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Conservation: Fish of the Week - Florida Pompano
December 5th, 2012

Conservation: Fish of the Week - Southern Stingray
November 29th, 2012

Conservation: CLEAN COAL, REALLY????
November 24th, 2012

Conservation: Students + Festival = Kickoff for America Recycles Day 2012
November 13th, 2012

Conservation: THE GREAT SUWANNEE RIVER CLEANUP
November 12th, 2012

Conservation: The Greening of Your Favorite Restaurant
October 21st, 2012

Conservation: Do You Really Want a Nuke Plant in Levy County?
October 10th, 2012

Conservation: Energy’s High Cost on Our Water
September 24th, 2012

Conservation: Coastal Clean-up
September 18th, 2012

Conservation: Ya’ Learn Somethin’ Everyday
September 14th, 2012

Conservation: Modern Consumption
August 31st, 2012

Conservation: The Reinvention of Fire
August 19th, 2012

Conservation: CONSUMPTIVE USE PERMITTING OF WATER PUBLIC HEARING CONVENES IN CHIEFLAND
August 17th, 2012

Conservation: Hello Natural Mosquito Trap - Goodbye Mosquitos
August 6th, 2012

Conservation: Good for the Environment and Good for YOU
August 4th, 2012

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Ya’ Learn Somethin’ Everyday

Ya’ Learn Somethin’ Everyday

Bev Ringenberg

Over the past month I`ve pretty much been confined to the couch because of foot surgery, which means I`ve had a bit more time to do some channel surfing and finally learned how to watch programs "ON DEMAND" (I know, I`m way behind the times). What I found was the Documentary Channel and what I watched were two pretty interesting documentary films called "Tapped "(produced in 2009)" and "Bag-It" (produced in 2010).

In previous Conservations Corners I`ve written about plastic bags and plastic bottles and I thought I was reasonably well informed, but these two documentaries (which you can get on Amazon and probably Netflix if you don`t have ON DEMAND) further opened my eyes. Here`s a few facts that might tweak (not tweet) your interest to watch the films.

The "Tapped" documentary provided some eye-opening facts:
* Most bottled water is "manufactured" and distributed by big beverage companies like Pepsi and Coke with "eco-healthy" looking names that make us feel like we are getting something special.
* Unlike municipal water supplies that have strict standards and frequent quality control testing, bottled water is subject to no such regulation.
* Much of the water we buy in the convenient plastic bottles is simply tap water from some municipality and we are paying over 2,000 times more for the same water that could be obtained from the tap (just google cost of bottled water vs tap water)
* And, not surprisingly, the real problem with bottled water is the plastic bottles themselves. Not only are they made from oil (fossil fuel) in plants that spew toxic chemicals into the air and water causing health hazards and environmental pollution, but scientists have proven that chemicals which may be linked to cancer can leach from the plastic and show up in urine (there are still differing opinions on whether the concentrations are high enough to cause cancer though).

From the "Bag-It" documentary I was once again totally taken aback by the number of single-use disposable bags that are used every day in the country (> 1 billion/day) and the horrible pollution and significant environmental effects of "discarded" plastic around the world (only 1-2% actually get "recycled"). Like all plastic, the bags are made from a highly valued, highly priced non-renewable resource (oil) and despite our best intentions way too much plastic ends up in the wrong place. Did you know that thousands of marine mammals and over a million birds die each year because of plastic pollution (BTW you may not want to watch the videos if you don`t want to see dead animals with their entire gut full of plastic pieces) and that the United Nations Environment Program estimates that there are 46,000 pieces of plastic litter floating in every square mile of ocean (often mistaken by marine life as food)?

The bottom line ---- like many countries around the world and several cities in the US that have banned single use plastic bags, we need to think long and hard about how much plastic we really need to use. Now that Cedar Keys` water is OK, start filling up from the tap (if you`re not comfortable with this get a filter but stop buying expensive water in individual use plastic bottles) and , if you haven`t done it yet, PLEASE start using reusable grocery and shopping bags. Watch the videos --- you`ll become a believer --- REALLY!

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