Saturday, January 19, 2019

YISS EcoSave FunFest Fundraiser

Over the past several months, the EcoSave club has carried out numerous lessons for different elementary classes.
On November 7th, the EcoSave Club achieved its first engagement with the YISS elementary school. In collaboration with Ms. Kelly Han and her kindergarten class, EcoSave members helped raise awareness among the younger generation on endangered species and habitat loss. The EcoSave club presented a lesson and a corresponding craft. The children’s artwork was then compiled into a poster that was later displayed in the school lobby.



In continuation with the teaching of elementary students, on March 16th, the EcoSave club worked with Ms. Kara Minor and her second grade class to raise awareness about global warming. Ms. Minor’s class had just finished a unit on weather, so the EcoSave club made sure to tie in this theme to the presentation for a comprehensive and engaging lesson. The children also completed a craft: groups were assigned different habitats to create with colored clay. The second grade students demonstrated great maturity and collaboration skill to construct beautiful artwork.


Finally, on May 18, the EcoSave club collaborated with Ms. Esther Stair to introduce her second grade class to the process of recycling. After giving a short presentation, the students participated in an activity involving trivia and “trashketball,” in which they had to sort a variety of different pieces of garbage into the correct container.





In October, the YISS EcoSave club fundraised at an event called Funfest to donate money to the WWF Tiger TX2. The game involved throwing a recyclable trash into the appropriate trash category (plastics, metal, paper, etc.)  








By Daniel Kim and the YISS EcoSave Club

Friday, January 4, 2019

Ocean Pollution Awareness Poem

The ocean is larger than any land we can inhabit, and it is beyond our scope of knowledge and private lives. Thus, it is convenient for us to search for excuses and isolate ourselves from the problem that we created for the ocean: our pollution. Yet, the ocean has always been a part of us and our world. As a result of our recklessness, we are actively killing 100 million marine animals per year and are also producing pesticides, oil spills, and metals such as mercury that end up affecting the marine animals that we end up consuming. As I have stated before, harming the ocean directly harms us. The ocean is indeed another tragedy of man’s mistakes and seems as if the harm we started is almost irreversible. However, the problem can be reversed.We only need not to lean on our own desire for comfort and convenience. Instead, we can take the initiative to prevent and reduce the harm we started. To that end, I offer a poem to highlight the ease in which these sentiments can be resolved by simply changing the way we look at things--that sometimes, it's simply a matter of thinking differently, positively, from the ground up. While this poem structure is by no means unique, I did feel it would be a poignant way to express the duality of thought involved.


Reverse Our Actions


The ocean is long gone!  
Don’t tell me that   
I can make a difference.  
Because after all
The ocean is dead, acidified with the Great Coral Reefs bleaching.
And I’m not reassured that
Bivalves and clams can build the calcium carbonate to build their shells
So I will remind myself that
the harm is irreversible
And we can not say that
Plastic bottles will be eradicated from our most precious resource
Because whatever effort we show
Oils spills like Deep Horizon and garbage stews like Pacific Trash Vortex will prevail
And it is not true that
The petroleum and fertilizers can be halted from running off the land now.
We can ponder that
the remedies for acoustic bleaching will succeed
Even though whales will still lose direction, with the loss of their primary sense of sound,
We will try to lie to ourselves, yet
There will be consequences
and don’t you know that when fish eats plastic,
We eat garbage that harms ourselves too?
So let’s stop dreaming of a false idea and believe that
The ocean can be saved.


By: Daniel Kim



Thursday, November 29, 2018

The Second Market Mango Bazaar

On November 28th, the Open Hands organization held the second Market Mango bazaar at Novotel hotel in Seoul.  Market Mango bazaar was established to help  the villagers of Calawis, Phillippines become financially independent.
Similar to the first bazaar, many different products such as mangos from Calawis farm, foods, various clothing, accessories, and perfumes were sold. And to better reflect the festive holiday spirit, the bazaare theme was named 'Merry Charity-Mas'.
Ecosave Club helped out the event by selling clothing and shoes. And  the fundraised money is all used to fund the Mango business in Calawis. We hope the Calawis villagers can get a job and financially independent through the Mango Farm Village Independence Project.





 

Sunday, October 28, 2018

ES Edible Bugs Workshop

On September 19th, the Ecosave Club got a great opportunity to teach Korean elementary students about the possibility of edible bugs as our future food and their benefits. The workshop was very successful and it felt great to see the little kids having fun with bugs.




by Ji Won Cindy Kim

Thursday, August 30, 2018

Beat Plastic Pollution

Beat Plastic Pollution
Plastic pollution has become an epidemic. Every year, we throw away enough plastic to circle the Earth four times. Much of that waste doesn’t make it into a landfill, but instead ends up in our oceans, where it’s responsible for killing one million seabirds and 100,000 marine mammals every year. For the good of the planet, it’s time to rethink how we use plastic. Read on to get the facts and learn how you can beat plastic pollution.

 
http://worldenvironmentday.global/en/news

Sunday, July 8, 2018

Hawaii bans sunscreens harmful to marine life

Sunscreens containing chemical substances harmful to coral reefs will be banned in the US state of Hawaii from 2021, US local media reported Wednesday.

Hawaii Gov. David Ige signed the legislation on Tuesday, making Hawaii the first state in the US to ban the sale, distribution and use of sunscreens that contain the chemicals oxybenzone and octinoxate.

The bill states, “Oxybenzone and octinoxate cause mortality in developing coral; increase coral bleaching that indicates extreme stress, even at temperatures below 87.8 degrees Fahrenheit; and cause genetic damage to coral and other marine organisms.”

Chemicals such as oxybenzone and octinoxate that block skin exposure to ultraviolet rays are severely harmful to coral, according to nonprofit organization Haereticus Environmental Laboratory.

Observations by the journal “Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology,” say that sunscreens are accountable for 1.4 ton of toxic substance that flow into coral reefs every year around the world.

Gov. Ige said regarding the bill, “This is just one small step toward protecting and restoring the resiliency of Hawaii’s reefs.” The bill recognizes exceptions for people who are prescribed the sunscreens for medical needs.

The sunscreens to be banned in Hawaii account for 70 percent of the sunscreens distributed in the US market, according to US media.


written by Lim Jeongyeo (korea herald)
http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20180705000498&ACE_SEARCH=1