Skip to main content
April 1 - April 30, 2020

Team FGCU Feed

BACK TO TEAM PAGE

Reflection, encouragement, and relationship building are all important aspects of getting a new habit to stick.
Share thoughts, encourage others, and reinforce positive new habits on the Feed.

To get started, share “your why.” Why did you join the challenge and choose the actions you did?


  • Kathleen Crawford's avatar
    Kathleen Crawford 4/14/2020 7:43 AM
    I am actually finding meal planning and avoiding food waste to be a bit easier in this new situation we find ourselves in.  I am hopeful that because we are all staying home more, that I am developing new habits that will stick for the long run!
  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    People Spend Time Outside
    Rachel Carson said that we need the beauty and mysteries of the natural world for our spiritual and emotional development. Does that ring true for you? What are the implications for a culture that spends most of its time indoors?

    Kathleen Crawford's avatar
    Kathleen Crawford 4/09/2020 10:11 AM
    In these days that are so far out of our routines... between the stress of trying to continue working, and staying healthy, and having to not physically come together as a community... this time spent outside is REBALANCING me!

  • Kathleen Crawford's avatar
    Kathleen Crawford 4/09/2020 6:04 AM
    The Last Straw
    Hi Team!
    I added a straw challenge to our team page.  I am betting most of us already say no to straws, but did you know that in the USA we use an average of 1.6 straws per day? That total 500,000,000 straw per day! YIKES! 

    If you are already straw-free, THANK YOU! Please encourage others.  If you are still a straw user, please consider other options... like going without or going reusable.

    Stay green, my friends!
    Kathleen

  • Kathleen Crawford's avatar
    Kathleen Crawford 4/07/2020 8:26 AM
    I added a challenge to our Earth Day Ecochallenge team that I think we can all accomplish safely - to replace 20 minute(s) each day typically spent inside (computer time, watching television, etc.) with quality time outside that follows CDC guidelines for preventing disease spread.
     
     
    What is the optimal time spent outdoors? "120 Minutes a Week, Doctors Say. Researchers have now quantified the ideal amount of time needed to reap the health benefits of the great outdoors. It's a medical fact: Spending time outdoors, especially in green spaces, is good for you." - https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/13/health/nature-outdoors-health.html 
     
    Be well and stay green! 
    Kathleen
  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    Action Track: Building Resilience Support Pollinators
    Why is it important to take care of pollinators?

    Kathleen Crawford's avatar
    Kathleen Crawford 4/06/2020 11:04 AM
    I was excited to learn what types of plants I can plant in SWFL to encourage pollinators.

    Did you know that pollinators like Birds, bats, bees, butterflies, beetles, and other small mammals are responsible for ensuring that we have the plants that 
    • bring us countless fruits, vegetables, and nuts,
    • ½ of the world’s oils, fibers and raw materials;
    • prevent soil erosion,
    • and increase carbon sequestration
    Not only did I learn what types of plants I can grow to help the pollinators I have ordered seeds... including tropical milkweed
    to help the migration of  Monarch Butterflies.