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What can You do to Make A Difference?

Say NO to disposal Nappies
Form a bicycle-commuting club.
Say NO to plastic shopping bags.
Identify local bird and wildlife species.
Plant trees or native shrubs and flowers.
Build and distribute compost and/or worm bins.
Re-vegetate eroded slopes in a park or green space.
Explore your own habitat!  Take a walk around your town.
Organise letter writing to a newspaper or the government.
Sponsor a Waste-Free day at your school or your workplace.
Pick up Rubbish at a beach, park, out of a stream or river.
Ask local businesses to sell and use Earth-friendly products.

John Denver on what you can do

John was asked many times What can I do to make a difference?
John would hesitate because he knew there was much to be done and John did not feel it was his place to tell people what to do. But in the end John would say the below.

 Quote~ John Denver
      "I would like to ask each of you to find a piece of litter every day - be it a beer can, a cigarette package, a Styrofoam coffee cup, or a food wrapper - and put it in the trash. Do that for yourself as one expression of your commitment to make a difference in this world. If you look every day for that piece of trash that you can pick up, you will discover new ways to manifest your commitment. People may give you a strange look if you happen to stop your car in the middle of the road to pick up a beer can, or if you pick up clutter around the office. You can say that you have taken a stand for a better world, a cleaner world, and this is one of the ways that you are making that happen."
End of Quote ~ John Denver

Copyright the Windstar Foundation, all rights reserved.

Windstar Journal, Spring 1989, used with permission
Thank you Ron Deutschendorf

Windstar

 

  John used to say very similar things to the above after a concert. It was great seeing a lot of people picking up rubbish and carrying it to the closet rubbish bin. I know a young man that was told the above at the age 3 by John and today at the age 25 he is still picking up rubbish, infact at times he goes up and taps people on the shoulder and says "Excuse me you must have accidentally dropped this" The people concerned get so embarrassed they throw it in the bin and say thanks mate".
 So as John said
You do what YOU can do And I'll do what I can do, and TOGETHER WE can make a DIFFERENCE" -John Denver

Have you ever wondered how Earth Day Started?

How the First Earth Day Came About

By Senator Gaylord Nelson, Founder of Earth Day

What was the purpose of Earth Day? How did it start? These are the questions I am most frequently asked.

Actually, the idea for Earth Day evolved over a period of seven years starting in 1962. For several years, it had been troubling me that the state of our environment was simply a non-issue in the politics of the country. Finally, in November 1962, an idea occurred to me that was, I thought, a virtual cinch to put the environment into the political "limelight" once and for all. The idea was to persuade President Kennedy to give visibility to this issue by going on a national conservation tour. I flew to Washington to discuss the proposal with Attorney General Robert Kennedy, who liked the idea. So did the President. The President began his five-day, eleven-state conservation tour in September 1963. For many reasons the tour did not succeed in putting the issue onto the national political agenda. However, it was the germ of the idea that ultimately flowered into Earth Day.

I continued to speak on environmental issues to a variety of audiences in some twenty-five states. All across the country, evidence of environmental degradation was appearing everywhere, and everyone noticed except the political establishment. The environmental issue simply was not to be found on the nation's political agenda. The people were concerned, but the politicians were not.

After President Kennedy's tour, I still hoped for some idea that would thrust the environment into the political mainstream. Six years would pass before the idea that became Earth Day occurred to me while on a conservation speaking tour out West in the summer of 1969. At the time, anti-Vietnam War demonstrations, called "teach-ins," had spread to college campuses all across the nation. Suddenly, the idea occurred to me - why not organize a huge grassroots protest over what was happening to our environment?

I was satisfied that if we could tap into the environmental concerns of the general public and infuse the student anti-war energy into the environmental cause, we could generate a demonstration that would force this issue onto the political agenda. It was a big gamble, but worth a try.

At a conference in Seattle in September 1969, I announced that in the spring of 1970 there would be a nationwide grassroots demonstration on behalf of the environment and invited everyone to participate. The wire services carried the story from coast to coast. The response was electric. It took off like gangbusters. Telegrams, letters, and telephone inquiries poured in from all across the country. The American people finally had a forum to express its concern about what was happening to the land, rivers, lakes, and air - and they did so with spectacular exuberance. For the next four months, two members of my Senate staff, Linda Billings and John Heritage, managed Earth Day affairs out of my Senate office.

Five months before Earth Day, on Sunday, November 30, 1969, The New York Times carried a lengthy article by Gladwin Hill reporting on the astonishing proliferation of environmental events:

"Rising concern about the environmental crisis is sweeping the nation's campuses with an intensity that may be on its way to eclipsing student discontent over the war in Vietnam...a national day of observance of environmental problems...is being planned for next spring...when a nationwide environmental 'teach-in'...coordinated from the office of Senator Gaylord Nelson is planned...."

It was obvious that we were headed for a spectacular success on Earth Day. It was also obvious that grassroots activities had ballooned beyond the capacity of my U.S. Senate office staff to keep up with the telephone calls, paper work, inquiries, etc. In mid-January, three months before Earth Day, John Gardner, Founder of Common Cause, provided temporary space for a Washington, D.C. headquarters. I staffed the office with college students and selected Denis Hayes as coordinator of activities.

Earth Day worked because of the spontaneous response at the grassroots level. We had neither the time nor resources to organize 20 million demonstrators and the thousands of schools and local communities that participated. That was the remarkable thing about Earth Day. It organized itself.

Envirolink

Thank you to the following sites
NASA Helps Earth, You Can Too
CASK
IIS
Earth Day Groceries Project
Earth Day Network
Envirolink
Windstar
Earth Day / Wilderness.org
Planetary Heroes
Do you like to colour in or have children that do?
If so go here.

Happy Earth Day Colouring and Activities Book