Columnists

March 27, 2009

3 great things to come from Earth Hour 2009

Eastern Bluebird

Eastern Bluebird

I was thinking about Earth Hour on the way home from work last night. It was around 7:30 p.m. and, as usual, lights were on in closed shops, office towers and picture windows everywhere. I thought a little about the benefits of having a darker night. Here are a few; let me know if you can think of others.

1. Fewer birds will die. I know that Toronto’s mayor, David Miller, encourages office towers to turn off the lights at night with the Lights Out program. The problem: When lights are on in a building, birds see the rooms inside as open spaces to fly into. Since many bird populations are in serious decline, it would be great if we could help more of them survive. Here’s a Homemakers story on building birdhouses for native songbirds.

2. You can get a better night’s sleep. Ambient light from street lights and other sources keeps us from sleeping deeply. In our new house, my partner and I use blackout cloth behind our bedroom curtains to block out the street light’s orange glow.

3. Star gazing. I used to have a great piece of software called MPj Astro. Fabulous for the mid ’90s, it would show you the night sky for your location, in whatever direction you wanted to look, and label whatever you liked. These days I could really only use it to find out what’s there, behind a wall of light. But I think I’ll see if I can find it and load it on my machine before Earth Hour — a window of an opportunity to try it out again.

What other fringe benefits are you expecting from Earth Hour?

Tags: , , , , , ,
Author(s):
Jessica Ross
Updated:
1:01 pm
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March 26, 2009

A landmark Earth Hour

sphinx at nightI’m getting really excited about all of the lights out statements happening around the world for Earth Hour (this Saturday night at 8:30, whatever your time zone). Positioned as an opportunity to tell global leaders that people want to tackle climate change, I think that, with some of the major statements planned, this will be a landmark year. Lights are going out on the Sphinx and Great Pyramids of Giza, the Golden Gate Bridge, the Eiffel Tower, the Sydney Opera House, the Acropolis in Greece, the CN Tower — even the Las Vegas strip!

While reading up about the event, I’ve found out about a few related contests:

World Wildlife Federation, which runs Earth Hour, is offering a chance to win a trip for two to visit the polar bears in Churchill, Manitoba. To enter, just register with their Earth Hour site.

For Toronto dwellers, there’s the “How Low Can We Go, T.O.?” contest, a chance to win an “Earth Hour Conservation Pack.”

Canon Canada’s Nurture Nature Awards are open for entries starting on Earth Hour. Just submit a proposal consisting of a short video and a brief written plan on how you intend to positively impact a threatened habitat in your area. Each winner gets a cash award of $20,000 to fund their project, as well as a Canon digital SLR camera and a Canon video camera so they can document their progress and the final results of their project. The contest closes on Sept. 1, 2009.

Tags: , ,
Author(s):
Jessica Ross
Updated:
11:19 am
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