[OKC] From the Green Lantern: Smells Like Green Spirit
KJones at ODOT.ORG
KJones at ODOT.ORG
Wed Sep 15 12:23:05 PDT 2010
There was a time that eculyptus was used and probably in someplaces still
is for floral air freshner. They're natural and can be rejuvenated by
scrunching them a bit after the smell dies down. Can last for sometime a
month. Fresh is best and floral shops should have them. Soy candles
also could be helpful with natural oil scents. Lavender in bed pillows or
as a sachet. Cedar blocks of wood good too.
Kendra Jones
okc-request at sustainableokc.org
Sent by: okc-bounces at sustainableokc.org
09/15/2010 02:00 PM
Please respond to
okc at sustainableokc.org
To
okc at sustainableokc.org
cc
Subject
OKC Digest, Vol 62, Issue 12
Send OKC mailing list submissions to
okc at sustainableokc.org
To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
http://www.sustainableokc.org/mailman/listinfo/okc
or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
okc-request at sustainableokc.org
You can reach the person managing the list at
okc-owner at sustainableokc.org
When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific
than "Re: Contents of OKC digest..."
Today's Topics:
1. From the Green Lantern: Smells Like Green Spirit (Miles, Karen)
----- Message from "Miles, Karen" <karen.miles at deq.ok.gov> on Wed, 15 Sep
2010 09:41:29 -0500 -----
To:
undisclosed-recipients:;
Subject:
[OKC] From the Green Lantern: Smells Like Green Spirit
Smells Like Green Spirit
Are air fresheners bad for the environment?
By Brian Palmer
Is air freshener earth-friendly? I like having air fresheners around the
house, but the other day it occurred to me that I don't know what exactly
they're puffing into my living room. Am I despoiling the planet by
freshening my air?
Air fresheners seem to occupy a special place, along with Hummers and
offshore drilling, in the environmentalist's doghouse. Maybe it's the
synthetic smell or the phony alpine meadow on the packaging. But the
Lantern suspects people have never gotten over the chlorofluorocarbon
crisis of the 1970s and '80s.
Americans fell for the flowery goodness of canned aerosol air fresheners
in 1956, when the S.C. Johnson Co. first released Glade. (It was a big
year for aerosols. The company rolled out Raid insecticide around the same
time.) The magic ingredients in the aerosols were chlorofluorocarbons, or
CFCs. These propellants are nontoxic, unlikely to explode, and don't react
with other ingredients. Then two chemists published a paper in 1974
showing that CFCs could break up ozone molecules, which protect us from
ultraviolet light. In 1985, scientists confirmed the breakdown of ozone in
the stratosphere, and over the next seven years most countries agreed to
phase the chemical out. (Check out the Green Lantern's full update on the
ozone layer.)
While manufacturers quickly developed CFC-free aerosols, the public soured
on spray cans. Companies have since developed alternative ways to perfume
your living room, most of which rely on some form of automated delivery
system. The most common use heat to evaporate the fragrance or fans to
disperse it.
Does the new generation deserve a clean bill of environmental health?
Article continues at: Smells Like Green Spirit
_______________________________________________
To unsubscribe or change to regular delivery mode:
http://www.sustainableokc.org/mailman/listinfo/okc
Go to the bottom of the website, enter your email address, and then edit
your options.
To subscribe:
http://www.sustainableokc.org/mailman/listinfo/okc
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.sustainableokc.org/pipermail/okc-sustainableokc.org/attachments/20100915/bfa409d4/attachment-0001.htm>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: not available
Type: image/gif
Size: 2310 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.sustainableokc.org/pipermail/okc-sustainableokc.org/attachments/20100915/bfa409d4/attachment-0001.gif>
More information about the OKC
mailing list