
Happy Birthday Earth Day and Green Up Day!

Wisdom of the Wild

Win a Signed Print!
I have a really exciting contest to announce! The author and illustrator of Redwoods, Jason Chin, has agreed to donate a signed print from his book and you could win it! Entering the contest is easy: just make a picture of something having to do with the environment and email it to me at deirdrekgill@yahoo.com. On January 1st I will choose a picture at random and send the winner the print. Here are the rules:
- Make a picture of something having to do with the environment (anything you want, really!)
- If you would like to also include a short explanation of what it is, please do.
- Any kind of art is acceptable, but no photographs.
- In your email DO NOT include your full name--FIRST NAME and LAST INITIAL ONLY!
- In your email DO include your address, so that I can mail you your print if you win.
- The random drawing will be conducted on January 1st and the print will be mailed out the next day.
- All artwork will be displayed on this website after the contest is over.
- You must be a kid or young adult to enter this contest...so please do not enter if you are over 18!
Going Green with Kids: Top Ten Green Activities and Projects
Nature Detective

Hey Kids!
Did you know that we share our homes and yards with many creatures…other than your little brother? From tiny spiders to foxes, creatures live all around us, even if we can’t always see them. Sometimes we just have to use our sleuthing skills to find the evidence.
Can you spy any of these signs of wildlife?
-A nest
-A feather
-A spiderweb
-A nibbled leaf
-A shed exoskeleton
-Animal tracks in the snow, dirt or sand
-A burrow entrance
And now, try to spy the things a creatures needs to survive:
-Nuts, seeds and berries
-Pollen for bees
-Tall grasses, brush and trees to hide and nest in
-A source of water
With the evidence you find, can you make up a story about one specific creature’s day?
This post originally appeared on the Little Green Blog.
Hey Teachers!
Take the waste free lunch challenge
Kids Konserve is challenging schools and kids to go waste-free this upcoming school year. To help you achieve that goal they are offering Green Guide for Kids readers 15% off their products. They have many neat ways to keep your lunch cool, clean and waste-free, such as an insulated lunch made from 100% recycled water bottles, a nesting trio of stainless steel containers, and a no-sweat ice pack that fits perfectly in the bags.
To get 15% off enter the coupon code: greenguide. Valid until 9/30/09.
A new book about being a vegetarian
Meet Tim Magner, Part 2
Meet Tim Magner, Author of AN ENVIRONMENTAL GUIDE FROM A TO Z
Just in time for Earth Day, we have a special interview with Tim Magner, the author and publisher at Green Sugar Press, whose books encourage kids to explore, examine and investigate the natural world around them. His book AN ENVIRONMENTAL GUIDE FROM A TO Z, provides 26 opportunities for kids to learn about the Earth they live on. From the Amazing Amazon to the Zoo, every letter explores a topic, idea or solution to better help kids comprehend and care for for the environment. Let's ask him a few questions!
What inspired you to write AN ENVIRONMENTAL GUIDE FROM A TO Z?
Patrick, one of my seventeen nephews, and now in 3rd grade, kept telling me about what he was learning in school—from the destruction of the rainforest to the struggling polar bears. He was sad. I chose to write a book about the wonders of the natural world and to encourage kids to get out and learn more about it by enjoying it.
What is you favorite letter in the book and why?
Can I have two? "L is for Lugari" is fun because I spent a couple weeks in Colombia visiting with Paolo Lugari and Gaviotas. Seeing firsthand how Lugari turned a wasteland into a new forest was over-the-top cool. I also love the "C is for Cycle" page, probably because I like conversations about how nature has no garbage dumps. When I visit classrooms I usually bring my worms and explain how they eat my left-overs and turn it into a valuable fertilizer for my plants.
Your book explores many different regions and people in the world. Why should a kid living in a city care about Mt. Kilimanjaro or the Inuit Eskimos?
Funny you should ask. Actually, I believe it's far more important they first know their backyards or nearby park than Africa or the Arctic. Learning about nature starts with the nearby and expands, so we included ideas to get out and learn more about what's around them, i.e. "Have you considered keeping a journal of your local habitat—to write about what you see, smell and hear?"
What is the single most important idea about the environment that you wish all kids knew?
Again, just one?
I want kids to know that exploring outside is loads of fun and, chances are their parents and grandparents got to have more fun than they did because they got to play outside often.
As John Burroughs said, "Knowledge without love will not stick, but begin with love and knowledge is sure to follow." So, once kids fall in love with the earth, they'll learn that we need nature for everything in life. Better yet, nature teaches us everything we need to know—from energy flows and nutrient cycles— to create a better future.
This is the most exciting time in the history of the world to be alive.