also got some gardening tools for free that the former owners wanted to get rid of.

The COVID-19 pandemic hasn’t halted bartering since porch pick-up became an easy and safe option. We have also shifted communication to email or phone, making face-to-face interaction unnecessary. 

3. Recycle waste into gardening supplies

It is very easy to recycle and repurpose wastes. For example, toilet paper rolls or yogurt cups can be reused as seedling pots. Used plastic bottles and milk cartons can be repurposed into planters. Wire hangers can be recycled into many useful things too especially in gardening. I recycle my wire hangers into tomato cages and hooks for my greenhouse. 

Photo Courtesy of Caroline W.

Another thing we can recycle for gardening supply is, of course, our food scraps! Instead of throwing away egg shells, banana peels, coffee grounds, etc., we should feed them to our plants. I got ½ pounds of red worms after I finished my C3 (Chicago Conservation Corps) training, and they worked wonderfully for turning my food scraps into compost.

Photo Courtesy of Caroline W

A Short Story About Me, Nish

Photo Sourced from Rich Greenspun, chicagopipingplovers.org

Hello, my name is Nish.
I have two siblings. 
Their names are Hazel and Esperanza.
Our names have very important meanings.
You can read about the meaning of our names, here.
We were all hatched at Montrose Beach in June 2020.
One of our siblings did not survive.

Our parents’ names are Monty and Rose.
We are a famous endangered Piping Plover bird family.
Our parents are the first pair to successfully nest in Montrose Beach Chicago since 1955.
They made big headlines in Chicago.
You can read more about us here.
You can also watch a documentary movie here to see how they survive.

During winter, we travel a long way.
Last winter, I went to Florida with my mom.
Hazel and Esperanza went to islands in Georgia.
My dad went to Texas.

Our species typically don’t stay together all year-round, but we usually return to the same breeding site year after year.
Will we go back to Chicago this spring? Maybe.
Meanwhile, can you draw a picture of us? 
Here is a step-by-step how to draw a Piping Plover bird.

Our Guest: Dr. Rohany Nayan

Protecting and saving our ailing planet begins with a willingness to make changes. Making a change needs courage. Taking that first step towards change can be frightening, disturbing, or disheartening. Finding the right group of people for support can help one to summon the courage needed to take the leap forward toward empowering change. Dr. Rohany Nayan is the CMGT Education Team Leader. She found her courage to make an empowering change when she met with and then joined the Chicago Muslims Green Team (CMGT).

When Rohany first moved to Chicago in 2017, she noticed two disturbing things about her new home. The first was the ubiquity of homelessness in the city. The second was the widespread mismanagement of unrecycled plastic trash. Her reading on the topic of panhandling in Chicago led her to learn more about the issue of homelessness.

In the United States, it is estimated that there are over half a million of people who are homeless. In the city of Chicago alone, it is estimated that 80,000 people were  homeless before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. It is feared that this number may be much higher during this crisis. Sadly, the management of homelessness too often focuses on managing the problem rather than seeking comprehensive solutions. Homeless people face multiple bureaucratic hurdles. This becomes a formidable administrative labyrinth for those looking for safe, permanent housing. Many end up feeling defeated and resign themselves to living on the streets. Clearly, there is a lot that needs to be done in order to fight the systemic problems related to homelessness.

Rohany’s experience with CMGT has increased her awareness about environmental issues, especially the problems related to the wasteful use of plastic bags. CMGT, through its educational programs, strives to build bridges between diverse communities. By doing this they hope to increase awareness of our ecology, natural resources, and the protection of our environment. This is accomplished by engaging social justice issues while promoting a mindful, sustainable, and eco-friendly lifestyle inspired by Muslim traditions.

Research on plastic bags reveals the love-hate relationship that we have with them. Despite being convenient, durable, and easy to use, we also hate the fact that plastic bags pose many dangers to our environment. According to the WorldWatch Institute’s report in 2004, Americans use and throw away 100 billion plastic grocery bags a year. Less than 1% of these plastic bags are recycled. They tend to clog machines at recycling facilities and are costly to recycle. As a result, they often end up in landfills where they take about 500+ years to photodegrade. Furthermore, plastic bags are also dangerous as they break down into tiny toxic particles that contaminate the soil and  local waterways, and threaten the food chain when animals accidentally ingest them.

How might we change this situation? Is it possible to change despair into hope? Rohany often turns to her faith as a Muslim when thinking about solutions for problems. In this case, the source of her inspiration comes from this particular verse in the Qur’an:

Indeed, Allah will not change the condition of a people until they change what is in themselves,” Sūrat al-Raʿd (The Thunder, 13:11).

The opportunity to make a difference came through CMGT when she took a course offered by the Chicago Conservation Corps (C3), a program of the Chicago Academy of Sciences/Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum. The C3 Leadership course recruits, trains, and supports community leaders in working together to improve the quality of life in our neighborhoods and schools through environmental service projects.

For her final project in the course, focusing on concepts such as rethinking, reusing, and conservation, Rohany designed a project that weaves creativity and upcycling into one mission – to conserve, crochet, and care for neighbors and the environment by making PLARN (plastic yarn) sleeping mats. From November 2020 until April 2021, participants in this project will collect recycled plastic bags and transform them into useful, comfortable PLARN sleeping mats that hopefully will warm hearts and bodies.

The PLARN sleeping mats offer comfort and cushioning as they create a barrier between the cold and hard ground and one’s body. Additionally, one can easily clean their mat by hosing it down and leaving it to dry. A PLARN sleeping mat retains one’s body heat while sleeping and most of all, provides a cleaner way of sleeping as bugs do not like plastic bags. Each PLARN sleeping mat takes approximately 700 plastic bags to make and saves those bags from our landfills. The PLARN sleeping mats are useful and are needed especially by our local neighbors who may be experiencing homelessness.

Rohany hopes to make a positive impact on our planet and neighbors in need. Through this PLARN Sleeping Mat: Conserve, Crochet, Care project, Rohany brings together diverse community members of ages 5 to 100 in raising awareness about conservation, the dangers of plastic bags and keeping non-recyclable plastic bags out of landfills. This project aims to make 100 plarn sleeping mats This means saving about 70,000 plastic bags from landfills, lakes and waterways!

Our ailing earth and our neighbors need our courage to make necessary changes possible. Rohany wants to be a mindful Muslim and calls on everyone to be a “mindful” individual who practices mindfulness where one develops greater attention and care for actions, thoughts, feelings, and inner states of being and avoids israf (wastefulness). It is important to remember that we are NOT separate from nor are we unaffected by our surroundings. We need to welcome and embrace practices that have neither negative impact on our environment now nor in the future. A reminder from our beloved Prophet Muhammad (peace be on him) who said, “Should you wish to act, ponder well the consequences. If good, carry on. If not, desist” (Ibn al-Mubārak).

For more information or to participate in the PLARN Sleeping Mat: Conserve, Crochet, Care project, visit our website.

Plastic Waste Generation by Country

It’s incredible how plastic has been affecting our lives since the 1950s. Below you can identify the top five countries that generate the most plastic waste.

Source of Information: https://ourworldindata.org/plastic-pollution

Below you can find the world map picture of plastic generation per year.

Map taken from https://ourworldindata.org/plastic-pollution

We have to reflect and self-analyze to reduce these numbers because we are harming our earth which is our big mosque.

Allah SWT says in the Qur’an:

يَـٰبَنِىٓ ءَادَمَ خُذُوا۟ زِينَتَكُمْ عِندَ كُلِّ مَسْجِدٍۢ وَكُلُوا۟ وَٱشْرَبُوا۟ وَلَا تُسْرِفُوٓا۟ ۚ إِنَّهُۥ لَا يُحِبُّ ٱلْمُسْرِفِينَ

O children of Adam, take your adornment [i.e., wear your clothing] at every masjid,1 and eat and drink, but be not excessive. Indeed, He likes not those who commit excess. (Qur’an, 7:31)

You can be a Green Khalifa and help the environment. Join the PLARN Sleeping Mat: Conserve, Crochet, Care project. Check here all the information about this incredible project and be a Guardian of the Earth.