

Patricia Iverson
POINTS TOTAL
- 0 TODAY
- 0 THIS WEEK
- 275 TOTAL
participant impact
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UP TO9.0meatless or vegan mealsconsumed
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UP TO6.0plastic containersnot sent to the landfill
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UP TO90minutesspent learning
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UP TO1.0documentarywatched
Patricia's actions
Food
Reduce Animal Products
Plant-Rich Diet
I will enjoy 3 meatless or vegan meal(s) each day of the challenge.
Materials
Reduce Single-Use Disposables
Bioplastic
I will avoid buying and using 2 single-use plastics and instead replace them with durable options.
Materials
Practice the 5 R's
Household Recycling
I will Practice the "5 Rs" — refuse, reduce, reuse, repurpose, and recycle — to reduce my waste more than I can with just recycling alone.
Food
Smaller Portions
Reduced Food Waste
I will use smaller plates and/or serve smaller portions when dishing out food.
Food
Support Organic Growing Methods
Nutrient Management
My family and I will buy organic cotton and foods grown without the use of synthetic nitrogen fertilizers.
Food
Start or Tend a Garden
Plant-Rich Diet
I will start or tend a garden at my home, whether in my yard or in containers on a porch or windowsill.
Food
Watch a Documentary about Food Waste
Reduced Food Waste
I will watch a documentary about food waste.
Participant Feed
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Patricia Iverson 5/15/2020 8:16 AMJust put in a raised garden bed and planted tomatoes, beans, zucchini, squash, basil and cilantro, which I will grow organically. -
REFLECTION QUESTIONMaterialsWhat are some more "R's" you could add to your daily practice to reduce your waste?
Patricia Iverson 4/17/2020 2:18 PMAfter hearing the founder of SCARCE, Kay McKeen, give a talk at York, I have heard her words that categorize all waste as resources and try to use this premise to guide my efforts at letting the 5 R's be my focus on decreasing waste disposal. -
REFLECTION QUESTIONMaterialsWhat disposable plastic items (e.g. straws, coffee cups, vegetable bags, plastic bags) do you regularly use? What could be substituted instead?
Patricia Iverson 4/17/2020 2:12 PMThis is a more difficult task in the time of COVID 19. I try not to use plastic at home or to purchase foods that come to plastic in the grocery store where I shop with my reusable tote and produce bags. However, due to fear of contamination, I am more hesitant to buy unpackaged produce, to place produce in reusable produce bags, and even to place items in my reusable tote. This would lead to a thorough cleaning of all alternatives to plastic packaging. Instead, I have tried to purchase in bulk to minimize plastic or only purchase vegetables that are loose when I see that produce workers are gloved and then give the produce a more thorough washing anyway. I am bringing wax paper bags for produce. -
REFLECTION QUESTIONFoodWhy do people in richer countries eat more meat than people in other places? How does eating more meat affect our bodies, our planet, and other people?
Patricia Iverson 4/17/2020 2:05 PMMeat has historically always been something the wealthy could afford. It takes a great deal of resources to grow one cow or pig. In addition, they give off methane gas as a byproduct. Also, instead of growing corn and soybeans for human consumption, much of what we grow is for feed for these animals. So it would be very advantageous to eliminate this cholesterol-laden food from our diets, freeing up land to grow crops to feed people, while cleaning the air of this source of methane. -
Patricia Iverson 4/15/2020 4:07 PMAs a high school Social Studies teacher, a Climate Reality Leader, and one fortunate to have a driven student who organized a team for the Youth Climate Ecochallenge, I am hoping we can make a difference in impacting lives for a greener future.