The environment is tops on everyone’s list. Browse the ‘new and notable’ tables at your favorite book store and GREEN jumps out at every turn.
You can help introduce your friends and family to environmentally friendly living, too.
Give them a GREEN GIFT of organic personal care,
or bath salts,
or perhaps some
mustard bath.
or a detox seaweed bath 
Henna hair coloring
is a great way to lessen a loved one’s exposure to possible carcinogens in chemical dyes.
You can promote sustainability, independence and encourage environmentally friendly business in impoverished nations by purchasing fair trade gifts.

Artisans worldwide produce crafts and are paid a fair wage. This also helps preserve ancient crafts which are rapidly disappearing as populations move to urban areas.
Another great way to introduce environmentally friendly living is to get a GIFT CERTIFICATE to start a friend sampling some environmentally responsible products. Often people are a bit hesitant to give up what they know, but once they try things, they find they are doing TWO things at once: saving the environment and being more environmentally responsible themselves!
This could be toward the purchase of a Sun-Mar composter
or perhaps a rain barrel…,
or even for a composting toilet
or maybe for a portable solar powered battery charger,
which is great for travellers!
We also have unusual
art and
gifts like original art 
by local Virginia artists.
There are many ways that you can spread the word about sustainable, green and helping the environment!
Two terms which are often confused are “Fair Trade” and “Free Trade” but they mean different things. One term - fair trade - respects the dignity of the human element, encourages stronger communities, provides a living wage and promotes a healthier planet. The other word, free trade, promotes greed, human rights abuses and environmental degradation.
FREE TRADE favors big business over workers and/or small farmers who cannot compete with the subsidized agriculture of countries like the United States. NAFTA and the newer CAFTA (Central American Free Trade Agreement) devastate small farmers who cannot compete with the cheap, surplus dumped into their countries.
In the FREE market the focus is on the bottom line. Businesses like Wal-Mart and others search for products from countries with the cheapest labor, making for the highest profits. Workers in these countries endure sweatshop conditions and low wages. They often lose their jobs when a company relocates to save even more money to be the lowest bidder to the ‘big guys.’
The free market has devastating effects on the environment. Free trade agreements do not require member countries to adhere to international environmental standards. Member countries can also compete for investment. Big corporations looking to broaden their bottom line often go to countries which have dangerous, lax or non-existant environmental standards. This means they can conduct their manufacturing facilities in most cases, without much (or any) restrictions. This encourages large corporations looking for the cheapest and easiest place to do business, regardless of the environmental impact. after all, it’s not their backyard that needs cleaning up!
In contrast, FAIR TRADE ensures that fair trade producers can earn enough to care for their families and community. A ‘floor’ is set to provide fair trade participants with a living wage in the local context with financial stability against global market fluctuations.
Fair trade works to educate its providers about sustainability and ensure that the fair trade local co-ops adhere to international environmental standards. This helps their local community be environmentally responsible and protects the health and well being of the community -and- the planet.
Which one do you choose?
What IS ENVIRONMENT?
Webster’s dictionary defines it as: “to surround, to encircle, to envelop, to encompass, external conditions which determine modifications in the development of organic life.”
I like the last one. When you think of it, what we all do, in one way or another “determines modifications in the development of organic life.” For much of the world, the environment beyond our noses has been given little thought. Not only the current chic usage of the word environment, meaning world or ecosystem health of the planet, but environment as in living conditions and lifestyles of millions on the planet. Environment as in human rights of; environment as in how one relates to the world in general.
How do you treat your environment? How do you treat, deal with, relate to the other beings on this planet, whether they be animal, plant or human? Where is your regard for their well-being is and what steps do you take to contribute to it?
Recently I started a web site. The original idea was to have environmentally responsible items. Now I find it has morphed into something else - to encourage and promote fair trade and human rights.
I have long been a champion of justice. Born in the middle of the sign of Libra, with many aspects IN Libra, justice, fairness and peace all relate to my core.
When faced with getting products to sell on the site, I could have taken the easy way out and used drop shippers who import from Asia. I scanned the offerings for weeks, never satisfied that any of them could provide me with organic, eco-friendly items. I became so frustrated and at times, tried to convince myself to break down and sell that crap. I couldn’t.
Why? Because I was raised to have respect for the Earth and, it seems for my entire life, I have loved the trees, the animals, the beauty and wonder of this world. I have lived with environmental mindfulness, far more than most people I know, far more than most Americans, too.
I could not bring myself to be a purveyor of what I call garbage; useless crap that the world already has too much of. Cheap knock-offs, or even the real things: i-Pods, sports team jackets, the latest phone or computer products, disposable this, wastefully packaged that, personal care products with no ‘natural’ IN the ‘natural’ they promise.
Stuff which is produced in sweatshops overseas for a pittance and where workers are mistreated, paid $1 a day, exposed to harmful, toxic, inhumane conditions and no thought to their welfare is given. It is slavery! Workers exploited all so that the United States can have cheap prices at their local Wal-Mart store. Americans want cheap, cheap, CHEAP. Who cares about quality when you can throw it away and get another one? Planned obsolescence has done much to fill up the landfills in the last 50 years, hasn’t it…. and we’ve all played right into it, haven’t we?
So my quest continued for organic, fair trade, sustainable and responsible environmental products.
I have been very lucky to find wonderful vendors for the site: A wonderful man named Syed, who offers completely natural henna products in a range of colors, to another man named Barry who has patented rain barrels, because he truly is concerned about our planet.
Then there’s the local artist, Adelbert, who, despite his battle with Parkinson’s disease, works in wood taken
from ’standing dead’ only, makes beautiful heartfelt items.
Cecilia, who lived in Botswana for many years, is a member of the Fair Trade Federation. Her daughter, Macallan designed a “Get Involved” t-shirt which from which proceeds go for AIDS orphans in Africa. 
These are truly inspiring and special people and I am so honored to be working with them.
Another aspect of the site is that it must give back and be useful to the world. By providing not only fair trade items, but also giving a portion of the profits to environmental, humanitarian and health organizations, it will enable me to give back to the people of the Earth. In this way I feel that I am contributing to the environment of the Earth instead of just taking away.
