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Thanks to Everyone Who Visited Us at The Home Show!

posted by EnviroWise Expert    |   April 4, 2012 07:29

Well we survived another year at the Home Show.  Ha! Ha!  It's a lot of work and long hours but it's great to see all our old friends stopping by to say Hi! and it is really great to meet so many new ones!  Hope everyone gets by the store after trying out their samples and make sure you remember your special discount card we handed out at the show!

EnviroWash continues to be our Number 1 selling product and this awesome laundry powder is very impressive to the end users for both it's effectiveness and it's cost effeciency for your pocket book.  EnviroWash is available in both scented and unscented varieties and is HE compatible.  If you haven't tried it out yet make sure you stop by the store and get a free sample.  We believe in our product that much - we let you try it before you have to buy it!!  And our laundry soap is also hypoallergenic and we have many customers with serious skin issues that can not use anything but our soap without a reaction! 

So stop in today and check out our full line of cleaning supplies made right here in Saskatoon - and keep that carbon footprint low!!

Hope everyone has an excellent Easter holiday weekend.

 

 

 

 

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Earth Hour is Tomorrow!

posted by EnviroWise Expert    |   March 30, 2012 13:22

Earth Hour 2012 is almost here! Tomorrow between 8:30PM – 9:30PM (local time), make sure you switch off your lights to show your commitment to the fight against climate change.

Earth Hour has done a lot to raise awareness about climate change issues. But there’s more to it than switching off lights for one hour once a year. It’s all about giving people, like you, a voice and working together to create a better future for our planet. It has ushered in a new era with participants going beyond the hour to commit to lasting action for the planet. Without a doubt, it’s shown how great things can be achieved when people come together for a common cause.

Earth Hour is organized by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF). Earth Hour started in 2007 in Sydney, Australia when 2.2 million individuals and more than 2,000 businesses turned their lights off for one hour to take a stand against climate change. It showed that everyone, from children to CEOs and politicians, has the power to change the world we live in.

In 2008, the plan was to spread Earth Hour to the rest of Australia but there was an appetite to expand the movement beyond that country’s borders. Canada’s own City of Toronto was the first to sign up and it wasn’t long before 35 countries and almost 400 cities and towns followed suit. It said something compelling to the world: that the climate challenges facing our planet are so significant that change needs to be global.

With the invitation to ‘switch off’ extended to everyone, WWF’s Earth Hour quickly became an annual global event. It’s scheduled on the last Saturday of every March – closely coinciding with the equinox to ensure most cities are in darkness as it rolls out around the Earth.

 

For more information go to:  http://earthhour.wwf.ca/earthhour/index.html

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HAPPY NEW YEAR!!

posted by EnviroWise Expert    |   December 28, 2011 20:38

 

 

May all the joys of the season be with you and your family through this holiday season.

Open Regular Business Hours 10 am to 6 pm through Friday, December 30th.

Closing early on Saturday, December 31st - Open 10 am to 4 pm.

Closed on January 1st and 2nd.

We will be open again Tuesday January 3rd with regular business hours!

We apologize for any inconvenience these changes to our hours may cause our valued customers!

 

Again - all the best in the new year!!

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To You And Yours ... From Us And Ours!!

posted by EnviroWise Expert    |   December 21, 2011 22:29

May all the joys of the season be with you and your family through this holiday season.

Our store will be CLOSED on Dec 24th, 25th and 26st.

Open Regular Business Hours 10 am to 6 pm Tuesday, December 27th through Friday, December 30th.

Closing early on Saturday, December 31st - Open 10 am to 4 pm.

Closed on January 1.

We will be open again Monday January 2nd with regular business hours!

 

We apologize for any inconvenience these changes to our hours may cause our valued customers!

 

Again - have a very Merry Christmas and all the best in the new year!!

 

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IT'S OUR THIRD ANNIVERSARY!!!

posted by EnviroWise Expert    |   October 26, 2011 18:41

That's right!!  It's amazing!!  How the time flies.  It seems like yesterday when we opened our doors to share our household product lines with the Saskatoon marketplace and yet here we are completing our 3rd year in business and walking into our 4th!! Thank you for supporting us and letting us expand our product lines to offer you even more throughout the past years!!

Thank you to all our customers that have allowed us the privilege to serve you!  We do appreciate the opportunity!  We love having you stop by for a visit and helping you with all of your cleaning challenges, and are pleased that many of our customers are also now our friends!

As a Special Thank You in honor of our 3rd Anniversary for the month of November we have a special bonus for you. When you purchase a 2 KG or larger size of EnviroWash Laundry Detergent we will give you a 250 ml of our Stains Free stain remover FREE! Not valid with any other special offers or discounts.  That's right ... you buy our number 1 selling laundry soap that is available in scented or unscented varieties - Hypo-Allergenic for all those with skin irritation issues - and we throw in a bottle of our fabulous organic stain remover.  Stains Free is ideal for pre-spotting organic stains such as blood, coffee, smoke, urine, red wine and more. Virtually scent free and 100% biodegradable, this product also sanitizes as it cleans. For all of those unexpected messes, Stain Free is here to help!  Use on carpet, car interiors, and laundry!  

Stop in and see us for all your cleaning product needs and let your cleaning products start working harder than you have to today!!

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Hey We're Part of TrustedSaskatoon.com Now!!!

posted by EnviroWise Expert    |   October 5, 2011 21:02

Why Trusted Canada?

It seems that everyone these days in the City of Bridges is so busy with life, family, work and a million other commitments. When a need arises for a product or service and you can’t think who to contact where do you turn? Perhaps the business you select randomly yourself or find in other ways lets you down and does a bad job....living in a rapidly growing City like Saskatoon can present it's challenges ....with new businesses springing up all the time and existing businesses getting busier standards can suffer.

Trusted is here to save you time, save you hassle, save you money and do the research for you...all the business on this site are contracted to uphold the 5 TRUSTED GUARANTEES.


TRUSTED GUARANTEES

  1. Provide the service and quality promised.
  2. Complete the job on time.
  3. Charge the price quoted with NO surprises.
  4. Communicate honestly and be responsive to customer needs.
  5. Resolve any issues with customer satisfaction in mind.

How we select Trusted Businesses

  • We research businesses that have a reputation for quality driven excellence in the Saskatoon market.
  • We check various reference sources.
  • We randomly survey clients provided by the businesses.
  • We ensure any required licenses and insurance are up to date.

How we maintain and monitor Trusted Businesses

  • All of the above is re-checked and verified on an annual basis.
  • Trusted has a 'Mystery Shopper program' where we guarantee a minimum 10% of the Trusted businesses on the site will be randomly 'shopped' throughout the year, this is to ensure that the trusted standards and the 5 Trusted guarantees are upheld.
  • If a Trusted business does not uphold the TRUSTED GUARANTEES they will be removed immediately from the site.


TrustedSaskatoon.com - a site worth checking out when you want to know more about the companies you plan to deal with. And we are very excited and pleased to be a part of the TrustedSaskatoon family!

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Interesting Concept

posted by EnviroWise Expert    |   September 18, 2011 10:49

Seawater Greenhouses Produce Tomatoes in the Desert

by Renee Cho

According to the World Health Organization, about 20 percent of the world’s people live in regions that don’t have enough water for their needs. With the global population increasing by 80 million each year, a third of the planet will likely face water shortages by 2025. This looming water crisis is inextricably linked to food production because agriculture accounts for 70 percent of all fresh water used, and obtaining irrigation water in arid regions has serious environmental impacts. Drilling wells can deplete groundwater, and desalination is energy-intensive and leaves behind concentrated brine.

The Seawater Greenhouse, however, provides what may be an economical and sustainable way of producing fresh water and crops in hot, dry regions near the ocean. Marco Goldschmied, President of the Royal Institute of British Architects, said in 2000,“The Seawater Greenhouse is a truly original idea which has the potential to impact on the lives of millions of people living in water-starved areas around the world.”

Photo credit: World Bank Photo Collection

A seawater greenhouse produces crops year-round in hot dry areas using only seawater and sunlight. Tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, lettuce, strawberries, herbs—anything that can be grown in traditional greenhouses—can be grown in seawater greenhouses. The award-winning technology, invented by Seawater Greenhouse Ltd. founder Charlie Paton, was inspired by the natural water cycle where seawater heated by the sun evaporates, cools to form clouds, and returns to earth as precipitation.

The humidification and de-humidification that result from differences in temperature between surfaces heated by the sun and cold water from the sea are the keys to the seawater greenhouse system.

Photo credit: Seawater Greenhouse Ltd.

Seawater is pumped into pipes in the greenhouse and is trickled down over the first evaporator, a large spongy honeycomb-like surface. As air is drawn through the honeycomb and into the greenhouse by fans, it is cooled by the seawater and becomes more humid. The cool humid air creates favorable growing conditions for the greenhouse crops. At the back of the greenhouse, the cool air is drawn through a second evaporator containing seawater that has been heated by the sun in the ceiling pipes. The air then becomes hot and humid to the saturation point. When the hot humid air meets an array of vertical pipes containing cold seawater, fresh water condenses (just like hot steamy air in your shower condenses on the cooler mirror and tile surfaces). The fresh pure water is then piped to a storage container and used to irrigate the crops.

The sustainable system is clean, efficient, and elegant in its design. The greenhouse control system, pumps and fans are powered by electricity produced completely by solar power. The honeycomb evaporator filters out pollen and pests that are killed by the saline water so the greenhouse doesn’t need much pesticide. Nutrients harvested from the brine are pumped back into the irrigation system to fertilize the crops, and the rest of the salt is made into gourmet salt crystals that Seawater Greenhouse Ltd. sells.

Because the greenhouse produces its own fresh water, and uses no fossil fuels or pesticides, its operating costs are 10 to 25 percent less than those of a traditional greenhouse. Its fixed costs are 10 to 15 percent less because it doesn’t need to purchase cooling, heating, or desalination equipment, and because it is usually built on cheap land where little can grow.

Seawater greenhouse technology works best in arid regions by the sea, and near consumer markets so crops can be easily transported.  Areas of Europe such as Crete, France, Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain; California and Mexico in North America; large parts of China, India, Pakistan and Turkey in Asia; and much of Australia, the Middle East and northern Africa, are good candidates for seawater greenhouse projects.

The seawater greenhouse concept was first developed in 1991 by Light Works Ltd. in the UK. A successful pilot project on Tenerife in the Canary Islands in 1992 led to research projects on Al-Aryam Island in Abu Dhabi and Muscat, Oman. In 2005 Seawater Greenhouse began collaborating with the architects Nicholas Grimshaw & Partners on the harbor redevelopment of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, exploring the use of its technology to cool a more urban environment. They are designing the 1.9-mile promenade, botanic garden, and Water Theatre using some of the same principles to produce fresh water and cooling.

Photo credit: Port Augusta greenhouse, Seawater Greenhouse Ltd.

In 2009, private investors backed the first commercial Seawater Greenhouse in Port Augusta, South Australia. The 2,000-square-meter structure, which draws seawater from the Spencer Gulf, is capable of producing 100,000 kilos of tomatoes each year. The excess fresh water it produces will be used to grow citrus plants outdoors. The Port Augusta greenhouse, which cost $2 million, produced its first crop of tomatoes in December.

This January, water-scarce Jordan and Norway joined forces on the Sahara Forest Project, a 200,000-square-meter demonstration center near Aqaba on the Red Sea that will produce fresh water, food, energy, and sustainable biomass. The project is being developed by London-based Seawater Greenhouse, Max Fordham Consulting Engineers, and Exploration Architecture, and the Bellona Foundation, a Norwegian environmental NGO.

The Sahara Forest Project will use water from the Red Sea in seawater greenhouses to produce fresh water for the crops and grow algae in open ponds for fuel and food. The project will also grow halophytes, plants tolerant of salty conditions, that have potential to be an energy crop. Because each 10,000 square meters of seawater greenhouse evaporates 50 tons of water daily, the greenhouse will help restore vegetation on the surrounding arid land through ventilating the “lost” humidity to create a cooler and more humid micro-climate downwind of the greenhouse. The “lost” humidity will also increase the chance for precipitation in the area. The algae, crops and other plants will sequester carbon dioxide from the air. Extra fresh water produced by the seawater greenhouse will be heated by a concentrated solar power plant (CSP), generating steam that will turn a turbine to produce electricity. The CSP’s excess heat will be used to desalinate seawater for drinking water. A single Sahara Forest Project facility with 50 MW of concentrated solar power and 50 hectares of seawater greenhouses would produce 34,000 tons of produce, employ over 800 people, export 155 GWh of electricity and sequester more than 1,500 tons of CO2 each year. If the demonstration project is successful, Aqaba will provide 200 hectares for a larger scale facility.

Photo credit: The Sahara Forest Project Foundation / Screenergy

Construction on the demonstration center will start in 2012, with the commercial scale development scheduled to begin in 2015.  The creators are planning a large-scale commercial facility comprised of a 10-million-square-meter area of seawater greenhouses, CSP towers, orchards, native species such as Jatropha for biofuel, and a desalination facility.

“The Sahara Forest Project is a fiercely ambitious effort…but ambitious is exactly what we must be,” said Bellona’s president, Frederic Hauge. “A critical prerequisite for solving both the climate crisis and the world’s food problem is to enable developing countries to produce their own food, their own water, and their own clean energy…”

 

Reprinted from http://blogs.ei.columbia.edu

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Folk Fest All Over For Another Year!

posted by EnviroWise Expert    |   August 23, 2011 21:32

Well it's all over and what a great weekend it was! 

Congratualtions to all the organizers of each and every pavillion and a special thanks who make each pavallion a reality - and the event the true success it is each and every year!

We are back at the store and in full gear - caught up on our sleep - sort of - and ready to help you with any of your needs.  If you managed to stop by our booth at the India Pavillion during the Folk Fest make sure you stop back by the store and use your discount card.  And make sure you try out that sample of our EnviroWash we handed out - it is our best seller for a reason!

Anyway - hope to see you pop into the store and wander through and see our full line up of products as we only brought select items to the show with us.

 

 

 

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Check us out at Folk Fest - Our booth is in the India Pavillion!

posted by EnviroWise Expert    |   August 13, 2011 10:33

Yes we will be back in the India Pavillion during Folk Fest again this coming week! The pavillion is located at Walter Murray Collegiate, 1905 Preston Ave, the same location as it was in last year.

Folkfest 2011 - August 18 ~ 20, 2011

FOR THREE DAYS EVERY YEAR, Saskatoon comes alive with the sights, sounds and tastes of our ethnic heritage. Thousands of volunteers contribute hundreds of hours to ensure your visit to each pavilion is a great experience. Performers of all ages, combined with exquisite artisans, global merchants, talented cooks, and enthusiastic servers, are proud to share their unique culture with you. Join us to become part of the cultural heartbeat of Saskatoon!

THE FOLKFEST PASSPORT is still your best entertainment value over the summer! You can visit any of the pavilions as often as you wish, and stay as long as you want. Passports are $14.00 including GST. Children ages 12 and under are admitted FREE, if accompanied by an adult. A Folkfest passport is also your "ticket to ride" - free of charge - on special Folkfest buses!  For More Information go to : http://www.saskatoonfolkfest.ca/home

We will have some featured products available for sale at special pricing at our booth in the India Pavillion only - make sure you stop by while making the rounds!

http://www.iccasaskatoon.ca/folkfest/

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4 Ways To Recycle Water

posted by EnviroWise Expert    |   July 29, 2011 22:20

According to the National Climatic Data Center, about 25 percent of the contiguous U.S. fell in the moderate to extreme drought categories (based on the Palmer Drought Index) at the end of April 2011.

Water rationing is common in the more arid regions of the United States during the summer months, which can make it difficult to maintain a healthy garden and lawn. Despite widespread flooding in some states, it’s likely that water conservation will become mandatory again this year.

Reusing wastewater is an easy way to conserve water and shrink your water footprint. There are lots of stylish ways to recycle water, but most of these involve fixtures that are too expensive for the average family. Try these practical tips instead:

Please note that there are two kids of wastewater; black water (water that contains fecal matter, urine, or heavy chemicals) and grey water (water generated from precipitation or domestic activities such as laundry, dishwashing, and bathing). Grey water can be reused but black water can’t. This is very important for your health!

Before you can recycle water, you’ve got to harvest it. There are many ways to do this, but some of the simplest are:

1. Bring a bucket into the shower with you when you bathe. If you’ve got room, bring two. You might be surprised at how much reuseable water you rescue from the drain. If your shower’s too small for buckets, just plug the drain.

2. Utilize a rain harvesting system to capture the free precipitation that falls from the sky. Make sure this catchment device is properly covered so bugs and debris don’t go for a swim.

3. Wash dishes or clothes by hand in a drainless tub or container. As long as you use non-toxic soaps, this water can be reused safely.

Now that you’ve got your water, it’s time to use it:

1. Water house plants or lawn

2. Water your flower beds or garden (only the cleanest grey water, aka rain water, should be used this way. If you use a toxic cleaning agent, don’t put it on your veggies.

3. Use it to manually fill your washing machine or flush your toilet.

 

Reprinted from  http://insteading.com

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