Native Garden Tour This Sunday in Oak Park & River Forest

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The news is full of scary stories about disappearing species and shrinking biodiversity. But YOU can help solve this problem by simply planting a few seeds in your yard or community garden that can support beautiful and beneficial wildlife. It's super easy to do, and we've put together an exciting garden tour to teach you. Join us for the Birds, Bees & Butterflies: A Native Garden Tour in Oak Park and River Forest this Sunday, Sept. 7 from 2 to 5:30 p.m.  West Cook Wild Ones and Green Community Connections cordially invite you to tour this carefully curated group of 11 private and public gardens. You'll learn how to get started, mix native plants with traditional ones, build a rain garden or even replace your lawn entirely.

For a taste, see brief descriptions of the gardens on the tour.  Learn more about the tour and register now.

As in this video, at each tour stop, the gardener or a plant expert will lead you through the garden and teach you more about the beauty and benefits of native plants.

Tour Details

Sunday, Sept. 7

2-4:30 pm Tour: guided bike tour (space limited) or self-paced tour by bike or car

4-5:30 pm Native Garden Fair at Forest Preserve District of Cook County General Headquarters

Suggested donation is $7 for adults. Children welcome - and we've planned special activities at the fair for kids!

Learn more about the tour

and

get the registration link

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Look for our Tour Stop signs around town and join the tour!

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Green Living: Enjoy the Birds, Bees & Butterflies on a Native Garden Tour

Purple bee balm Green Community Connections and West Cook Wild Ones will present the first-ever “Birds, Bees & Butterflies: A Native Garden Tour” on Sunday, September 7, 2014, from 2:00 to 4:30pm.  The tour concludes with a Native Garden Fair, from 4:00 to 5:30pm at the Forest Preserve District of Cook County located at the northwest corner of Lake and Harlem in River Forest.  REGISTER NOW!

The Birds, Bees & Butterflies garden tour will feature 11 Oak Park and River Forest home and public landscapes that showcase various ways of integrating native plants, including:  starter gardens, full-fledged prairie gardens, gardens designed to attract wildlife, those that harness rain water, and plants that invite children's involvement in the garden. Unique plants for shade, sun, rain gardens, clay soil and other applications will also be highlighted.  Learn more about the specific gardens here.

A guided bike tour for a limited number of participants will be available.   Or design your own self-paced tour with family and friends on foot, by bike, or by car, rickshaw or other vehicle of your choice. A donation of $7 per adult is suggested to help cover costs.  Children are free.

Tour organizers want to encourage and support the rapidly growing interest in native plants and their important role in our ecosystem.  Here are 5 reasons to join the tour:

  1. Get inspired and meet others in the community who share an interest in native plants.

    Doug's parkway

  2. Learn how to get started with native plants if you've never used them before and get tips on maintaining a native plant garden.
  3. Learn how to integrate native plants into traditional landscaping.
  4. Find out where you can purchase native plants, and meet professionals who can help you.
  5. It will be fun!

The tour wraps up with a drop-in Native Garden Fair at the Forest Preserve District of Cook County General Headquarters at Lake and Harlem Avenues in River Forest from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Participants can enjoy refreshments, mingle with fellow native gardeners, learn more about native gardening and where to get native plants, obtain seeds to start now or in the spring, and sign up to be part of the exciting OPRF Wildlife Corridor, which will link Thatcher Woods with Columbus Park through residential native gardens.  There will also be games and children's activities.

Free parking is available behind the Forest Preserve headquarters building, accessible from Bonnie Brae Place, one block west of Harlem.

Participants can register and pick up a map on the day of the tour at Cook County Forest Preserve at the northwest corner of Lake & Harlem.

Advance registration and additional details are available HERE.

We are looking for volunteers to help us put on this fun event.  The volunteer slots are for various, short activities the day of the event.  Please help us make this first-ever OP/RF tour a success!

Sign up to volunteer NOW.

Visit West Cook Wild Ones at  www.facebook.com/wildoneswestcook and  http://westcook.wildones.org/

Visit Green Community Connections @ www.greencommunityconnections.org  and https:/www.facebook.com/GreenCommunityConnections

Solar Chicago pools purchasing power and reduces cost 25%

Owners of single-family homes and two-flats in Chicago and surrounding communities can participate in a new  solar discount program that pools buying power to make New Discount Solar Program Flyer v3-page-001going solar more affordable than ever (25% off).  Take these three easy steps to get started:

1.       Learn about the program:  Attend an upcoming workshop on Thursday, August 21, 2014, 7:00-8:30pm at the Oak Park Main Library, 834 Lake St, Oak Park. Learn the basics of residential solar from the program contractors, Juhl Energy / Microgrid Solar,  and have your questions answered. The event is hosted by Green Community Connections, Seven Generations Ahead / PlanItGreen, and the Interfaith Green Network.  If you are unable to attend, find program details on the Solar Chicago web site.

2.      Sign up, with no obligation:  Register at the 8/21 event above or at www.mygroupenergy.com/group/solarchicago. Once you register, Juhl Energy / Microgrid Solar will contact you to schedule a free on-site evaluation. 

3.      Have your home evaluated.  A contractor will help you determine what works best for your needs and budget and provide you with a written, no-obligation proposal and price quote.

October deadline:  Homeowners have until October to sign a contract and lock in the savings offered through SolarChicago.

Help Spread the Word:  More participants means a better deal for you and more clean, reliable solar power for your community.  If the group collectively installs more than 100 kilowatts of new solar capacity, the Juhl / Microgrid Solar team will provide each homeowner with an additional cash incentive.

Here comes the sun, at a discount!

Barrows 50percentSolar Chicago is a new, community-wide group solar discount program offered by the City of Chicago, the World Wildlife Fund and Vote Solar, a non-profit organization working to bring solar energy into the mainstream. This initiative is available to Oak Park and other Cook County residents.  Through this program the contractor will offer residential solar to the program's participants starting at $3.49 per-watt — more than a 25% discount off average market installation costs. Please join us for an informational workshop on the Solar Chicago Discount Solar Program on Thursday, August 21, 2014, 7:00-8:30pm, at the Oak Park Main Library, 834 Lake Street, Oak Park, to learn more about the program.   There will be opportunities learn more about how the program works and to ask questions.

This program is intended to help homeowners pool their buying power to secure significant discounts that make installing solar more affordable than ever. Solar Chicago simplifies the process of researching and choosing a solar provider, making it easy for you to save money and produce clean, renewable energy.  Oak Park and Chicago are part of the core program area that will receive a guaranteed base installed price of $3.49 /w.  Installations outside the core program area but within Cook County will receive a base installed price of $3.59 /w.

See the web site for more information.After vetting several solar companies, a community evaluation committee has selected the team of Juhl Renewable Energy Systems and Microgrid Solar as Solar Chicago's installation partner.

The program will only available through September 30, 2014. Now is a good time to explore solar power for your home!  You can register to receive a no cost / no obligation proposal through Solar Chicago. The contractor will schedule free site evaluation and provide you with a proposal specific to your home.

Please help spread the word about Solar Chicago to your co-workers, friends, family and neighbors.  Solar Chicago Information Session Flyer.

To learn more, visit: http://www.mygroupenergy.com/group/solarchicago/news/

Information excerpted from SolarChicago web site

Seeking Oak Park/River Forest Native Plant Gardens for Upcoming Tour

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Green Community Connections and West Cook Wild Ones are collaborating on a local native plant garden tour on Sunday, September 7, 2014 from 2:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.(tentatively), and we are seeking Oak Park and River Forest home and public (libraries, churches, schools) landscapes to be included on our tour.

The tour’s focus will be on landscapes using native plants (i.e., plants indigenous to Illinois, pre-settlement). This tour is meant for a wide audience of people, from those who currently have no native plants in their yards to people who are very knowledgeable about natives and are looking for more ideas. We would like to feature established native plant gardens as well as those that are “in progress” or are transitioning from non-natives to natives.

Below are some types of gardens we aim to include on the tour; if you think you (or your neighbor or friend’s or business or church’s) garden fits one--or more--of these categories (loosely or partially is ok), please complete the form below or send an email with your garden address and type, along with your phone number to: christiane@greencommunityconnections.org by Monday, August 4.

  • Native landscape1 (2)Starter Garden: yards where homeowners are just beginning to add native plants to landscapes that may include traditional lawns, evergreens and annuals

  • Fixer Uppers: gardens that are transitioning--they’ve gone beyond adding a few natives and are following a more robust plan of replacing non-natives with natives

  • Pretty as Petunias (but without the work): these can be colorful, low maintenance and less resource-intensive

  • Formal Attire: native plants in traditional, formal garden design

  • Kids in the Garden: gardens that have children as co-caretakers

  • What’s Blooming Now:  featuring fall blooming natives

  • Food for All:  includes native edible plants for humans

  • Mixed Company: established gardens that show off attractive mixes of non-natives and natives

  • Purely Prairie & Woodland Wonders:  yards that try to recreate native ecosystems, the major ones being prairies (full sun), savannah (part sun), and woodland (shade), although an ecosystem is not defined strictly by light requirements

  • Block Party: whole block or stretch of a block that features natives

  • We Care about Carex:  sedge lawns

  • Living Lawn Free:  yards with no turf grass

  • Plants with Wet Feet:  rain gardens and bioswales

  • Not Just a Pretty Face:  habitat gardens that provide for wildlife; can also be focused on attracting particular animals such as butterflies, birds, bats, pollinators

  • Wild Card: Is there something we’ve missed? Do you have a fabulous native garden that has some other special feature? Please contact us!

If your garden is included in the tour, there will be several options for your participation. We realize that some people may enjoy guiding visitors through their garden; others would prefer less involvement. There will be a member of Wild Ones and possibly a Master Gardener at each site helping with logistics for your site (except at gardens under option 3, below).  The choice is yours, and we’ll provide you with tour-preparation guidelines in any case. Please consider whether:

GoldFinch1. You’d like to lead people through your garden;

2. You would prefer that a Wild Ones volunteer or Master Gardener lead people through your garden; or

3. You would like your garden to be included as a  “bike by” or “drive by” site only.  Guests would only view from the sidewalk or street.

Because time is of the essence--the tour date is just six weeks away!--we need to know if you are interested in being included in the tour by Monday, August 4.  Please complete the form below indicating your interest in participating (or send an email to christiane@greencommunityconnections.org with garden address and type, along with your phone number). Someone will be in contact with you about next steps shortly after we hear from you.  Also, please don’t hesitate to contact us with any questions you might have about participating in the tour (you may phone Sally Stovall at 773-315-1109).

Thank you very much for considering being included in what we hope will be an annual event for learning about native gardening and expansion of our local wildlife corridor!  For more information about Green Community Connections or Wild Ones, please visit our websites/Facebook pages:

http://www.greencommunityconnections.org/ ; https://www.facebook.com/GreenCommunityConnections

http://westcook.wildones.org/ ; https://www.facebook.com/wildoneswestcook [contact-form-7 id="12358" title="2014 Native Plant Tour Contact Form"]

Euclid Ave UMC Solar Dedication and Sustainability Fair

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Please join Euclid Avenue United Methodist Church and the Interfaith Green Network and a host of special guests for the dedication of Euclid's Solar Energy array and a Sustainability Fair.  The public is invited to join us on Friday, August 22nd, 4-6pm, at 405 S. Euclid Ave, Oak Park, as we share accomplishments and works in progress in our journey toward reducing our carbon footprint and caring for God's creation.   Refreshments will be served and there will be opportunities to socialize and learn about how you can make a difference in your congregation and home with sustainability initiatives including:

  • An installed geothermal system which provides heating and cooling to our buildings and reduced  energy consumption by 81%solar photo4
  • Use of  permeable brick in our parking lot to make sure 100% of the rainwater is absorbed into the ground and replenishes the water table .
  • The amount of trash that we send to the landfill has been reduced by increased recycling and composting.
  • Butterfly Sanctuary:  Children and adults from the congregation have planted native plants to provide habitat for birds, bees & butterflies.
  • And most recently we have installed 99 solar voltaic panels on the roof that will provide 27% of the electricity needed.

Please RSVP to Dick Alton (richard.alton@gmail.com or call 773-344-7172) so we will be sure to have enough chairs and food!

Community Profile: Julie Carlson and her River Forest Passive Solar Home

This month, the 2014 GreenBuilt Home Tour stops at two innovative homes in Oak Park and River Forest: one is a thoughtful green rehab with a greywater system, the other is a spectacular custom-built, passive solar home. The self-guided tour, which showcases the best in sustainable design and construction in home building and remodeling in Illinois, runs Saturday and Sunday, July 26 and 27. We chatted with one of the homeowners, Julie Carlson, about her River Forest passive solar home. Read on to learn Julie's biggest challenge in building the home. (Hint:  Julie, an editor by profession, acquired a whole new vocabulary to meet the challenge.) Plus, discover which stainless steel appliance is her favorite green feature of the home...but it's not for cooking!

In June 2013, Julie and Quinn Carlson broke ground on a custom green home built to passive house specifications. Their passive solar house includes features like a super-insulated, air-tight building envelope and massive specialized windows that minimize airflow and maximize energy capture from the sun. Completed in May 2014, the home meets or exceeds multiple national certification standards for green building, air quality and energy performance. A recent energy audit revealed that their home earned a super-low 21 rating on the Home Energy Rating System (HERS), which is the most efficient score of all 17 homes on this year's GreenBuilt tour.

Here's what Julie had to say about the project:

GCC:  When you began thinking about building a home, what were your top goals?

Julie Carlson: In building this home, we really thought a lot about our children and how important it is to make a healthy home for them. In addition, we agreed that we wanted the home to be energy efficient, but also blend with all the beautiful older homes in the neighborhood.  We wanted to preserve the large backyard where our kids could play. That meant having a contained building footprint with a smart floor plan that fit our family of four. Space planning took a long time. We thought about every room and how we would use it. For example, we opted not to have a formal dining room or living room. Our dining table is in our kitchen/great room.

GCC: Why did you choose passive solar as the main strategy?Passive Solar Kitchen

JC: The ultimate goal in green building these days is a "Net Zero" home, where your home produces as much energy as it uses. But that is hard to achieve in Chicago's climate. We thought we could get close to Net Zero with a passive solar, all-electric home.

I haven't turned on the air-conditioner yet. It's been really comfortable so far. We don't have a traditional furnace for winter. Instead, we have massive windows that let the sun warm up the house in the winter, and the home is super insulated and sealed tightly, so there's very little airflow from outside.

GCC: What was the biggest challenge to building a green home?

JC: My husband would say it was the budget. When you're building green, everything costs more, from the LED lights to the paint.

My biggest challenge was educating myself about green building. It was a lot of work! But in the end it was great, and I learned a lot. For example, now I know what a "lumen" is [the amount of light emitted by a source]. And when we started work on the closets and cabinetry, I learned that we should avoid products made out of medium density fiberboard (MDF) or particle board because of the toxins in it, which was really difficult to do, because it's everywhere!

GCC: What are your favorite green features of the house?

JC: Our giant windows not only bring in light and warm the house in the winter, they also look good and function well. They are aligned on the south side of the house and are specially designed in Europe for passive houses.

Another feature is the Energy Recovery Ventilation System – essentially the "lungs" of the home. Most homes are leaky and naturally breathe to allow fresh air inside. But our home is so tightly sealed, we need this equipment to exhaust out the stale air and bring in fresh air.

Finally, I love the smell, or lack of one: it doesn't smell like a new home! We used building materials with no or low amounts of volatile organic chemicals (VOCs). Our contractor put up signs on all the doors to warn workers not to bring toxic materials inside the house. We even purchased floor model furniture that had already off-gassed the bad stuff. We are all sleeping better, and the house feels really healthy.

You can see the Carlson's homes during the GreenBuilt Tour July 26-27. The Oak Park home of Ana and Jim Doyle is also featured on the tour. Their award-winning rehabbed home features one of the first residential greywater systems in Illinois. Learn more at greenbuilthometour.org.

 

Beyond Hostas: Native Plants for Shade

(Oak Park, IL) West Cook Wild Ones will host a program titled "Beyond Hostas: Native Plants for Shade" presented by Patricia Hill, author of Design Your Natural Native midwest gardenMidwest Garden on Sunday, July 20, from 2:30 to 4:30p.m. The program takes place in Lewis Hall at Dominican University (7900 W. Division, in River Forest). This program is free and open to the public.

In this program, award-winning garden designer and author Patricia Hill tackles the difficult, dark and dry conditions often found in shady areas of a home landscape. These are the spaces underneath dense maple trees, on the north side of homes and other hard to plant places where grass, most annuals and other sun- and moisture-loving plants can't thrive. Out of desperation, many people turn to dependable hostas, those ubiquitous, variegated-leaved, purple flowering summer staples. But Hill has other tricks up her sleeve...beautiful, hardy, native plants that are uniquely suited to shade.

Gardening with native species is low-maintenance, good for the environment, and yields stunning results. Hill shows you how to combine varieties that are perfect for the soils and climates of the upper Midwest into beautiful combinations for every space around your home.

Patricia Hill is a professional landscape designer who specializes in designs featuring only native species. Her work has been featured in a variety of regional and national gardening and landscaping publications. She won "Best of Show" for an exhibit garden she designed for the 2000 Chicago Flower and Garden Show.

In her book, Design Your Natural Midwest Garden, Patricia Hill draws on more than 25 years of experience to present readers with an easy-to-follow and beautifully illustrated instructional guide to gardening with native species. The results are gardens that are low-maintenance and good for the environment while simply lovely in appearance and perfect for upper Midwestern soils and climates.

The designs are organized around Entrance Gardens; Patios and Terraces; Specialty Gardens (including the very popular Butterfly Garden); Borders; Hillsides; Woodlands; and Water Gardens. The concluding chapter provides advice on planning a Prairie Garden.

Contact: Pam Todd, pamtodd5@me.com  or  Debby Preiser, dpreiser@oppl.org or (708) 366-1475

Wild Ones is a national organization with its roots in the Midwest.

For more information about West Cook Wild Ones or this presentation, please contact Pam Todd, President, (pamtodd5@me.com) or Stephanie Walquist, Program Director, (swalquist@gmail.com).

https://www.facebook.com/wildoneswestcook http://westcook.wildones.org/

Green Living: Caulk Your Way to A Lower Carbon Footprint

Insulating and caulking air leaks in your home isn't sexy, but aside from trading your car for a bike or train pass, it could be one of the easiest and cheapest ways to reduce your carbon footprint. With savings in reduced utility bills, the payback can be realized within several years, and -- with currently available energy rebates -- even sooner. Elevate Energy, formerly CNT Energy, is a non-profit that has worked with Illinois residents since 2000 to create and promote programs to help make home energy retrofits even easier. Elevate Energy's mission is to promote smarter energy use (www.elevateenergy.org). Skyler Larrimore, local adviser for Elevate Energy, is hosting workshops at local libraries in June and July.  Click CONTINUE READING for schedule.

caulk-man-outdoors-window-590rr040610Home Energy Savings Workshops

Berwyn Public Library (2701 Harlem Avenue): Monday, June 16 7-8 p.m.

River Forest Public Library (735 Lathrop Ave): Monday, June 16 6:30-7:30 p.m.

Forest Park Public Library (7555 Jackson Blvd): Monday, June 23 6:30-7:30 p.m.

Elmwood Park Public Library (1 Conti Pkwy.): Thursday, July 10 6:30-7:30 p.m.

At these workshops, Larrimore will present information on local resources you can use to make your home more comfortable, keep gas and electric bills in check, and increase home value. She will also highlight how you can use Smart Grid and Smart Meter technology to reduce your energy bills still more.

Elevate Energy estimates that with an energy retrofit (including air sealing and insulating), a typical home can save 300 therms of natural gas and 770 kilowatt hours of electricity per year. As of April, Elevate Energy says that Oak Park and River Forest residents who have gone through their program have saved a combined 690,697 total pounds of carbon dioxide and an estimated total of $62,800 on annual utility costs.

Contact Skyler at Skyler.Larrimore@elevateenergy.org or at 773-407-3784 to learn more.

Community Profile: Building Political Will for a Livable World

Local residents are advocating for policy change at the federal level. The mission of the Citizens Climate Lobby ("CCL") is to build political will for a livable world and to empower us as citizens to exercise our personal and political power.   The Chicago West chapter of the CCL, which meets in Oak Park, was established in the summer of 2012. CCL is committed to a respectful, non-partisan approach to working with members of congress to make the case for a national fee (tax) on fossil fuel-based carbon with the entire proceeds of the tax to be rebated to the citizens -- also known as Fee and Dividend.

 

Five Oak Parkers will head to Washington, D.C. in mid-June to be part of the Citizens Climate Lobby’s International Conference. Dick Alton, David Holmquist, Cheryl Pomeroy, John Porterfield and Sally Stovall will join nearly 700 other conference participants to hone their lobbying skills and visit members of Congress and their staffers.

Today, there is a buzz building due to a new study, released on Monday, June 9, 2014.  The general assumption, until now, has been that solutions to address global warming will be a drag on the economy and lead to loss of jobs.  The newly released study “turns that assumption on its head.”  The study, conducted by Regional Economic Models, Inc. (REMI), shows that a carbon tax refunded to household would add 2.1 million jobs to the US economy over 10 years, and carbon emissions would decline by 33 percent over the same period.  13,000 lives would be saved annually after 10 years, due to cleaner air, with a cumulative 227,000 American lives saved over 20 years.

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The Citizens Climate Lobby commissioned REMI to conduct this nation-wide study on the impact of a Fee and Dividend policy in order to have quality data free of ideological taint.  REMI has 3+ decades of experience doing econometric modeling for government and private sector clients.  REMI studies have been published in peer reviewed academic journals, and the methodology and equations used in the present study are peer reviewed and available to the public.  More information on the REMI study, including a 3-page summary or a copy of the full report is available on Citizens Climate Lobby web site. Since its founding, Citizens Climate Lobby, has grown rapidly and spread - from three chapters in 2007 to nearly 200 chapters in today located throughout the United States and Canada.