Archive for June, 2008

It’s time for a community kitchen

Sunday, June 29th, 2008

Our good friends Brandi and Sandra Daniels of Embrace Sweets left Cincinnati for San Francisco today. While it’s incredibly sad news for us, we’re happy that they’re headed for even more greatness. After a failed search for financial support to expand their confectionery business here in Cincinnati, Brandi and Sandra found many open arms at La Cocina Community Kitchen, a nonprofit shared use commercial kitchen and business incubator in San Francisco. Clearly, it’s time for a community kitchen here.

Brandi and Sandra left behind one final batch of vegan buckeyes in our fridge. The buckeye, which resembles the tree’s nut, is a spoonful of peanut butter fudge covered in dark chocolate, leaving a circle of the peanut butter exposed. We’re going to miss offering these to our customers, vegans and non-vegans alike.

Event benefits regional transport movement

Sunday, June 22nd, 2008

Park + Vine is one of many hosts of a fundraiser benefiting the Alliance for Regional Transit 5:30 to 7 p.m. June 26 at Arnold’s Bar & Grill, 210 E. Eighth St. Tickets are $30 and include draft beer, wine and a buffet. RSVP to millvalley [at] aol [dot] com. Send checks to Alliance for Regional Transit, 2055 Reading Rd., Suite 220/230, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202. The Alliance for Regional Transit is a nonprofit organization formed in 1999 to make the civic case for higher-level public transportation in greater Cincinnati.

Less meat, more local produce in green plan

Friday, June 20th, 2008

Here’s even more good news for the citizens of Cincinnati and the local environmental movement: Cincinnati city council Wednesday approved Mayor Mark Mallory’s Green Cincinnati Plan. The goal of the plan is to reduce green house gas emissions by eight-percent in four years, 40 percent in 20 years, and 84 percent by 2050.

A citizen committee chaired by Vice Mayor David Crowley developed the plan. It has 80 specific recommendations to achieve the goals. Those include offering free compact fluorescent light bulbs to low-income residents, asking people to wash their clothes in cold water, and urging consumers to boldly change their eating habits, such as reducing red meat and eating organic produce grown in the region.

Embrace Sweets: A long chapter closes in Cincinnati

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

We are totally saddened and devastated over the news that our good friends Brandi and Sandra Daniels at Embrace Sweets are closing their business here in Cincinnati and moving west to California. Brandi and Sandra were an essential part of the emerging local food movement in our city, as well as an inspiration to us here at Park + Vine when we jumped into the uncertain waters of retailing in Over-the-Rhine. Their smiling faces, warm hearts and unforgettable sweets were well-known at markets, coffeehouses and restaurants around Cincinnati. We will miss them deeply. Their news release follows:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

CONTACT:
Brandi Daniels
Embrace Sweets, LLC
513.921.0079
brandi@embracesweets.com
www.embracesweets.com | www.embracesweets.blogspot.com

June 16, 2008

To our most valued customers,

After years of truly trying to make Embrace Sweets a successful specialty dessert company in Cincinnati, we are sorry to say that we must close our doors*. As many of you know, we have been seeking funding for over two years and without receiving it, there was only so much longer Embrace Sweets could go on.

This decision is not due to a lack in customers or accounts, but simply with the daily increase in fuel, supplies and ingredients the combination has taken its toll.

This has not been an easy decision, but we are excited about the new opportunities, and we will carry with us all of your support, love and encouragement you have given us the past four years.

As many of you know Embrace Sweets began as an online company and through our website (www.embracesweets.com) and www.amazon.com you will still be able to purchase our award winning brownies, cookies and granola!

On a final note, Sandra and I just want to thank all of you for believing in us, standing by our product and trusting us to bring the very best to your customers. We have enjoyed working with all of you, and we’re taking so much with us. Thank you.

Sandra + Brandi Daniels

*Effective June 24, 2008, Embrace Sweets will be closing in Cincinnati, OH. Ordering will still be available via www.embracesweets.com & www.amazon.com.

Parents moved to go green

Monday, June 16th, 2008

Mom and Dad can choose from an array of eco-friendly food, diapers, cleaning products and clothes
BY LAUREN BISHOP | LBISHOP@ENQUIRER.COM

Forget Al Gore. The people responsible for getting many people to “go green” are much younger – about 60 years younger.

Babies are prompting parents who never considered themselves especially eco-conscious to start stocking up on green baby products, from cloth diapers to organic baby food and clothing to all-natural lotions and ointments.

One of those parents is Jena Richter, 22, of Sharonville. After she became pregnant, she decided to use cloth diapers after she read about the chemicals that some disposable diapers contain and how they may take hundreds of years to break down in landfills.

Then she started eating organic food to avoid pesticides. Now she spends about two hours once a week making baby food, often with vegetables from her garden, for 6-month-old Eden.

She dresses Eden only in 100 percent cotton clothing, preferably organic. And the whole family uses personal care and cleaning products that contain as few ingredients as possible, preferably natural ones.

“Before all this,” Richter says, “we didn’t even recycle.”

Babies “R” Us has increased its stores’ inventory of natural and organic items over the past two years to more than 300 separate products. It carried just a few dozen items only a few years ago.

The retailer reports an increase in baby registries that include organic food, organic cotton clothing, natural bedding and environmentally friendly cleaners.

“I wouldn’t call this a trend. This is definitely a lifestyle change,” says Babies “R” Us spokeswoman Jamie Beal.

At Park + Vine, a “green” general store in Over-the-Rhine, green baby and parent products make up 20 percent of the inventory, up from 10 percent when the store opened a year ago, says owner Dan Korman.

Cincinnati also has a new cloth diaper service, Good Natured Baby, which has 16 customers, says Amy Hruschak of Liberty Township, who started the business with her husband, P.J., after their son Rory, 16 months, was born.

“Six years ago (when her oldest was born), it was kind of unheard of to use cloth diapers, and people thought you were a weirdo,” says 30-year-old Donyé Cortese of Mount Auburn. “Then it kind of seemed like the whole green thing became easier to do.”

The dizzying array of green products at specialty stores, major retailers and online prompted 25-year-old Suzanne Istvan of Oakley to start www.greenmommyguide.com, which contains articles about and reviews of various green products.

Istvan never thought she’d be a mom who cared about organic baby food, sustainable materials and cloth diapers, until she found out how easy it was to integrate eco-friendly options into her life.

“I really wanted to spread the word to other moms that you don’t have to be ‘crunchy’ to be green,” Istvan says.

For many parents, little changes do lead to entire lifestyle overhauls.

Ronita Farria of Kenwood, a 24-year-old mother of a 2½-year-old and a 6-week-old, says her older son’s asthma and allergies prompted her to start using nontoxic, more earth- and people-friendly medicines and products.

Now, Farria and partner Scott Dean buy food at farmers’ markets, get baby and household items through Craigslist and Freecycle, combine car trips, use energy-efficient light bulbs and are trying to get their condo association to start a recycling program.

Megan Seaman-Kossmeyer, a 33-year-old mother of two from Bridgetown, also says parenthood turned her into an “accidental environmentalist.”

When Seaman-Kossmeyer’s 8-month-old daughter began fighting every diaper change, she learned how to calm her down and reduce diaper waste by practicing “elimination communication” – reading infants’ signs and signals to know when to put them on the toilet.

Her family also tries to reduce waste by using cloth grocery bags and acquiring clothes and toys secondhand. And they shop at farmers markets and have started a garden.

“Once you make the leap and you try to change, you realize it isn’t that hard, and it starts to become second nature,” says Seaman-Kossmeyer, who helps run local Diaper-Free Baby and Attachment Parenting International groups.

But doesn’t going green cost more? Sometimes yes, sometimes no.

Farria says natural products can be more expensive, but they tend to last, and she’s mindful of how much she uses.

Eastgate resident Kimberly Duffy, 28, estimates she spends $150 a week on mostly organic and natural food and other products in an effort to minimize the chemicals and preservatives to which her daughters, ages 1 and 3, are exposed.

But she saves money on cleaning products by making her own, using water, vinegar, baking soda, lemon juice and tea tree oil.

Parents who use cloth diapers say it’ll save them money in the long run. Istvan paid $300 for diapers that she hopes will last until her son is potty-trained. She would have spent the same amount for just six months’ worth of disposable diapers, she says.

Whether parents’ motivation is saving money or the planet, it doesn’t matter, Istvan says. “The end result is good for everyone.”

‘Green baby’ resources

‘Green baby’ resources

Monday, June 16th, 2008

THE ENQUIRER


WEB SITES

www.cincyMOMS.com: Click on the “Natural Living” forum for lots of tips from moms in the region.

www.greenmommyguide.com
: Oakley mom Suzanne Istvan’s clearinghouse of information on organic food, natural skin care and environmental fashion.

http://cincinnatilocavore.blogspot.com
: Blog for those trying to eat as much as possible from local food sources and producers. E-mail discussion group: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cincilocavore

www.cincinnatinaturalparent.com: Forum to connect parents and care providers who share a “green” perspective on parenting and living. E-mail discussion group: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cincinnatinaturalparent

www.cincinnatifarmersmarkets.org: A guide to farmers markets in Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky.

www.localharvest.org: Information about local community-supported agriculture groups

ORGANIZATIONS AND SUPPORT GROUPS

Attachment Parenting International: Advocates creating a strong emotional bond with infants by methods such as including breast-feeding, bed-sharing and nurturing touch. www.attachmentparenting.org, http://groups.yahoo.com/group/API-Cincinnati

Diaper-Free Baby: Organization that advocates reading infants’ signs and signals to know when to put them on the toilet. www.diaperfreebaby.org, http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CincinnatiDiaperFreeBaby

La Leche League: Offers support and counseling for breast-feeding. 513-357-6455, www.lalecheleague.org

LOCAL BUSINESSES

Earth Bums: Northern Kentucky-based online store selling cloth diapering products and accessories, handmade soaps, handmade burp cloths and quilts and products for moms. 859-912-2009, www.earthbums.com

Good Natured Baby: Liberty Township-based cloth diaper service. 513-348-2727, www.goodnaturedbaby.net

Park + Vine: Green general store that sells baby and parenting products. 1109 Vine St., Over-the-Rhine. 513-721-7275, www.parkandvine.com

The Spotted Goose: Kids’ clothing and shoe store carrying organic and natural products such as blankets, baby slings, bath products, clothing and nursing covers. 3048 Madison Road, Oakley. 513-351-9600, www.thespottedgoose.com

BOOKS

“Growing Up Green! Baby and Child Care” by Deirdre Imus (Simon & Schuster, $15.95);

“Healthy Child, Healthy World: Creating a Cleaner, Greener, Safer Home,” Christopher Gavigan (Dutton, $25.95)

“Raising Baby Green: The Earth-Friendly Guide to Pregnancy, Childbirth and Baby Care” by Alan Greene, M.D. (Jossey-Bass, $16.95)


Parents moved to go green

bumGenius inspires talk of cost-effectiveness, eco-friendliness

Monday, June 16th, 2008

While cloth diapers have been a regular feature at Park + Vine since early fall 2007, the arrival of the hugely popular bumGenius cloth diaper from Cotton Babies in St. Louis, Mo., encouraged us to talk up the cost-effectiveness and eco-friendliness of diapering a wee one. Elizabeth Whitton, who works here at Park + Vine, is largely responsible for managing our baby and parenting section. A mother of two, Elizabeth is quite nuanced in encouraging parents to switch over to green baby products. Here, she talks about how going green with diapers is the best way to go.

Going green doesn’t always mean spending more money. This is certainly the case with cloth diapers, and other “reusable” personal products that replace throw-away items. Switching your family to handkerchiefs, cloth napkins, reusable menstrual products and cloth wipes (instead of toilet paper) is easier than you think, and saves trees and other raw materials, not to mention being very economical. Although you will do some extra laundry, your budget and the earth still come out on top (not to mention reusable options are usually healthier).

For diapers, the average family would probably save around $1000 per child by using cloth over disposables. This savings goes up with each subsequent child that uses the same diapers. Of course, it does depend on the type of diapers you buy. My diaper “stash” cost around $500. I use very economical diapers though. If I had bought them used, I probably could have spent half that. Washing expenses are minimal (maybe $50-$100 per year for detergent, water, and energy). To put it in perspective, using disposables costs about $2500 per child (8 diapers per day for 3 yrs. at $.25 per diaper plus 8 disposable wipes per day at $.04 per wipe) and that is a fairly conservative estimate I would think. So on my first daughter I saved around $1775. With my second daughter who is using the same diapers, I should save around $2000.

It is possible to spend a lot more on the high-end fancy cloth diapers these days… if I were to get the best of the best, it would be possible to spend $2500 on cloth diapers, no doubt. However, it is important to note that cloth diapers have an excellent resale value! You can sell them on websites such as ebay and www.diaperswappers.com and recoup a good bit of your initial investment – sometimes even getting close to what you paid in the first place, depending on the type of diapers and their condition.

Better for babies, better for the environment, better for your bank account.

bumGenius diaper diagram

Elizabeth Whitton orders baby and parenting items for Park + Vine

Cool wares made from bicycles, for bicycles

Saturday, June 14th, 2008

In 2005, listeners to BBC Radio 4’s “You and Yours” program voted in an online poll looking at the most significant innovations since 1800. It was an easy victory for the bicycle which won more than half of the vote. The transistor came second with eight percent of the vote.

There’s no denying the importance of the bicycle in modern life. Bicycling for transport is fun and easy, even in the hilliest of cities (hello, Cincinnati). In a country famous for its love of cars and driving, bicycles still inspire a better way to live and creativity in product design, and Park + Vine has the stock to prove it:

  • Bike Furniture Design: modern furniture made primarily from recycled steel and aluminum bicycle rims, handlebars, and frames
  • Fabric Horse Utility Belts: canvas belts made from recycled materials that double as fanny packs and hold everything (from wallet to bike lock) and look pretty (thank you, Chelsea VandeDrink, for suggesting this line)

Fabric Horse utility belt

  • Pedro’s Chain Lube: chain lube made from renewable materials
  • Q-Tubes Valves: bicycle inner tubes fitted for Presta and Schraeder valves
  • Resource Revival: cool gifts made from recycled bicycle parts
  • Seagull Bags: waterproof, high-quality courier bags made in Columbus, Ohio
  • Splaff Flopps: sandals, handbags and belts made from recycled race car tires and bicycle inner tubes, regupol (a cushioning material made from used tires chipped and pressed into mats), and hemp
  • Zero Per Gallon Recycled-Tire Belts: belts made from recycled bicycle tires

Bicyclists enjoy comaraderie, local food

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

More than 40 cyclists turned out for the city’s first Queen City Bike + Dine June 7. Overcast skies protected bike riders as they enjoyed two-wheeled camaraderie and great hospitality at local restaurants. Special thanks to Myra’s Dionysus, Melt, Greenup Cafe, Arnold’s Bar & Grill, Five Star Foodies, Coffee Emporium, Reser Bicycle Outfitters and Park + Vine for making it such a memorable day. Check out these photos from Jerome Strauss to see how much fun was had.

Qualls, Pratt to discuss city’s recycling program June 12

Monday, June 9th, 2008

According to 91.7 WVXU, only 11,300 tons (or about 10 percent) of the trash generated in the city of Cincinnati gets recycled. That’s 1,150 tons less than in 1999. The promising news is that city council has recently called for Cincinnati to increase the amount of trash it recycles to 30 percent within the next seven years.

Councilwoman Roxanne Qualls and Rumpke Communications Manager Amanda Pratt will discuss the city’s recycling program on WVXU’s Impact Cincinnati program 9:20 a.m. Thursday, June 12.