Archive for the ‘Green’ Category

Green Drinks Brisbane: what it is not

In some ways it may be easier to describe Green Drinks Brisbane by clarifying what it is not:

  • Green Drinks Brisbane is not a networking event. Sure, everyone is there to meet other people (and most people at the event seem to work/study in the ‘green collar’ spectrum of things), but the vibe is quite relaxed. ‘Networking’ definitely occurs at the event, but the mood is chilled, and people appear interested in holding genuine conversations with the others that they meet. I am thankful for this, as I loathe the sharky, self-interested vibe of certain ‘networking events’ that I have been to in the past. Participants of Green Drinks Brisbane face no risk of paper cuts from business cards being thrust into unsuspecting hands.
  • Green Drinks Brisbane is not a political gathering. Certainly, the politics of environmentalism and sustainability are discussed in various conversations across the night, but that is just part of the territory. The decentralised nature of the night means that the group will never come to broad consensus on anything, as there are always a dozen discussions occurring at once.
  • Green Drinks in itself will not solve our problems of sustainability. Green Drinks is about introducing people and starting conversations. Great things may come out of the relationships that form at Green Drinks, but they will not necessarily happen on the night. Green Drinks is simply a catalyst.

Green Drinks Brisbane October 2009 03 - me on the far right
Photo credit: Gordon Curtis

Green Drinks won’t provide the answer to our sustainability challenges, but it is a great place to start. I have great faith in the serendipity that can come from a critical mass of motivated people getting together in the one place. The number of times I have heard green drinkers say things like “oh, so you are interested in ……..? You should really talk to ……..” is amazing.

If you have any interest in environmentalism, sustainability or related areas, you owe it to yourself to be a part of Green Drinks. Check out the greendrinks.org and search for your city. If your city is listed, join the mailing list. If your city is not listed, it is up to you to start your own event!

Green Drinks Brisbane: principles and practices

These are my personal extensions to some points from the ‘Green Drinks code‘ as listed on the international website.

Barring a 30 second speech on the first night, I have kept the events uninterrupted by announcements of any kind. There are plenty of ‘seminar’-type events where people can join an audience and listen to guest speakers. Those events are great and I regularly attend them, but I also like the idea of serendipitous, agenda-free conversations. To me, Green Drinks should be free-form and purely driven by the interactions of participants.

Green Drinks Brisbane October 2009 02
Photo credit: Gordon Curtis

There is no entrance fee to Green Drinks Brisbane. I am quite against ‘networking’-type events where participants need to pay money for the privilege of entering. I think organisations hosting such events should review their cost-structures and reconsider the benefits that might come their way if they instead provided their functions for free as gestures of goodwill to the community. Thankfully there are plenty of great events in Brisbane that do not charge people for wanting to attend.

I am also determined to maintain the independence of the event. Green Drinks Brisbane will never be ‘presented by’, ‘sponsored by’ or ‘affiliated with’ any organisation. Heck, I don’t even list my name on the official webpage, so this is not even a vanity exercise for me. It is a labour of love; a community service that stands as its own entity without needing the affiliation of any other group. Green Drinks Brisbane just exists.

Green Drinks Brisbane: now in its second year

It’s coming up to the 12 month anniversary of the establishment of Green Drinks Brisbane, so I thought I should publish some insights into the event.

Green Drinks is one of the simplest and best ideas there is. It is a regular night where people interested in sustainability, environmentalism and similar topics meet at a bar and talk to each other over drinks.

Green Drinks Brisbane logo

Green Drinks happen in hundreds of cities internationally, and are extremely decentralised and localised. Each city’s event is organised by a local resident who is super-enthusiastic about the idea of starting a Green Drinks event in their region. I can only speak from my experiences at Green Drinks Brisbane, but I’m sure the characteristics of the cultures, climates and venues from all around the world lead to very different events.

Initially helped by the like-minded Holly and Morgan, I soon became the sole organiser of Green Drinks Brisbane. Being the coordinator is an easy gig, but also a very rewarding one. As an organiser you just need to make sure the bar is booked, make sure the reminder emails go out on time, and make sure to be the first person at the bar on the night. Other jobs crop up, such as collating a ‘contact details sheet’, organising dorky name tags/stickers for attendees and creating event listings on social networking sites, but these chores are easily handled. Sure beats spending the evenings watching ‘Deal or No Deal’!

Green Drinks Brisbane October 2009 01 - me on the far right
Photo credit: Gordon Curtis

Getting the event started out took some time, effort and tenacity; as I was keen to attract as many people from as many organisations around Brisbane. This ambition meant scouring the internet for people and companies that I could invite – exhibitor listings at events like Greenfest were a great starting place. It was worthwhile casting a wide net, as the event feels like an ‘open’ night that is not dominated by cliques of individuals from certain groups.

Normally at least a third of attendees are first-timers, which adds a great freshness to the evenings, and stops things from becoming too familiar. There seems to be an unwritten rule to regularly circle the room and talk to people that you have never spoken to before!

Green Drinks Brisbane October 2009 04
Photo credit: Gordon Curtis

One of the most positive things about attending the events is gaining insight into the range of people that are concerned about environmental sustainability in the modern context. They are certainly not the ‘long-haired hippies’ that envrionmentalists were painted as through outdated stereotypes. The event attracts people from fields as diverse as architecture, engineering, financial planning, fashion, town planning, politics, marketing, science, and many more. Cross-pollination is great, especially when it happens with interesting people who are doing things to address a problem.

It is great to look around the room to see dozens of people in conversation and think “these people may never have met each other if it wasn’t for this event.” I couldn’t be happier about the way the events have turned out so far, and will keep organising them well into the foreseeable future.

Green tips #4: report a smoky vehicle

I thought I’d share a handy link that seems to be unknown by most members of the community. Queensland Transport allows people to report vehicles that are producing excessive amounts of smoke into the air.


Photo credit: infocog.

Simply go to this section of the Queensland Transport website and enter the licence plate of the car/truck, along with other details such as the date and time seen and a description of the vehicle. It helps to jot down these details onto a notepad/into a text message at the time that you spot the vehicle.

I’m sure other states and countries have similar schemes. It is a simple and easy way to force inefficient, polluting vehicles off the road and into the mechanic’s garage for a tune-up.

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Green tips #3: start a worm farm

Kitchen scraps...aka worm food
Kitchen scraps…aka worm food

One of the most direct ways you can reduce the waste stream is to compost organic waste at your home. With around half the average household waste being organic matter (food scraps), the benefits of composting are multiple:

  • households become less reliant on centralised dumps
  • councils reduce the continuous expense of hauling waste in rubbish trucks.
  • organic matter is steadily broken down in a controlled, small-scale fashion – rather than the anaerobic, toxic decomposition that happens in landfill.
  • households create a new source of soil-enriching fertiliser, which is continuously produced for free on-site.

In the past I have used traditional compost heaps, but for the past year I have been using a commercial worm farm system. I have been very impressed by the quick and odourless way that a box filled with thousands of worms can digest its way through food scraps, compared to the slower method of compost heaping.

Stuart's worm farm

How worm farming works:

The worm farm is essentially a small ecosystem, needing only the input of food scraps to sustain it. The unit is split into several trays, which are snugly stacked on top of each other.

Stuart's worm farm - top trayStuart's worm farm - middle trayStuart's worm farm - bottom tray
Lid removed showing the three trays of the worm farm unit

The floor of each tray contains a grid-like array of holes that allow the worms to freely migrate between the different levels of the worm farm. Typically, the worms will base themselves in the bottom layer of the unit, where they apparently spend most of their time. This is where they reproduce and lay eggs. When they become hungry, the worms will migrate to the upper layers of the unit, where their food is placed.

Each layer of food scraps becomes increasingly composted as it remains in the system. The worms will digest and re-digest the food multiple times, leaving their ‘castings’ (faeces) behind. After enough passes through the digestive system of the worm, the scraps become transformed into a rich soil high in organic matter – compost! This soil is removed from the system from the bottom tray, and the cycle continues with new matter being added to the upper trays.

Stuart's worm farm - bottom trayStuart's worm farm - bottom tray
Increasingly digested worm castings in the middle and bottom trays

I must mention how efficient these little decomposers are. I have had my worm farm for more than 12 months, and have continuously introduced fruit and vegetable scraps to the system. Despite the many kilograms of waste that I have fed my worms, I have not once had to remove any solid compost from the system. The only chore that is involved with operating my work farm is draining the excess liquid from the bottom of the system about once per month (there is a tap provided for this purpose). The ‘worm tea’ that comes from this tap makes an excellent fertilizer, and in fact is so concentrated that it must be heavily diluted before being applied to the garden. This worm tea contains a rich array of microbes, and is one of the best ways to add nutrients to a garden.

Stuart's worm farm - draining the worm tea into a bucketStuart's worm farm - draining the worm tea into a bucket
Draining the ‘worm tea’ from the worm farm unit’s tap

Contrary to popular conception, your worm farm will produce no odours. My system is located around three metres from the front door of my house. If I did not have the luxury of our large house and block of land, I would be happy to place the worm farm inside my house! Having said this, it is important not to add meat or dairy to the worm farm. Whilst the worms will compost meat and dairy (they are organic, after all), it will be a long and smelly process compared to the way that plant matter (fruit and veg, grains, cardboard, paper, etc) is broken down.

Besides the broader environmental, financial and societal benefits of worm farming, the entire process is also personally rewarding for the worm farmer. It is amazing to think of the volume of waste that can seemingly be reduced to zero by the biological activity of these organisms alone. The worms will digest and re-digest the food, until every possible nutrient has been unlocked and used. I see this as an analogy to the way that humanity must now look at the world; an antidote to our current ‘extract and dump’ economy. The experience of interacting with my personal ecosystem of decomposers is a fascinating and humbling experience.

Handful of worms

In my opinion composting should be subsidised by local councils, with free composter units given to households in honour of the logistical benefits they will bring to the local sanitation department. I think that there should also be disincentives for the wasteful status quo of households putting food scraps and lawn clippings into their rubbish bins. Bin sizes should be reduced so that residents take the time to consider the bulk of material that they send ‘out of sight, out of mind’ to the dump.

Convinced? How to get started:

Home worm farm units can be purchased new for around AUD$80. There also appears to be a strong second hand market through agencies like eBay. After months of patience, I managed to pick up a set of three worm farms for around AUD$100, which was a very good deal. There are also many great DIY resources available on the internet that explain how to construct worm farms/compost systems from bought materials.

To start your worm farm, you will need at least 1,000 worms, which can be bought as ‘starter kits’ from hardware stores and nurseries for around AUD$30-50. Note that you must only use these ‘composting’-type species (e.g. ‘tiger worms’) in your worm farms. Other worm species, such as the common earthworm have a great place aerating the soil around the garden, but are nowhere near as quick at composting food as the ‘red wigglers’ that worm farmers use.

So instead of asking for the usual round of consumer goods for your Christmas present this year, why not take a side-step and set your sights on a worm farm.

Update 24 June 2010: some of my expanded thoughts on worm farming can be found here. Another short article of interest is about using worm farms for document destruction.

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Power plant lamington drive

Part of Nature coal plant lamington drive

Don’t believe the crocodile tears of the coal industry, nor anyone else with a vested interest in status quo. These dinosaurs have had a cruisy, subsidised ride for far too long and are responsible for many toxic and deleterious side-effects. They should be forced to compete on fair terms with the cleaner alternatives that are comparatively starved of government assistance. As Dr Karl says, “When was the last time you saw a coal plant having a lamington drive?”.

Our economy is flexible, and society will benefit as we transition away from coal, and towards renewables.

The above image was drawn for, but cast-aside from my newest cartoon ‘Part of Nature‘.