1natural awakenings April 2011
HEALTHY LIVING HEALTHY PLANET
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APRIL 2011 | Location-Edition | website.com
CELEBRATEEARTH DAY
APRIL 22
KIDS DIG WORMCOMPOSTING
The DARK SIDE of
“OWNING”EXOTIC PETS
Ed Begley, Jr.’sGREEN HOMEMAKEOVER
The Healing and Restorative
Powers of Nature
APRIL 2011 | S.E. Louisiana Edition | NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com
2 New Orleans NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com
Sam RichardsDavid BergeronTami HillsPaul TroyanoElijah SprolesJoseph RobertsRandy JohnsonBen Bullins Linda BermanTara Sanchez
Eddie CortezChip MartinsonJoe DohertyAmelia HendersonJose CruzStephen Gopaul Matthew SweeneyCarey ClouseJeremy ShatzChad Anderson
Lance Vargas Josh MurpheyRoss LunzJacob HollimonWyoming Quinn F. Scott GreenfieldNed HobgoodRoger SteinbrinkDaniel HollandJohn Robert Portman
Jerald WhiteDane ClarkAlan McGillivrayKathleen WelchJason JonesMatthew HoldrenNicole BordleyPete MorrisTraci SalisburyTim Dean
Mark KirkCraig TaylorRachel WhiteRenee BoyerLinda FriedlanderThomas DutelKatie LeeseRobert LeQuirePrisca WeemsAbe Geaseland
April 16, 2011 from 7 – 10 pm
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Natural Awakenings is printed on recycled newsprint with soy based ink.
SUBSCRIPTIONSSubscriptions are available for $24 (for 12 issues). Please call 504-330-2157 with credit card information or mail a check made out to Natural Awakenings – S.E. Louisiana to the above address.
© 2011 by Natural Awakenings. All rights reserved. Although some parts of this publication may be repro-duced and reprinted, we require that prior permission be obtained in writing.
Natural Awakenings is a free publication distributed locally and is supported by our advertisers. It is avail-able in selected stores, health and education centers, healing centers, public libraries and wherever free publi-cations are generally seen. Please call for a location near you or if you would like copies placed at your business.
We do not necessarily endorse the views expressed in the articles and advertisements, nor are we respon-sible for the products and services advertised. We welcome your ideas, articles and feedback.
contact usPublisher/Editor
Lolita Werhan
Assistant EditorsLinda Sechrist • S. Alison Chabonais
Paul Scott • Linda Agnello Colleen Morgan
Design & ProductionPaul Scott
Advertising SalesLolita Werhan • Colleen Morgan
Distribution Gillian Rice-Duncan • Sonny Daniels
Clay Thomas • Peggy Scott Carey Mischler • Mel Borne Elizabeth Ohmer Pellegrin
Veronica Jeanfreau
To contact Natural Awakenings S.E. Louisiana Edition:
PO Box 750758 New Orleans, LA 70175-0758
Phone: 504-330-2157 Fax: 504-324-0131
[email protected] www.NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com
letterfrompublisher
In honor of Earth Day 2011, highly aware that producing 20,000 magazines each month creates its own carbon footprint, I’d like to share with you some
of the unusual ways that Natural Awakenings readers and publishers have devised to extend the use of copies once they have read them. Of course, many of you over the years have told us how you file every issue, so that you can periodically refer back to them. For those who prefer to go beyond recycling to imaginative reuses, following are some ideas to consider. One person told us she shreds old issues to use
as bedding for the family’s baby chicks; because there are no chemicals in the soy based ink, it is safe for these sensitive newborns. Another reported using the colorful pages of the magazine to wrap gifts and one created an amazing bow looping thinly sliced strips. An artist I know uses pages from old issues to make new paper from which she creates beautiful notecards and bookmarks. Old issues also make great packing material; just put them in a shredder to avoid using the foam packing peanuts that harm the environment. Of course, newsprint is also great for mulching flower beds and vegetable gardens. It’s also good starter material for composting piles; I plan to use some old issues to get my new worm bin started. On page 25, Jessica Iclisoy describes the benefits of setting up a worm composting system, a fun family activity that is sure to involve the children. If creative reuse tickles your imagination with possibilities, let us know how. We want to hear the good, the bad and even the ugly, because everyone can use a grin for the day. Who knows; you may see your suggestion in a future issue. Pictures are welcome. This month our feature article takes a look at what a truly sustainable lifestyle might look like in “Ed Begley, Jr.’s Green Home Makeover.” This actor turned activist is renowned as the epitome of conscious living, having turned a modest 1936 home into a nearly energy self-sufficient and waste-free residence. Now he and his wife, Rachelle, are building a new LEED certified residence. Read how this focus on a sustainable lifestyle works as a family affair ( page 20. ) To celebrate Earth Day the Louisiana way, come out to the Earth Day Festival and Green Business Expo hosted by the Louisiana Bucket Brigade on April 17 along Bayou St. John. We’ll be there. Check this month’s news briefs for details. While we celebrate and bask in our beautiful Spring weather, we also are thinking of the people of Japan who need so much compassionate support right now. If you wish to help, we suggest making a donation to an organization that is already on the ground there; page 6 lists several ways to donate to the Red Cross. Our thoughts and prayers go out to these tireless providers as well.
Let’s make every day Earth Day,
Lolita Werhan, Publisher
5natural awakenings April 2011
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HOW TO ADVERTISE To advertise with Natural Awakenings or request a media kit, please contact us at 504-330-2157 or email [email protected]. Deadline for ads: the 10th of the month.
EDITORIAL SUBMISSIONSEmail articles, news items and ideas to: [email protected]. Deadline for editorial: the 5th of the month.
CALENDAR SUBMISSIONSEmail Calendar Events to: [email protected] or call 504-330-2157. Deadline for calendar: the 10th of the month.
REGIONAL MARKETSAdvertise your products or services in multiple markets! Natural Awakenings Publishing Corp. is a growing fran-chised family of locally owned magazines serving com-munities since 1994. To place your ad in other markets call 1-239-449-8309. For franchising opportunities call 1-239-530-1377 or visit NaturalAwakeningsMag.com.
NaturalAwakeningsMag.com
contents
6 newsbriefs
11 ecobriefs
25 healthykids
26 wisewords
28 naturalpet
30 greenliving
32 calendarofevents
34 ongoingevents
35 consciousdining
36 classifieds
36 community resources
Natural Awakenings is your guide to a healthier, more balanced life. In each issue readers find cutting-edge information on natural health, nutrition, fitness, personal growth, green living, creative expression and the products and services that support a healthy lifestyle.7
8
17
17 GUMBO GREEN GAMES Meet the Participants
20 ED BEGLEY, JR.’S GREEN HOME MAKEOVER Saving Energy and Cutting Waste is a Family Affair by Brita Belli
25 KIDS DIG WORM COMPOSTING Red Wigglers Turn Kitchen Scraps into Gardening Gold by Jessica Iclisoy
26 RICHARD LOUV’S WELL-BEING Rx: RECONNECT WITH NATURE by April Thompson
28 FORBIDDEN CREATURES Author Peter Laufer Discusses the Dark Side of Exotic Pets by Gail Condrick
30 THE POWER OF PERMACULTURE Care for People, Sustain the Planet, Share the Surplus by John D. Ivanko
20
25
26
28
30
6 New Orleans NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com
newsbriefsEarth Day Festival and Green Business ExpoThe Louisiana Bucket
Brigade is again putting on their annual Earth Day Festival, but this year it will also include a showcase of green businesses. The event will take place April 17 from 8:30 a.m. until 6 p.m. at the corner of Orleans Avenue and Bayou St. John in Mid-City New Orleans. While commemorating the first anniversary of the BP oil disaster, the event’s focus this year is engaging the com-munity, environmental organizations and businesses around sustainability. In addition to booths featuring businesses that supply green products and services, the event will have speakers and children’s activities on environmental issues as well as great local music groups. The 2011 Earth Day Festival on the bayou, the first of its kind, attracted more than 3,000 visitors.
Companies and organizations interested in being featured at the event should contact Lenora Gobert at 504-484-3433 or [email protected]. See ad on page 40.
Untitled-4 1 3/16/11 1:49 PM
“Cleaning for a Reason” Helps Cancer PatientsAny woman undergoing chemotherapy
can receive free housecleaning for four months while she is in treatment through the Cleaning for a Reason program. The patient can sign up on the web, have her doctor fax a note confirming her treatment, and the organization will assign a cleaning service in her area to assist during her time of need. This nonprofit organization is national and currently has 547 cleaning service partners that assist in this program. The New Orleans affiliate for Cleaning for a Reason is Magical Maids. For more information, visit CleaningForAReason.org.
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ey D
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7natural awakenings April 2011
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The Reconnection Coming to New OrleansA chance experience led chiropractor, Dr.
Eric Pearl, to discover a healing method he dubbed, “Reconnective Healing,” a new transformative paradigm in healing that has since been learned by more than 60,000 people worldwide. Pearl and his team of instructors will come to New Orleans in June to present a series of workshops beginning with a new Reconnective Yoga Workshop on June 2 at 7 p.m. that will be offered for free. This workshop is designed to “further expand one’s yoga practice as new physical capabilities and a deeper spiritual connection are explored.” The workshop will be led by Elizabeth Polito. Yoga will be offered early on all the mornings of the workshops.
Reconnective healing is described as consisting of bandwidths, comprised of energy, light and information, that are transferred from practitioner to patient, causing physical and emotional shifts that encourage health and healing by reconnecting body and mind with the universe. Pearl says, “I feel deep gratitude for having been the person entrusted to bring Reconnective Healing into the world. But this is not about me. It’s truly about you and your Reconnection to the complete and vital self in this era of ‘information medicine’.” Pearl will be in New Orleans to lead Level I/ II Reconnective Healing Seminar on June 3rd through the 5th . Level III will be offered by the Reconnection Teaching Team June 6th and 7th. Pearl is the bestselling author of The Reconnection: Heal Others, Heal Yourself and is considered an authority on energy healing. His organization, The Reconnection, is leading the way in teaching Reconnective Healing to people around the world for personal health and professional advancement.
All events in New Orleans will take place at the Double Tree Hotel at 300 Canal St. in New Orleans.For additional information on the upcoming Reconnective Healing Seminars, call 323-960-0012 or visit TheReconnection.com. To see a video clip, visit YouTube.com/TheReconnectionTV. See ad on page 9.
The Great Cloth Diaper Change Babies across the city are invited
to participate in a Guinness World Records Diaper Changing Challenge as a way to celebrate Earth Day. The event, sponsored by ZukaBaby and FuzziBunz, is to take place in Audubon Park at 11:30 a.m. on April 23. At the same time, babies across the coun-try and the world will don a new change of cloth diapers. The first 50 participants to arrive will receive a free FuzziBunz diaper.
For more information, email [email protected] or visitZukaBaby.com.
Dr. Eric Pearl
8 New Orleans NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com
newsbriefs
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Plant a Giving GardenThe Latino Farmers Cooperative of Louisiana is preparing
for its second Giving Garden Fundraiser. Volunteers and staff will build backyard gardens for $350 to raise money to support the Latino Farmers Cooperative food pantry. Last year’s event raised enough funds to regularly serve approximately 250 low-income Latinos in New Orleans, or about 28,000 pounds of food, through a partnership with Second Harvest Food Bank of Greater New Orleans and Acadiana. The goal is to install 20 vegetable gardens, according to Executive Director Kathia Duran. “It is a mutually beneficial fundraiser,” explains Community Outreach Coordinator Ilana Robbins Gross, saying that residents learn how to grow vegetables while helping people in need. The cost of the raised bed includes a site evaluation, a three-foot by six-foot raised bed constructed from untreated wood, design specifications, tilling and instillation of fertile soil, five hoops to support a cover in case of freezes, and a selection of baby vegetables and herbs.
For more information, visit LatinoFarmersCoop.org. To reserve your Giving Garden, call Ilana Robbins Gross at 917-596-3697. See ad on page 22.
Hike Supports Future Greenway The Friends of Lafitte Corridor (FOLC)
is sponsoring a three-mile hike along the corridor that is to be the future site of a greenway that stretches from downtown New Orleans to Lake Pontchartrain at Bayou St. John. The hike will start at 10 a.m. on April 16 and will lead community members along the stretch that links the neighborhoods that include the French Quarter, Treme, Mid-City, Foubourg St. John, City Park and Lakeview. One of FOLC’s goals is to engage residents in the areas adjacent to the corridor in the planning process, and its annual hikes help to achieve that goal. “Once you actually walk the length of the future greenway site, it makes it easier to see the potential such a project will have on our neighborhoods and community,” said FOLC president Bart Everson.
For information on the event and details on additional activities as they are developed, visit the FOLC website at folc-nola.org.
9natural awakenings April 2011
June is the Month for Locavores The NolaLocavores are
putting on the New Orleans Eat Local Challenge during the month of June, when participants will challenge themselves to eat only food that was grown or caught within 200 miles of New Orleans. The challenge is part scavenger hunt and part healthy lifestyle promotion and a learning experience for all. Each participant can choose between three levels of strictness: The Ultrastrict, The Bienville Rule, or The Wild
Card. Participants will be regulating themselves based on the honor system. For a $20 registration fee, participants get a t-shirt, a New Orleans Local Foods Buyers Guide, a 10 percent discount at Hollygrove Market and Farm, access to the Eat Local Challenge discussion forum with daily postings of recipes and tips for eating locally, and invitation to the finale party July 1.
The last day to sign up is May 22nd at the 3rd Annual NOLA Veggie Fest. For more information on the rules and guidelines, as well as resources on where you can find the local products and to sign up visit NOLALocavore.org.
EAT LOCALCHALLENGE
2011 Salvations GalaThe Green Project’s annual fundraiser furniture competition
and auction gala will kick off at 7p.m. on April 16 at The Shops at Canal Place on the third floor. The frolicking continues until 10pm. Sustainable style plus salvaged design with over 50 pieces of one-of-a-kind furniture crafted from reclaimed materials will be celebrated and auctioned off. Great local cuisine, craft signature cocktails and music by Casual and The Mumbles will round out the fun.
A $50 admission ticket allows one entry into a drawing for a 50cc Buddy Scooter donated by Big Easy Scooter plus a scooter cover fashioned from a reclaimed Super Bowl 44 banner by Repurposing NOLA Piece By Peace. A $100 patron ticket includes three entries for the scooter drawing. Complimentary parking is provided. To purchase tickets call 504-945-0240 or visit TheGreenProject.org.
10 New Orleans NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com
Stirring GiantsGreen Homebuilding Progress ReportAmerica’s 10 largest publicly traded homebuilders have started to improve their environmental policies and practices, but much progress remains to be achieved, according to the latest Survey of Sustainable Practices by the Homebuilding Industry, by Calvert Asset Management Co. KB Home, based in Los Angeles, and Pulte Homes, of Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, were ranked as the top industry firms. Calvert reports that out of 42 possible green data points, the average total score was just over six points, or 15 percent. Without the top two companies in the mix, the average overall score would have been less than 6 percent. Green building represents a major industry opportunity. “Whereas two years ago, the industry had not yet begun to embrace sustainability as a core part of building design and construction, companies today have taken many meaningful steps toward developing greener and cleaner homes,” says Rebecca Henson, a sustainability analyst at Calvert and co-author of the report. “However, given the environmental impact that homebuilding has, the industry has significantly more progress to make.” Companies are most active in energy efficiency and conservation, paying more attention to sustainability issues that can offer short-term financial benefits to operating costs and customers, such as building material recycling and energy and water efficiency measures. Issues with long-term benefits, such as climate change, are not well addressed.
For more information, search Green Homebuilder at Calvert.com. To assess a home’s energy efficiency score, take the quiz at EnergySavvy.com.
Ortho-Bionomy Training Ortho-Bionomy Phase 5: The Language of the
Body will be taught by Advanced Instructor Richard Valasek the weekend of June 11-12 in New Orleans. The basic principles of Ortho-Bionomy will be presented and practiced throughout the workshop including the reflexes that are central to this modality. Ortho-Bionomy was founded by Dr. Arthur Lincoln Pauls, a British osteopath and judo instructor, who used his knowledge of form and function to develop this technique that gently works with the body’s inherent ability for self correction. Valasek, the workshop leader and a registered nurse, learned the technique from Dr. Pauls and has practiced it for 35 years, including 23 years as an RN for the Army at Tripler Army Medical Center in Hawaii, where he has used it to treat post traumatic stress.
This class has been approved for 12 Continuing Education Units (12 CEUs) by the Louisiana Board of Massage Therapy. The workshop fee is $250 if paid by April 30 or $300 thereafter. For more information and to register, call Peggy Scott at 504-352-0039 or Mary Catherine Pfalzgraf at 903-263-8684. Additional information is available in the website PureEnergyBodywork.com.
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newsbriefs
11natural awakenings April 2011
Paint America GreenNew Program Certifies Green PaintersNew Living, of Houston, has launched the coun-try’s first training program to educate painters about workplace health, environmentally sensitive indus-try practices and long-term protection of indoor air quality for consumers. “Painting has been one of the most toxic and polluting sectors of the construc-tion industry,” says Daniel Wurm, with the nonprofit GreenPainters Australia, which is partnering with New Living to green the industry. “Not only has it led to contamination of water after cleaning up and off-gassing into the atmosphere of poisonous and un-
healthy chemicals, but it has also contributed to health issues.”
It all starts with consumer demand for the use of low-VOC (volatile organic compound) paints and heat-reflective coatings in homes and offices.
Find a local certified green painter at GreenPainters.us or email [email protected].
ecobriefs
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ecobriefs
For more information about advertising and how you can participate, call 504-330-2157
Feel good both inside and outExpress your natural beauty • Celebrate feminine power
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Earth CareWomen’s Leadership for a Green EconomyEarth Day Network’s new campaign, Women and Green Economy (WAGE), is engaging female executives in business, government and nongovernmental organizations to take leadership of the emerging global green economy. “Currently, women are not present in very many top international negotiations on climate change and the green economy,” says Earth Day Network President Kathleen Rogers. “We aim to change that equation.” Women such as Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Christiana Figueres, executive secretary of the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change, are among those now leading key efforts in the climate and renewable energy discussion. “It is essential that our most talented and driven women come together to fast-forward the green economy,” says Rogers. With the world’s women making 85 percent of all consumer choices, they are in a commanding position to lead the way to a sustainable world. WAGE creates a road map for women to aggregate their power and promote their leadership in such issues. Earth Day Network’s supporting goals are to help prompt national and international initiatives that will promote the green economy, secure education and job training opportunities for women and channel green investment to benefit women.
Learn more and join in via the Programs menu at EarthDay.org.
Earth Day 1970 was irrefutable evidence that
the American people understood the environmental
threat and wanted action to resolve it.
~Barry Commoner
13natural awakenings April 2011
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Action AlertScience Solves Mystery of Bee Colony CollapseBees are dying off in developed Western countries, putting 90 percent of U.S. crops in peril. Multiple scientific stud-ies now blame one group of agricultural toxins—neonic-otinoid pesticides—as a major contributor to their rapid demise, and bee populations have recovered in the four European countries that have banned these products. But Bayer still sells this deadly poison here, even though the Environmental Protection Agency has recognized, in a leaked document, that Bayer’s “highly toxic” product is a “major risk concern to non-target insects [honey bees].” In 2009, Italy’s new, neonicotinoid-free corn sow-ing resulted in no cases of widespread bee mortality in apiaries around the crops, a first since 1999. Italy, France, Slovenia and Germany, where Bayer’s main manufactur-ing plant is located, have all banned neonicotinoids with good results. It’s up to U.S. citizens to convince the government not to heed the powerful chemical lobby, but to defend the bees and the country’s food supply by calling for a national ban now.
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Present
GUMBO
A Green Business Competition
Would you like to find ways to save money in your business, while
improving your environmental impact? How would you like free
advertising for doing just that? If so, then you should sign up to
participate in the Green Games!
What Is It?
Green Games is a year-long competition for businesses to compete in
greening up. Ratings for each sector will examine energy, water, food,
and material use of business purchasing, business operation, and use of
products and services, emphasizing the importance of life cycle
analysis.
Each business will receive a free consultation and sustainability
assessment from LifeCity and recognition for participation in Natural
Awakenings Magazine. At the end of the year awards will be given at
the Green Natties. Most importantly, we’ll announce the greenest of the
green businesses in our community, whether you are most improved, or
best-all around.
The following commercial sectors, each rated
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Restaurants / Hotels / Offices and Retail Stores
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17natural awakenings April 2011
JOULE ENERGY
Joule Energy installs solar panels and solar hot water systems, which is a way for homes and
businesses to save money on their energy bills and protect the environment simultaneously. Now that the state and Federal government tax credits together amount to 80 percent, Louisiana has the best deal in the nation for solar energy. “Now is the best time to do it,” said David Denny, Joule Energy’s outreach coordinator. “Customers come to our company because we offer a five-year total workmanship warranty, which includes annual quality check and cleaning.” The company’s engineers are also certified and customers receive free digital monitoring, so they can track how much energy they are using and how much money they are saving. Incorporated in 2009, this relatively new business is still older than most of the other solar companies that have sprung up since Louisiana instituted the 50 percent state tax credit in 2008, Denny said. Even with that substantial perk, it has been a big challenge to educate the public about the technology, which many see as new age, foreign technology even though it is relatively simple. The company registered for the Green Games because they want to support companies with environmentally-friendly practices – or are trying to institute them - while educating the public that solar energy is readily available right here in New Orleans.
For more info. visit Joule at Joule-Energy.com.
ECOCAFE
EcoCafe has a classic look with oak floors
and gently-used wooden furniture. Two large, airy dining rooms offer abundant daylighting and views of the Canal Streetcar. A third, more intimate space in the back allows for more private conversation. Owner Monica Ramsey is a self-described nature lover, so any business she ever started would have to be green. EcoCafe’s ingredients are locally sourced as much as possible and as natural and organic as can be found, she said. Sourcing fresh produce for a busy restaurant is a challenge, so it varies daily. She also offers organic, fair trade coffee, a full juice bar, and vegetarian options such as a portobello chimichurri panini, scrambled tofu with onions and peppers and the classic Veggie Club.
Omnivores can enjoy a panini with hormone-free jerk-marinated chicken or a classic tuna melt. Because the food is fresh, the kitchen produces less waste. The staff strives to make EcoCafe as environmentally responsible as it can be. Ramsey is vigilant about water and energy consumption, providing biodegradable to-go items and even wash cloths in the bathroom. Unused food serves as compost at a community garden, and she even cleans the linens in house because she can be sure of what detergent is used.
Check it out at EcoCafeNO.com
ZUKABABY
ZukaBaby offers a large selection of cloth diapers,
baby carriers, breastfeeding supplies and apparel, natural toys, organic layette and locally made baby items. The business, which has been in existence for about a year and a half, also offers classes and
resources on natural parenting options. ZukaBaby’s owner, Erin Pelias, was inspired
when she met a mother with a lingerie shop who hosted La Leche League meetings monthly. “I decided to offer these products after becoming a mother and struggled to find products and businesses that coincided with my ideas of parenting,” Pelias said. A few months after renting space in the lingerie shop to sell cloth diapers and baby carriers, ZukaBaby was born and Pelias had her own store. The business is the realization of an idea about how modern, environmentally sensitive mothers want to raise their children. Blending that idea with reality is a daily balancing act, she explains, especially when she faces daily decisions that test her dedication to environmental stewardship. “Do I print these cards on recycled paper for x amount more dollars? How do I promote my ideas without producing more crap that ultimately ends up in landfills? It’s a daunting task,” she said. “I wish that the world rewarded the ‘green’ and charged the frivolous, but this is not the world we live in, yet.” When she heard about the Green Games she was happy because she was not alone, she said. “I think that this will help me to understand what I am doing and how I can do it more effectively.”
Find out more at ZukaBaby.com
Gumbo Green Games – Meet The ParticipantsEVERY MONTH FOR THE NEXT 12 MONTHS WE WILL OFFER PROFILES OF THE BUSINESSES AND
ORGANIZATIONS WHO HAVE COMMITTED TO BECOME THE MODELS FOR SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS OPERATIONS IN SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA BY SIGNING UP. THE GAMES HAVE BEGUN!
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Acupuncture is a medical tradition which helps promote health and well-being. It is used to treat a broad range of medical conditions:
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COMTERRA SOLUTIONS
Comterra Solutions offers a wide variety of technology products and services, with an
emphasis on server and desktop virtualization. Virtualization allows businesses to consolidate all of their necessary information technology (IT) resources and applications on a single physical machine. By utilizing this technology, Comterra can reduce a business’ capital costs by increasing energy efficiency and availability. Comterra Solutions has been in business for approximately six months. The company offers these products and services to businesses who, in the current economic climate, are looking to cut capital costs and operating expenses. Comterra was created to help businesses that
essentially want to “do more with less,” said owner Craig Schnell. “The emergence of energy-efficiency in today’s IT industry made our decision for our current and future direction extremely easy, and we would not have it any other way,” Schnell said. The company’s leaders continue to identify ways to improve Comterra’s environmental performance as well as providing the most environmentally-friendly technologies to customers. In Comterra’s case, environmental performance means savings. “By utilizing our server and desktop virtualization platforms, we have reduced our energy and power consumption by over 90 percent,” Schnell said. “If businesses are looking to save money in ways they did not think possible, Comterra Solutions can provide a solution.” Schnell signed Comterra up for Green Games to help create an environmentally-friendly atmosphere for businesses, which helps to “ultimately improve the long term vitality of the New Orleans Metro Area,” he said.
Find them at http://www.wix.com/cschnell3112/comterra
ARC OF GREATER NEW ORLEANS – the first organization signed up for Green Games!
The Arc of Greater New Orleans is a nonprofit started in 1953
that assists residents with intellectual disabilities. To further that mission the organization developed a division called Arc Enterprises, to bring funding into the program and to offer the clients meaningful employment. This entrepreneurial arm of the organization started about 20 years ago with a janitorial division, and now The Arc runs a vending operation, landscaping service, day care center, Mardi Gras bead recycling program, the Vintage Garden Kitchen’s healthy soups project and supports the Louisiana GreenCorps, which performs house deconstruction and weatherization projects, among others.
These initiatives came to be because The Arc’s leaders saw green in them – not environmental sustainability, but money. “We did not and do not want to be beholden to Baton Rouge,” said Arc Comptroller Vance Levesque, noting state budget cuts that have plagued The Arc’s program for decades. To help pay the bills, they put recycling bins near vending machines, sold their healthy soups to the public, and reclaimed and sorted Mardi Gras beads for resale – this year a record 100,000 pounds.
“It’s a no brainer,” Levesque said. These “green best practices” bring in money with little investment, and often save money as well. They also provide jobs for The Arc clients, which give them experience and confidence to be employed in the community. The soups were developed as highly nutritious meals for the clients, but they also support crews at the farm and in the kitchen – they have become money-making, tax paying citizens. Herbsaint and Couchon are now customers, so word is spreading. The Green Games helps spread the word, which grows the program. Fifty percent of residents know someone who has an intellectual disability, but 9
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out of 10 do not know about The Arc, he said. But most people help support The Arc once they learn.
Learn more about Arc’s programs at ArcGNO.org
NOLA BREWING
NOLA Brewing uses traditional craft brew methods to produce a hearty taste in their warehouse-turned-brewhouse right on Tchoupitoulas. The
shop makes a NOLA blonde, a brown ale, the Hopitoulas IPA, and the 7th Street Wheat year round, with three seasonal brews: Irish Channel Stout, Flambeau Red Ale and Hurricane Saison. A fourth seasonal is to be released this year. The blonde is the best selling of the beers, but owner Kirk Coco likes the brown ale and the Irish the best. The post-Katrina returnee moved back to help rebuild, to create jobs and income for New Orleans residents, and in his brainstorming – over Dixie beer – he found out that the once-local brew is now produced in Wisconsin. “That got me mad – we need a beer in this city,” Coco said, noting the community’s “wonderful culinary background” and talent for creating flavors, so he wanted to help make that happen for beer. Craft brewing is inherently green, Coco explained, because it is done the old-fashioned way. “We use everything, and reuse everything,” he said. Moreover, drinkers of craft brews are “green-oriented,” partially because those beers are made with fresh ingredients and they are heat pasteurized (so the beer will only last for four months). “We are a part of the slow-food movement – where the food is prepared right before you eat it. Our beer is essentially prepared right before you drink it.” Coco signed up for the Green Games because he hopes to improve and make the business even more environmentally sustainable.
There’s more at NOLABrewing.com.
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Ed Begley, Jr., widely regarded as America’s most envi-ronmentally aware actor—the one by which other green celebrities are measured—has never tired of the years
of effort he and his family have made in making their home as green as possible. But this past year, his wife, Rachelle Carson-Begley, had had enough. She isn’t fed up with turning off lights or relying on solar power—she’s just grown weary of the home’s tiny closets and sharing one small bathroom between two adults and a soon-to-be-teenage daughter, 11-year-old Hayden. While Rachelle played the disgruntled foil to the over-achieving eco-cop Ed on their former television show, Living with Ed—which aired for three seasons, first on HGTV and then on Planet Green—her problems with their modest 1936 home in Studio City, California, are those to which most homeowners can relate. For example, cramped rooms make entertaining diffi-cult. The home’s 1,600 square feet of main living space (plus an additional 600-square-foot room above the garage) does not easily accommodate the fundraisers the Begleys regu-larly host; not to mention the camera crews that routinely invaded the family’s day-to-day lives to capture the couple’s good-natured squabbles over everything from composting to conserving water and energy. For seven years, the family even ran a nontoxic cleaning business—Begley’s Best—out of their garage, adding to the mêlée. “Even if it were designed differently, it would be better,”
Rachelle explains. “It’s just that it’s a 1936 house. Yes, it’s effi-cient, but it would be great to be able to incorporate everything that’s going on now in eco building and be a recipient of all the latest benefits—why not?” So, the Begleys are moving. After years of document-ing how to retrofit an older house to maximize use of solar energy for electricity, heating, cooling and hot water, family recycling and rainwater catchment, they are planning to sell their modest abode and build a modern, 3,000-square-foot home a mile away. Ed emphasizes that the move is a major concession on his part. “I made it crystal clear when Rachelle and I were dating: ‘This is the home I plan to be buried in. I will never move.’ And I said it repeatedly from 1993 until about a year and a half ago; now I’m going against that.” Although the Begleys are trading up, they will continue to set an example by building their new home to green build-ing standards that few homeowners have achieved. They’re going for the platinum; that is, Leadership in Energy and Envi-ronmental Design (LEED) Platinum standards, the highest rat-ing possible for buildings certified by the U.S. Green Building Council (usgbc.org). This premier LEED designation requires an incredible environmental commitment in every aspect of the building process, from responsible site development, reduced water use and renewable energy utilities to the use of recycled and local materials and indoor air quality control.
GREEN HOME MAKEOVER
Saving Energy and Cutting Waste is a Family Affair
by Brita Belli
Ed Begley, Jr.’s
21natural awakenings April 2011
Of the more than 130 LEED Platinum building projects in California—the state that boasts the most such projects—only about 30 are private homes. Despite his initial protestations, Ed admits that he’s excited about the prospect. If there’s one thing he relishes, it’s a green challenge.
Life with EdIt’s not easy to live up to Ed’s 30-year-strong waste-nothing ethos. Although he first made a name for himself as an ac-tor, initially as Dr. Victor Ehrlich on the 1980s TV show St. Elsewhere, followed by his recurring roles in the hit TV series Six Feet Under and Arrested Develop-ment, as well as a co-starring role in Woody Allen’s 2009 film Whatever Works, lately he’s become best known as Hollywood’s green guru. He’s the people’s go-to expert on green building and saving energy, authoring the how-to books, Living Like Ed and Ed Begley, Jr.’s Guide to Sustainable Living. Ed is often spotted around Hollywood riding his bike, his preferred mode of travel; on weekdays, he and his daughter ride to-gether to her school, pedaling two miles each way. This down-to-earth, affable man is perhaps eco-conscious to a fault. The success of the show Living with Ed relied in great part on the watchdog antics of Ed catching his wife stuffing vegetable peel-ings down the garbage disposal, instead of in the compost bin, timing her long show-ers or opening a running dryer to discover Rachelle’s lone tank top inside. In each case, the chastised Rachelle vowed to be more eco-conscious, with a raised eye-brow aimed at the camera. “I felt vindicated,” Rachelle says of
her reality show adventures. “They [the viewers] were going to side with me.” If there’s any question that Ed’s needling occurs only when the cameras are on, his family members put those doubts to rest. Rachelle describes how her husband insists on keeping the temperature uncomfortably low on cold nights for the sake of saving energy; of turning off her curling iron while it’s warming up if she leaves the room; or switching off the TV if she’s listening to it while getting dressed down the hall. Daughter Hayden’s biggest gripe has to do with TV time. “I love to watch TV for hours on end,” she says. “My dad is very cautious about using power and we have to turn off several different things when we use the TV, like the DVR and its power switch.” But Ed insists that all these little energy-saving strategies add up. While he was willing to recently trade his
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obsolete 1992 TV set for an HDTV, he knows it’s a major energy hog—and not only when someone’s watching it. “The phantom power can be as high as 100 watts per hour,” he says—that’s the power the TV consumes simply by being plugged in. “But,” he notes, “ if you have put power strips everywhere in the house and you just walk around and click off a few of them, all of that phantom power is turned off. Then, you can enjoy an ap-pliance like that without using a tremen-dous amount of energy.” The sun may be an unlimited source of energy, but the solar power stored in their home’s batter-ies has limitations—and Ed is a vigilant watchdog. With rooftop solar panels provid-ing most of the home’s power, the Begleys remain blissfully unaware when there’s a power outage in the neighborhood. “I only find out about it when I walk to the post office and see the signal flashing to show that power has been restored,” Ed comments. Ed manually switches over to the municipal power grid only when he senses that the stored power capacity in the home’s solar batteries is running low. He foresees that eventu-ally that system will be automated, but for now, he’s happy to keep track. The solar power generated onsite is enough to
operate the house and professional TV cameras; it also charges an electric car in the garage—an all-electric 2002 Toyota RAV4 that’s clocked 85,000 miles. For hot water, the family comfortably relies mostly on a simple solar thermal setup—a 4-by-10-foot panel on the roof of black anodized tubing behind a piece of glass. A pump activates when a sensor in the panel senses that it’s hotter than the temperature in the tank. Ed observes: “If you keep things simple, they work well.” Simplicity also keeps maintenance issues at bay. The upkeep required for his solar electric system is minor; he’s com-mitted only to adding water to the batter-ies every nine months and occasionally
getting up to the roof to clean the panels with a brush and a little water.
Embracing the Great OutdoorsOne of Ed’s first acts when he purchased his current house in 1988 was to rip up the existing lawn and replace it with na-tive California plants and a fruit and vegetable garden. Unless raising cows or running a golf course, he can’t imagine why anyone would need high-maintenance, water-wasting grass
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outside their home. But, as with many of Ed’s improvements, energy saving tends to trump aesthetics. That’s where Rachelle comes in. “A few years after Rachelle had moved in here, she was telling a friend to meet her at the house,” Ed recalls, “and she said ‘It’s the one on the corner that looks like the Addams Family yard.’ I thought: ‘Oooh, maybe that garden isn’t quite as nice-looking as it used to be.’ It was very drought-tolerant, but it didn’t look good.” With Rachelle’s help, a new landscaper joined the effort of turning the formerly bleak-looking yard into an attractive mix of native plants that includes fragrant rosemary and purple-flowering sage along with broccoli, artichoke, corn and lettuce. Plans for the new family home will allow Ed an expanded capability to harvest rainwa-ter through a large catchment system with an underground tank, so that he can irrigate the gardens without draw-ing from the municipal water supply—which he characterizes as having, “… our straw dipped into someone else’s drink”—namely, Northern California’s water. “If you’re going to take water from someone else,” Ed advises, “the least you can do is to use it responsibly and not waste it on non-native species.”
Meeting in the MiddleBringing Rachelle’s aesthetic influence to bear has entailed replacing outdated living room curtains with attractive and energy-efficient wooden shutters, and finding ways to recycle without having
large bins in plain sight. She’s orches-trating the design and layout of the new house—allowing for both entertain-ing space and larger closets—while Ed focuses on its renewable energy systems—including more unshaded rooftop panels and orienting the build-ing to make the most of natural light. “If we don’t go LEED Platinum, then who will?” Rachelle queries. “That alone is not easy; still, I want to make it look like other houses in the neigh-borhood. I don’t want a Jetsons’ house; super modern has never been my style. I‘d like to show people that you can have it all, and I’m praying that it’s true.” The Begleys got off to a good start in March by tearing down an existing home on the property they recently purchased—96 percent of which, from cabinets to pipes, will be recycled or re-used through Habitat for Humanity. By March 2012, the new house should be finished. They want their LEED Platinum home to serve as a model for people who are building new residences, to show what is possible in achieving real energy efficiency and waste reduction without sacrificing style or comfort. Ed’s aim is to ensure the place produces more energy than it uses. As before, the whole process will be documented. “I hope that I’ve shown what you can do with a retrofit,” Ed says. “Now I want to show people what you can do from the ground up in 2011 and beyond.” The family’s ongoing focus on green living has made a major impact
on Hayden, who accepts environmental consciousness as the norm. “I learned everything from my dad, from compost-ing to solar panels,” Hayden says. “I always teach my friends to turn off the lights more often, take shorter showers, stuff like that.” Her green awareness gives this tween maturity beyond her years. As Rachelle says, “She thinks about things outside of herself. She’s always been conscientious. She’s also really concerned about the planet and very compassionate.” Hayden is proof that a family’s day-to-day environmental com-mitments can leave a lasting impact that reaches far beyond the immediate family.
Brita Belli is the editor of E-The Envi-ronmental Magazine and the author of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Renew-able Energy for Your Home. Her next book, due out this fall, explores the relationship of environmental toxins and autism.
24 New Orleans NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com
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Your family loves to shop at area farmers’ markets, investigating greens and other veggies to make meals bursting with vitamins and minerals. Yet, it’s not always
easy raising children who love to eat the fruits, veggies and salad makings you tote home. So consider mixing in a strategic science lesson—all you need are a few thousand wiggly worm friends to gobble up kitchen scraps; waste that would normally go into the trash and municipal landfill. For kids, worm composting gives food preparation a special mission: The worms must be fed! Worm composting, also known as vermiculture, produces nutrient-rich worm castings. In kid parlance, that’s “worm poop.” This organic matter provides the perfect soil conditioner and organic food for plants, indoors and out. It’s also easy to harvest the liquid (worm tea) from the compost and dilute it with water to sprinkle any garden with an extra dose of natural fertilizer. Both will promote strong, healthy plants that are resistant to disease. Our family has maintained a four-level worm bin just outside our kitchen door for five years, and for me, the hardest part of getting started was opening the box of wigglers. Now, we have more worm castings and worm tea than I can use, so I routinely pack up the castings into resealable plastic bags, pour the tea into bottles, and use both as much-welcomed gifts. A well-designed worm composter is opaque and has a secure lid and ventilation holes. Peaceful Valley Farm &
Garden Supply, in Grass Valley, California, offers both a deluxe bin and inexpensive do-it-yourself worm bin kit at GrowOrganic.com. Or, find step-by-step instructions to build your own at the educational website, RedWormComposting.com, which also lists reputable sources for worms (the pictures alone are enough to juice kids’ interest). Keep these tips in mind for successful composting, indoors or out:
n The best worms for composting are red wigglers. According to the Peaceful Valley company, one or two pounds of mature red worms can convert 3.5 to 7 pounds of food scraps into castings in one week.
n Newspaper provides cover. Shred or tear old newspapers into strips and place a fluffy layer on top to cover food scraps and discourage flies. Also use paper on the bottom to provide bedding for the worms.
n Keep the worm bin moist. Periodic spritzing with a spray bottle or fine mist from the hose will keep wigglers moisturized and on the move.
n Worms prefer a vegetarian diet; so don’t add cheese or meat scraps to the compost pile. Do feel free to toss in cereal, grains and rinsed, crushed eggshells. If possible, chop up all vegetable waste prior to adding it to your bin to speed up the composting process.
Jessica Iclisoy, the founder of California Baby natural baby care products, writes about natural living and backyard organic gardening in Beverly Hills, CA. She also maintains two worm bins and three composters. Connect at Jessica@ CaliforniaBaby.com.
KIDS WORM COMPOSTING Red Wigglers Turn Kitchen Scraps into Gardening Gold
by Jessica Iclisoy
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If it’s true that people are self-interested creatures at heart,
journalist Richard Louv has a message for humankind: Think not only what we can do for nature, but what nature can do for us. Louv’s seminal book, Last Child in the Woods, launched a national dialogue about the disconnection between children and nature, a state he calls nature-deficit disorder. Now, in The Nature Principle, Louv vividly portrays how a nature-infused lifestyle can enhance the quality of our health and relationships, benefiting every facet of experience. He asserts that the more high-tech our lives become, the more nature we need, and offers a roadmap to a future that incorporates nature into every aspect of our lives, from our homes to our workplaces. The recipient of the 2008 Audubon Medal, Louv is the author of eight books and the founder of the Children & Nature Network.
You cite many instances of nature’s power to heal and restore us mentally, emotionally, physically and even intellectually. How does science account for this?Healers have known about the importance of nature to our health and well-being for thousands of years, but only in recent years have scientists begun to study the benefits of what I
call, “vitamin N.” Still, the preliminary research indicates overwhelmingly positive correlations between human health and intelligence and nature. For example, a University of Illinois
study of urban children with attention deficit disorder found that even a little exposure to nature can have a positive effect on ADD. Several other studies indicate that walking in natural areas improves our mental and physical health. Researchers from Sweden and England that compared exercising in indoor and outdoor settings learned that expending the same amount of energy in these different environments provides different results, with green exercise offering added value. Science can’t yet tell us the causes and mechanisms behind these correlations, yet we know enough to act. Technology permeates every aspect of our lives today. A Kaiser Family Foundation study found that American youth spend an average of 53 hours a week using entertainment media. So we have to consciously bring more nature into our lives—not just to escape technology’s documented negative effects, but also to access the positive benefits that nature provides. It’s not a case of nature versus technology, however; it’s a matter of balance. The “hybrid mind” can access the benefits of both, facilitating skills in big-picture thinking.
Richard Louv’s Well-Being Rx: Reconnect with Nature
by April Thompson
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You assert that reconnecting with nature also strengthens community and family bonds, but where can busy urbanites start?
Often, families want to connect with nature but don’t know how. We offer free tools at ChildrenAndNature.org to help you start a family nature club organized around prearranged nature play dates. One club has 600 families. This helps create meaningful social bonding within and between families. It’s something any family can do, regardless of location or income, and it’s good fun.
What roles do governments play in preserving a nature-balanced world?All have a role to play. Urban planners a hundred years ago planned cities around nature. It’s not a new idea; we’ve just forgotten. Nature can offer cost-effective solutions to some of the problems cash-strapped governments face. For example, it costs a lot to tear up a canyon and put in a new stormwater system, but a lot less to develop a system that takes advantage of the natural watershed.
People often think about nature as somewhere else, like a state park or wilderness area, yet you point out the need to re-imagine our own yards and neighborhoods. What can we do to enhance the local habitats that ultimately sustain us?We often overlook the nature where we live, work and play. In 2008, for the first time in history, more people on Earth, were living in urban, rather than rural, areas. That means if we are going to have meaningful experiences with nature, we are going to have to rethink nature within cities. Looking forward, conservation measures alone won’t be enough to get us where we need to be. We need to start re-creating nature in order to protect the biodiversity that all creatures
need, humans included. We can start in our backyards by replacing lawns with flowers and native plants that will bring back sustainable migration routes for birds and butterflies. Acting on The Nature Principle is an optimistic way of looking at the future. It’s not just about survival; it’s creating a way of life that is profoundly all-around better for all of us.
April Thompson is a freelance writer in Washington, D.C. Connect at April Writes.com.
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Peter Laufer, Ph.D., is the James Wallace Chair in Journalism at the University of Oregon School
of Journalism and Communications, a broadcaster and the author of 12 books. His latest, Forbidden Creatures, exposes the illegal network of hunters, traders, breeders and customers who are negatively impacting the lives of exotic animals, humans and the environment.
In Forbidden Creatures, as you explored people’s fascination with collecting exotic and forbidden animals, what did you find?Many of us like to think that humans are the ultimate animal, and that we can tame the rest of nature. My research
for the book introduced me to an engaging cast of characters, many of who fantasized not just about communing with exotic beasts, but controlling them. Such dreams can dissolve into nightmares in seconds and without warning.
Exotic animals are collected and owned by celebrities, criminals and your neighbors. In fact, there are more captive-bred tigers in private homes in Texas than in the wild in India. I found a tiger in the back of a feed store in Idaho, a colony of chimpanzees in the countryside south of St. Louis and laundry bags full of pythons at a former missile base in the Everglades. There are legal auctions of exotic animals from aardvarks to zebras in Missouri, and sales of black market chimps on the Internet.
You have stated that illegal trading of wild and protected animals is growing exponentially; how profitable is this?Wild animal trafficking profits are estimated by Interpol to be $10 billion to $20 billion a year. It’s the third most lucrative illegal business in the world, trailing only drugs and weapons smuggling. It is easy to accomplish, the risks of capture are slim and penalties are minimal. Many amateurs also bring in animals for their own pleasure, based on their personal fascination for the exotic. Legal trade in endangered animals also exists, along with trade that skirts the law. It is the illegal wildlife trade that further threatens already endangered species and creates a crisis for survival.
How many exotic animals are there in the United States?No one knows the answer, because there is no census of exotic pets and the legal enforcement issues differ from state to state and by locality. In fact, while we license dogs, we have no overarching law governing exotics, or even a national registry of owners. This remains a great frustration to many people and organizations working for the benefit of the animals.
Forbidden CreaturesAuthor Peter Laufer On the Dark Side of “Owning” Exotic Pets
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What can animal lovers do?Education is needed to make conscious choices. Most of the people who collect exotics are ignorant of the long-term impact of owning these animals. The cute and cuddly tiger cub or baby chimp may look like an entertaining pet now, but what about the future? What will this animal be like in six months or six years? When animals reach their adolescence and full body weight, we must ask: How will they be cared for
and what will their lives be like? Chimps and other
great apes grow to be stronger than a man, are overtly
dangerous and must be corralled. Pythons can grow to 20 feet, endangering other pets and humans.
Often, people cannot keep up with the expenses of the food and care, and release the animals to sanctuaries or simply drop them off in the wild. This creates further repercussions for society and the environment. The reality is that exotic pets will not live happily in confinement. There are many terrifying and heartbreaking stories of captive animals attacking and even killing their owners after years of mutual affection. No one knows what makes the wild side emerge to disastrous results.
What should buyers of exotic animals understand?I view our attempts at taming animals as little more than subjugation. That’s understandable if our own survival is at stake. But to subjugate other beings for our amusement diminishes our own self-worth. Animal smuggling exists because there is a market for it. Decisions to purchase or own an exotic animal cannot be made in isolation; every action has an impact upstream. We need
to realize that there is an environmental impact of removing creatures from their habitats and teach the benefits of seeing animals in their natural environments. Wild animals do not need us. We should leave other animals alone, and they should remain forbidden creatures.
For more information, visit PeterLaufer.com.
Connect with Gail Condrick, writer and workshop leader, at GaelaVisions.com.
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Self-Sufficient SystemsPermaculture is widely adaptable to suit local climates, soils and geographies, and can scale to any size location that can sustain life. Because nature fosters no waste, permaculture-inspired gardens recycle or reuse all nutrients and energy sources; this approach regenerates natural systems, while
boosting the self-sufficiency of human settlements and reducing the need for industrial production systems that rely on polluting energy sources. Plants are selected and planted according to the way they help one another. Animals also play key roles in garden sustainability. Free-range chickens, for example, can help fertilize and work up the soil and control insect pests, while providing nutrient-packed eggs; humans, meanwhile, provide shelter, security, a water source and supplemental food. Surplus produced in these gardens is freely shared. “Many permaculturists are concerned about their relationships with others—all others—and the planet,” continues Wilson. “We believe that it is possible to redesign our lives to provide an abundance of food, fiber, energy and shelter for every person on this planet, while dramatically improving overall quality of life.” He notes that only 20 percent of the permaculture process is about growing food. “Permaculture is the big picture,” agrees Heather Lanier, who has developed a plan for Hill of the Hawk Farm, in Big Sur, California. “It’s about how relationships are built and how these relationships help care for one another in the circle of life.” At her farm, the staff are transforming abandoned chicken coops into living spaces and artist studios,
THE POWER OFPERMACULTURECare for People, Sustain the Planet, Share the Surplus
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and planting a forest garden that will provide shade and fresh fruit, while attracting beneficial insects. Chickens and ducks meander around a series of ponds that collect water in preparation for the region’s long dry season. Just down the road, the Esalen Institute offers educational workshops, which Lanier’s staff have attended. An instructor there also helped complete the permaculture plan for Lanier’s property.
Place-Based LivingPermaculture is equally appropriate for the urban and suburban areas where most Americans now live, says Wilson. “It’s for any size property, including an apartment, and for any climate... any place.” He and other permaculture enthusiasts maintain that, “With more and larger settings, together we can have a great positive effect on the total environment.” When it comes to the potential for rural areas, “We can harvest a far greater amount of resources than we do now—water, sun, carbon dioxide and wind—and greatly improve productivity, while improving the overall quality of the region.” However, he quickly clarifies: “One can be very successful in small spaces, too.”
John D. Ivanko is the co-author of Rural Renaissance, describing Inn Serendipity’s journey toward sustainability (InnSerendipity.com), based in part on permaculture and onsite generation of wind and solar power.
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calendarofeventsFRIDAY, APRIL 1Mandeville Live! – 6:30-8:30pm. (4/8, 4/15). Enjoy an evening of music for the family. Bring blankets and chairs. Anais St. John (4/1), Vic LaRocca opens for Kingsroe (4/15). Mandeville Trailhead, Old Mandeville. Free. 985-624-3147; [email protected].
SATURDAY, APRIL 2The Psychodynamics of Addiction – 10am-1pm. Attend a Jung Society workshop with David Schoen discussing the psychological creation of addiction and its effective treatment. Parker Methodist Church, 1130 Nashville Ave., NOLA. 3 CEU’s. $35/mem-bers, $45/non-members.
Spring Garden Show – 10am-4pm. Two days (4/2 & 4/3). Horticultural exhibits, plant sales and garden products, speakers, special area for children and a plant health clinic for diagnosis, recommendations and soil sample testing. $8 adults/$4 children (un-der 5 free). Botanical Garden, City Park, NOLA. 504-736-6519.
Adjustments Workshop – 2-4pm (4/2) 12-2pm (4/3) w/Meredith Salvago. Learn how the body moves through hands on adjustments; through safe and effective adjustments both teacher and student can open up and deepen their yoga practice. Balance Yoga & Wellness, 120 S. Cortez, NOLA. $20/ea or $35/both. 504-309-9618.
SUNDAY, APRIL 3Breathwork & Self Care Part I – 10:30am-5:30pm. Relax, let go and reconnect with the power of the breath. Led by Jack Anthony Fontana, Professional Breathworker. 6 hrs CEUs approved for massage therapy (LA provider #0125) $120; 120 S. Cortez St., New Orleans. Call 504-453-9161 to register.
MONDAY, APRIL 4Chair Massage at Monday Madness/The Nutri-tion Co. – 9am-7pm. Take a break from the day; relax and feel the healing benefits of massage. Offered by Mel Borne, LMT. 4350 Hwy 22, Ste. H, Mandeville. 985-869-2087.
TUESDAY, APRIL 5Kinder Garden: “The Green Grass Grows” – 9:30-10:30am (4/5, 4/12). Children ages 1½ to 3 yrs. and accompanying adults are invited to explore the world of gardens through age-appropriate activities. A hands-on class for young, curious learners. $10/members; $12/non-members; $5/additional adult. Contact Lydia Vaughn at 504-293-4722 or [email protected].
The Darkly Shining Heart – 7:30pm w/Deedy Young. An Exploration of Anger’s Paradoxical Nature. 2 CEUs. Parker Methodist Church, 1130 Nashville Ave., NOLA. C.G. Jung Society of New Orleans. Free/members or $10.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6Milk Party! – 7pm. Join in for mother to mother breastfeeding support. Certified International Lac-tation Consultant, Julie Holcomb attends to answer questions. No registration is required. ZukaBaby, 2124 Magazine St., NOLA. 504-596-6540.
THURSDAY, APRIL 7Green & Granola Domestics’ Nanny Training – 7pm. Working with families who live a natural lifestyle, this introduction covers topics such as how to support a family which practices breastfeeding, attachment parenting, baby wearing, cloth diaper-ing, gentle discipline, and more. ZukaBaby, 2124 Magazine St NOLA. Free/registration required. 504-596-6540.
FRIDAY, APRIL 8Ponchatoula Strawberry Fes-tival – (4/8-4/10). Come out for rides, music, games, strawberry-eating, cooking contests, food and antiques. Ponchatoula Memo-rial Park. 800-917-7045 or 985-370-1889.
French Quarter Festival – (4/8-4/10). Music on 15 outdoor stages, world’s largest jazz brunch, pa-tio tours, art shows and music workshops. New Orleans, French Quarter. 504-522-5730.
Deepen Your Yoga – (4/8-4/11) w/Sri O.P. Tiwari. This is a rare opportunity to study with one of India’s masters of Hatha yoga. The four day workshop consists of morning and evening sessions. Daily bookings taken, advanced booking required. Balance Yoga & Wellness, 120 S. Cortez, NOLA. 504-309-9618.
SATURDAY, APRIL 9Plant Sale – 8am-12noon. This is the biggest plant sale conducted by the Dept. of Parks and Parkways. Department staff will guide purchases and Dan Gill will be on site to deliver a workshop. 2829 Gentilly Blvd., NOLA.
Broad Flea Paint and E-waste Drop – 11am-4pm. Take advantage of an opportunity to drop off old paint and electronic waste (computers only) to the Broad Flea at the old Roberts supermarket, North Broad and Bienville. Second Saturday of every month.
Usui Reiki -Level I & II – Two-day (4/9 & 4/10). A 2-day intensive class of Level I & II taught by Reiki Master Tianne D. Lastra. Learn Reiki for self, others and long distance, history of Reiki, ethics/legalities of practice, animal reiki included. $350. Metairie location. Call to register: 504-909-3723.
Louisiana Iris Day – 12-4pm. Caroline Dormon’s Legacy in Bloom. Walk the winding Iris Path at Longue Vue House and Gardens and view a spec-tacular display of native Louisiana Irises! One of the most extensive collections of Louisiana Irises in the country. Free. Hilairie Schackai/504-293-4726.Theosophical Society Covington Lodge – 2-4pm. 2101 N. Hwy. 190, Rm. 200, Covington. Free. Contact: [email protected].
Gro Mo’ Better Series/Irrigation – 3pm. Water-wise irrigation and urban rainwater catchment offered by New Orleans Food and Farm Network, covers vegetable, herb and flower gardens. Holly-grove Market & Farm, 8301 Olive St, NOLA. $5. 504-864-2009; [email protected].
SUNDAY, APRIL 10New Orleans Group-Sierra Club Monthly Pro-gram – 7-8:30pm, 6:30pm refreshments. Aaron Viles from Gulf Restoration Network will speak on the BP Oil Spill Commission Report. Free. Audubon Zoo, Dominion Auditorium. Enter education gate behind the statue of Audubon. Parking plentiful and safe. For more info: Louisiana.SierraClub.org/NewOrleans.
TUESDAY, APRIL 12Swedish Massage Clinic – 6:15 & 7:45pm. (Also 4/14, 4/19, 4/21, 4/28). Help a student with their education at the student massage clinic. Swedish is good for overall relaxation & increasing flexibility. $30. Blue Cliff College Massage Dept, new location: Clearview Mall by food court, Metairie. Appoint-ment only. 504-456-3141, x2248.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13Deep Tissue Massage Clinic – 9:15-10:45am. (Also 4/16, 4/20, 4/22, 4/27). Help a student with their edu-cation at the student massage clinic. Deep Tissue is muscle specific and really works out the kinks. $30. Blue Cliff College, Massage Dept., new location: Clearview Mall by food court. Metairie. Appointment only. 504-456-3141, x2248.Swedish Massage Clinic – 1:15 & 2:45pm. (Also 4/15, 4/20, 4/23, 4/29). Help a student with their education at the student massage clinic. Swedish is good for overall relaxation & increas-
ing flexibility. $30. Blue Cliff College Massage Dept, new location: Clearview Mall by food court, Metairie. Appointment only. 504-456-3141, x2248. Holistic Education Monthly Meeting/Metairie – 6:45pm. Sponsored by Holistic Center for Health and Healing, Inc., network time followed by program. Speakers: Thor Agustsson, D.O. on Osteopathic Medicine. Old Metairie Library, 2350 Metairie Rd, Metairie. Free. 504-838-4350; 504-841-0188.Kirtan Concert – 8-10pm. Mantras merge with rock, world, funk, & trance grooves w/Sean Johnson and the Wild Lotus Band (Alvin Young and Gwendolyn Colman) leading voices in western kirtan music. Wild Lotus Yoga, 4842 Perrier St., NOLA. 504-899-0047.
THURSDAY, APRIL 14Little Masters – 10-11am (4/14, 4/28). Stretch, sketch, and sing a song in this new program for 2½ to 5 year olds and their parents or caregivers. Get in-spired by the beauty of the gardens. $12/members; $15 for non-members. Pre-registration is required, and tickets may be purchased at Longuevue.com or contact Kat Chulvick at 504-293-4721.
FRIDAY, APRIL 15Second Degree Reiki Class – Time TBA w/Reiki Master Elizabeth Ohmer Pellegrin. Oku Den (The Deeper Knowledge) is available for Reiki students with 6 months experience in Usui Shiki Ryoho. For private classes and residential retreat information call 504-388-2356.Sunset at the Landing Concert – 6-9pm. Free concert at the Columbia Street Landing, Covington.Open Mic Night – 7pm. TGITF (Thank God it’s the Third Friday). Share comedy, singing, music, poetry, and talents at Unity Church in Metairie, 3939 Vets. Blvd (2 blocks west of Cleary, entrance/parking lot in rear of bldg).Great Louisiana Birdfest – (4/15-4/17). Annual event includes birding trips, food, hospitality and workshops. Visit swamps, wetlands, pine savanna, hardwoods of S.E. Louisiana. Northlake Nature Center, 23135 Hwy. 190 E, Mandeville. $20-50 for trips and workshops. Contact: 985-626-1238.
SATURDAY, APRIL 16Vinyasa Yoga and Live Music Weekend – Time TBA (4/16-4/17) “The Mighty Mississippi to the Blue Ridge Mountains Tour” with visiting teacher Simon Park and DJ Hyfi. Join Simon Park and DJ HyFi on a sonic, spiritual journey. Wild Lotus Yoga, 4842 Perrier St., NOLA. 504-899-0047.Annual Hike the Lafitte Corridor – 10am. Come hike the 3 miles of the future greenway with Friends of Lafitte Corridor which will link neighborhoods of the French Quarter, Treme, Mid-City, Faubourg St. John, City Part and Lakeview. Folc-NOLA.org. Paint and E-waste Drop-Off at Hollygrove Mar-ket – 10am-2pm. Drop off old paint and electronic waste (computers only) to the Hollygrove Market & Farm, 8301 Olive St., NOLA. s. Pick up a $25 box filled with locally-grown, fresh produce while there.
33natural awakenings April 2011
Olde Towne Slidell Spring Street Fair – 10am-5pm (4/16 & 4/17). Annual Spring street fair featuring 140 vendors from around the U.S. with antiques, furniture, glass, art, pottery, jewelry, dolls, hand-made crafts, and great food and drink. Free. First, Second and Erlanger Streets in Olde Towne Slidell. 985-641-6316.
First Degree Reiki Class – 11am-7pm (4/16 & 4/17) w/Reiki Master, Elizabeth Ohmer Pellegrin. Reiki promotes and accelerates healing and balance of the body, mind and spirit. Learn to do Reiki for the self and others. No experience needed. Private classes and retreats on request. Pre-registration required. $250. Info/registration: 504-388-2356.
LPO Swing in the Pines Concert – 4-7pm. Concert by Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra at beautiful Bogue Falaya Park, Covington.
Spring for Art – 7-10pm. Follows free concert by LPO. Dozens of local galleries, boutiques, restau-rants and businesses showcase work by dozens of artists from region. Live art demos, chef’s challenge and bartender’s competition, live music at many restaurants. Historic Downtown Covington. Free. 985-892-8650.
Salvations 2011 – 7-10pm. A furniture competition and auction gala to benefit The Green Project. An evening of sustainable style + salvaged design with over 50 pieces of one of a kind furniture crafted from reclaimed materials, local cuisine, craft signature cocktails, music by Casual Baby and The Mumbles. $50-$100. 504-945-0240.
SUNDAY, APRIL 17Earth Day Festival/Green Business Expo – 8:30am-6pm. LA Bucket Brigade’s day of family fun, education on sustainable living and music. This year includes a green business expo. Free. Located along Bayou St. John at Orleans Ave., NOLA.
Breathwork & Self Care Part II – 10:30am-5:30pm. Relax, let go and reconnect with the power of the breath. Led by Jack Anthony Fontana, Pro-fessional Breathworker. 6 hrs CEUs approved for massage therapy (LA provider #0125) $120; 120 S. Cortez St., New Orleans. Call 504-453-9161 to register.
MONDAY, APRIL 18Milk Party! – 9-10am. A second monthly meeting added for mother to mother breastfeeding support. Certified International Lactation Consultant, Julie Holcomb attends to answer questions. No registra-tion required. ZukaBaby, 2124 Magazine St, NOLA. 504-596-6540.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20Sustainable Design Series – 5:30-7:30pm. Monthly panel discussion of topics from sustainable design to community action. Hosted by AIA New Orleans, Global Green & USGBC-Louisiana. Free. AIA Bldg, 1000 St. Charles, New Orleans. 504-525-8320.
THURSDAY, APRIL 21CPR for Babies/Children – 6pm. Nola Nesting is offering this course for both parents and expecting parents. Be prepared for anything! Come learn how to perform CPR on babies and children as well as what to do if a child chokes. This is a non-certifying course. ZukaBaby, 2124 Magazine St, NOLA. To register: 504-655-1819.The Green Screen – 7pm. The screening of A Vil-lage Called Versailles for this monthly environmental film series. Refreshments provided by Elizabeth’s Restaurant. The Green Project, 2831 Marais St., NOLA. Free. 504-945-0240. Holistic Education Monthly Meeting/Covington – 7pm. Sponsored by the Holistic Center for Health and Healing, Inc., network time followed by program. Speaker: Shelley Radosta, D.C. Free and open to public. Covington Council Chambers, 222 Kirkland St. 504-841-0188.
SATURDAY, APRIL 23. The Great Cloth Diaper Change – 9am. Join the North American and International cloth diaper com-munity to set the world record for the most cloth diapers changed simultaneously. ZukaBaby teams up with FuzziBunz to sponsor New Orleans’ participa-tion in the Guinness World Records Diaper Changing Challenge. Audubon Park. Info: 504-655-1819.
SUNDAY, APRIL 24Advanced Anusara Practice – 3:30-5:30pm w/Laura Flora. Work on and play with postures from the Anusara Level II and III syllabus. Using sound alignment principles and partner work, each class will be a laboratory for exploring the keys to unlock-ing advanced asana. Balance Yoga & Wellness, 120 S. Cortez, NOLA. 504-309-9618.
MONDAY, APRIL 25Holistic Medicine Education Meeting – 7-9pm. Potluck and network time 6:30-7pm. Different speaker each month. House of Broel, 2220 St. Charles Ave., NOLA. Free. [email protected]
TUESDAY, APRIL 26Build It Back Green – 6-8pm. Monthly series on do-it-yourself green building and energy efficiency. This month: Financing green upgrades, tax incentives and green loans. Free and open to public. 841 Carondelet St, New Orleans. Info: [email protected].
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27Welcome Baby/Newborn Care – 6pm.Wanting to care for baby is instinctual, knowing how to, is learned. Welcome Baby taught by Nola Nesting’s Amanda Devereux, RN and Erin Majorie, doula (DONA) teach everything from bathing, massaging and diapering to caring for baby’s umbilicus. Zuk-aBaby, 2124 Magazine St, NOLA. $50. Register: 504-655-1819.
FRIDAY, APRIL 29Columbia Street Block Party/Street Festival – 6:30-9:30pm. Classic Car display at 200 through 500 block of Columbia St, Covington A free fam-ily event.
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“You too can move away from the past and towards a life of vitality, wholeness and fulfilling relationships.”
Individual, Couples& Family Therapy
Andrea Scheele, LCSW, LMFT1303 Amelia Street
New Orleans, LA 70115(504) 899-2686
A
cupuncture
Georganna Ranglack, DVM, PhD Certified Veterinary Acupuncturist
Greater New Orleans Area, North Shore & West Bank
504.874.1189
Drug-free treatment for common conditions with acupuncture.
House calls or office visits by appointment.
Veterinary
markyourcalendarThe Reconnection
Coming to New OrleansLevel I/II Reconnective Healing Seminar
With Eric PearlJune 3-5
Level III The Reconnection SeminarThe Reconnection Teaching Team
June 6 & & 7Reconnective Yoga Workshop-Free
With Elizabeth Polito
June 2 at 7pm.Double Tree Hotel, 300 Canal St, NOLAwww.TheReconnection.com
34 New Orleans NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com
ongoingeventsNote: All Calendar events must be received via email by April 10 for the April issue. $10/Event Calendar or Ongoing Calendar listing. Free community wide events are listed for free as space is available. Items may be up to 50 words in length. Email [email protected] for guidelines and to submit entries. No phone calls please.
sundaySpiritual, but not religious? – 11am. If you like what Wayne Dyer and Maryann Williamson have to say, you will love Unity Church of Practical Christi-anity in Metairie. We encourage the transformation of your life through practical spiritual principles. Spiritual discussion group 12:30pm. Please join us for movie matinee on last Saturday of the month at 1:00pm. 3939–2A, Veterans Blvd, Metairie (2 blocks west of Cleary, rear of building). For more info call 504-885-7575. Community Yoga – 4-5:15pm. All levels. Shanti Yoga Shala, 3528 Magazine St, New Orleans, 70115. [email protected] or 310-435-6098. Relax Deeply- Yoga Restoratives – 5:30-6:30pm. Taught by Daria- All Levels - Check our website in ad for prices. Shanti Yoga Shala, 3528 Magazine Street, New Orleans, LA, 70115. [email protected] or 310-435-6098.Transmission Meditation – 6:30pm. Want to help the world and build a stronger connection with your own spiritual nature? Transmission Meditation is the simplest way to do both at the same time says Benjamin Creme. No fee. Uptown, NOLA. For info: call Alan 504-606-8512.
mondayAll Levels Yoga – 5:30-6:45pm. Donation based. Swan River Community Center Arabi, 7011 St Claude Ave, #213, Arabi, LA. Info: 985-218-0724 or [email protected] Northshore Viniyoga – 5:30-7pm. Small classes with individual attention for beginners and those new to yoga. $10/ session or $48/ 6 sessions Yoga School, 603 S. Tyler St, Covington. Info: 985-893-8834. Yoga Basics – 6:15-7:45pm. Taught by Katherine. Level 1. Shanti Yoga Shala, 3528 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA, 70115. 310-435-6098 or [email protected].
tuesday
Crescent City Farmers Market – 9am-1pm. Open air market with fresh locally grown fruits, vegetables, seafood, baked breads and pies, bedding plants, dairy products, freshly cut flowers. Located in the parking lot of Uptown Square.Morning Flow Yoga-Level 2 – 9:15-10:30am. (also Thurs) taught by Lindsay. Shanti Yoga Shala, 3528 Magazine St, New Orleans. [email protected] or 310-435-6098.
Chair Massage at Columbia Natural Food – 10am-2pm. Take 15 minutes for yourself. By using acu-pressure techniques in a precise sequence, the body is encouraged to release tension. Columbia Natural Food Market, 415 N Columbia St, Covington. Tom-mie Main, LMT#5627. Contact: 985-515-7218Hollygrove Market & Farm – noon-6pm. NOLA’s only CSA-style market selling each week assorted fresh local and organic fruit and vegetables from LA, MS & AL. 8301 Olive St, NOLA (across from Carrollton Boosters). Vinyasa Yoga – 6:30-7:45pm. Taught by Nathalie. Shanti Yoga Shala, 3528 Magazine St, New Orleans, 70115. [email protected] or 310-435-6098. Weekly Insight Meditation Group – 6:30-9pm. 2134 Magazine St., 3rd fl., New Orleans. Contact [email protected] or 504-343-8378.Community Class – 7:15-8:45pm. A playful and fun class combining flowing yoga sequences, restor-ative poses and breathing with awareness. No prior experience necessary. Taught by Ann Yoachim. By donation. Balance Yoga & Wellness, 120 S. Cortez St, Mid-City. 504-309-9618.Brazilian Dance and Drumming Class – 7:30-9:30pm. Casa Samba offers classes on samba, traditional Afro-Brazilian dance and drum rhythms from Rio to Bahia. Gym/dance attire suggested. Instruments provided. $8/class. 800 Race St. @ Annunciation (N.O.R.D. Bldg). Call Curtis Pierre 504-553-9500 or 504-236-7479.Order Vintage Garden Soups – Order by noon Tuesday for delivery on Wednesday. Fresh delicious savory soups developed by our chef. Options for spe-cial diets. Free delivery with $15 min or $3 delivery fee. Also pick up at two locations. Visit website on ad for soups of the week or call 504-620-2495.
wednesday“Dog Day at the Spa” – all day. The Peaceful Bud-dha Day Spa donates 10% of all profits to the ASPCA each Wednesday. Spa offers specialty facials, mani-cures, pedicures and customized massages. 4303 Canal St, New Orleans. 504-322-2482.
LASPCA Wellness Wednesdays – Ensure your pet’s health with annual vaccinations and a well-ness check-up. Basic Wellness Exam $20, low-cost spaying and neutering available. By appt.only. 1700 Mardi Gras Blvd, New Orleans. Call 504-368-5191.
Covington Farmers Market – 10am-2pm. Offering fresh produce, fresh baked breads, prepared foods and plants. Located at The Covington Trailhead, 419 N. New Hampshire, Covington.Intro to Mystical Meditation – 10:30am- noon. Strengthen your entire being through a guided meditation. Experience the positive, uplifting trans-formation of your energy. Donations only. Uptown Holistic Center, 723 Hillary, New Orleans. Contact: Jessica Tregle [email protected] German Coast Farmers Market – West Bank – 3-6:30pm. Open-air market offering fresh produce, rotisserie & fresh meats, fresh pastries/breads, sausage, kettle corn, cracklins, prepared foods, soy candles, goat milk soap and lotions. Arts and crafts 4th Wed. Located at 12715 Highway 90, St. Charles Plaza Shopping Center, Site of the old K-mart build-ing. Luling, LA
Rockin’ at the Rails – 5-7:30pm. A free concert series every Wednesday in April and May. Open to the public. At Covington Trailhead, Covington.
Meditation/Deeksha Blessing – 6:15 pm. Rev. Da-vid Florence will facilitate a meditation followed by the blessing and class on Eric Butterworth’s discover the Power Within at 7p.m. 3939-2A Veterans Blvd. (2 blocks west of Cleary, entrance/parking lot at rear of bldg.) Metairie. 504-885-7575.
Beginner Bellydance Class – 6:30-7:30pm. 4332 Magazine St, above Hey Café – take the staires in-side café. $15 drop in/$60 class cards for 6 classes. Contact: [email protected] Yoga – 7-8:15pm. Donation based. Swan River Community Center Arabi, 7011 St Claude Ave, #213, Arabi, LA. Info: 985-218-0724 or [email protected] Meditation & Study Group – 7-8:30pm. 45 min meditation, refreshments, then 45 min. book discus-sion group. Donations. 621 Opelousas Ave, Algiers Point (gate locked 7pm sharp!). Info: 504-905-4090 or [email protected].
thursdayCrescent City Farmers Market – 3-7pm. Farmers Market at 3700 Orleans Ave, American Can Co. building, New Orleans, rain or shine. Northshore Viniyoga – 6-7:30pm. Small classes with individual attention for beginners and those new to yoga. $10/ session or $48/ 6 sessions Yoga School, 603 S. Tyler St, Covington. Info: 985-893-8834. Intro to Meditation – 6:30-8pm. Strengthen your entire being through a guided meditation. Experi-ence the positive, uplifting transformation of your energy. Donations only. Uptown Holistic Center, 723 Hillary, New Orleans. Contact Jessica Tregle [email protected] Brazilian Dance and Drumming Class – 7:30-9:30pm. Casa Samba offers classes on samba, traditional Afro-Brazilian dance and drum rhythms from Rio to Bahia. Gym/dance attire suggested. Instruments provided. $8/class. 800 Race St. @ Annunciation (N.O.R.D. Bldg). Call Curtis Pierre 504-553-9500 or 504-236-7479.
fridayDaily Kundalini yoga – 9am. Kundalini yoga class offered daily by donation. Devine Kundalini Yoga, 1223 Baronne St., New Orleans. 866-989-3626.
All Levels Yoga – 10:30-11:45am. Donation based. Swan River Community Center Arabi, 7011 St Claude Ave, #213, Arabi, LA. Info: 985-218-0724 or [email protected]
saturdayVietnamese Farmers Market – 6-9am. Over 20 vendors set up shop on blankets spread with produce, beyond the courtyards are shops selling Vietnamese baked goods and imported groceries. 14401 Alcee Fortier Blvd, New Orleans East.Crescent City Farmers Market – 8am-noon. Open-air market with great selection of fresh locally grown fruits, vegetables, seafood, baked breads and freshly made pies, bedding plants, dairy products, fresh flowers. Cooking demos by some of the city’s most acclaimed chefs. Located at 700 Magazine, corner of Girod, New Orleans.
35natural awakenings April 2011
German Coast Farmers Market - East Bank – 8am-noon. Open-air market offering fresh produce, rotisserie meats, fresh meats, fresh pastries/breads, sausages, kettle corn, cracklins, prepared foods, soy candles, goat milk soap and lotions. Arts and crafts 2nd Sat. Ormond Plantation, 13786 River Rd., Destrehan. For info call 985-359-0190.
Camellia City Farmers Market – 8am.-1pm. Featuring yard eggs, Mediterranean foods, herbs, produce, baked goods, coffee and iced tea, local musicians, tastings and cooking demos. Griffith Park, 333 Erlanger and Second St, Olde Towne, Slidell. Info: 985-640-8291.
Gretna Farmers Market – 8:30am-12:30pm. Featuring fresh fruits and vegetables, meats, baked goods, dairy, native fruit wines and garden plants. Located in the old train depot, 300 Huey P. Long Ave, between 3rd and 4th streets, Gretna. Info: 504-362-8661.
Westwego Farmers & Fisheries Market – 8:30am-12:30pm. Open year round, rain or shine. Free parking. Featuring fresh produce, seafood, bakery items, dairy, plants, prepared foods & hand-crafted items. Plus live music & kids activities. 484 Sala Ave, corner of 4th St., Westwego. Contact 504-341-3424, x 209.
Cloth Diapering 101 – 9am. Learn about modern cloth diapers, how to care for them, the pros and cons, hands on demos and handouts to take home. Fee: $20 and you may bring up to 2 family members. Receive a $20 coupon off a purchase of $100 for attending. Reg. required, Zukababy, 2124 Magazine St, New Orleans, call to register 504-596-6540 or email [email protected]
Covington Farmers Market – 9am-1pm. Offering fresh produce, fresh baked breads, prepared foods and plants. Located at Covington City Hall, 609 N Columbia St., Covington.
Mandeville Trailhead Community Market – 9am-1pm. Fifty-plus vendors weekly: Gourmet foods, art, produce and plants. Tai Chi at 9:30am. Parking lot of the Mandeville Trailhead on the St. Tammany Trace off LA59. For vendor/entertainment info: Donna Beakley 985-845-4515.
Kundalini Yoga Class – 9-10:15am. All levels class taught by Melissa. Shanti Yoga Shala. 3528 Magazine St., New Orleans. 310-435-6098 or [email protected].
Hollygrove Market & Farm – 10am-2pm. NOLA’s only CSA-style market selling each week assorted fresh local and organic fruit and vegetables from LA, MS & AL. 8301 Olive St, NOLA (across from Carrollton Boosters).
Sankofa Farmers Market – 10am-2pm. Weekly market offering fresh produce and seafood from local farmers and fishermen. 5500 St. Claude Ave, corner of Caffin Ave.
Friends of the New Orleans Public Library Book Sale – 10am-2pm. Lots of fiction, non-fiction, local & rare books, CDs, DVDs, videos & records plus children’s books. Help rebuild the New Orleans Public Libraries. Book donations appreciated! At the Carriage House behind the Latter Branch Library, 5120 St. Charles Ave, New Orleans
Meditation Group – 2:30-3:30pm. Fairgrinds Cof-fee House. Sponsored by Art of Living Foundation. 3133 Ponce de Leon, New Orleans. For info contact Allen 504-247-6692.
Community Class – 3-4:30pm. A playful and fun class combining flowing yoga sequences, restor-ative poses and breathing with awareness. No prior experience necessary. Taught by Ann Yoachim. By donation. Balance Yoga & Wellness, 120 S. Cortez St.; 504.309.9618.
southshoreECO CAFÉ & BISTRO3903 Canal St., N.O. 70119
504-561-6585
EcoCafeNO.com
and Bistro
Catering and to go orders available. Sustainably operated.Salads, Soups, Panini’s, Hot Plates, and more with
fresh all natural ingredients. Vegetarian/vegan options, organic wines, organic Coffee Bar, Full Juice Bar. Tapas Fri & Sat 6-10pm. Breakfast Mon-Fri 8- 11:30 and 8-2:30 Sat/Sun. Lunch Mon-Fri 11:30-3 and Sat/Sun noon -2:30pm.
GOTT GOURMET CAFÉ3100 Magazine St. (8th),
New Orleans
504-373-6579
GottGourmetCafe.com
Casual food prepared to a gourmet’s standards.The freshest ingredients in made from scratch food. Salads, soups, paninis, wraps, burgers, gumbo and Chicago style Vienna hot dogs. Take-out in
biodegradable containers.Order your favorite menu items in party size quantities. Open Tues-Fri 11-9, Sat & Sun 8-5.
THE VINTAGE GARDEN KITCHEN925 S. Labarre Rd,
Metairie
Soup order line: 504-620-2495
VintageGardenKitchen.org
Healthy and delicious soups created by our chef using fresh, wholesome ingredients without preservatives and hormone-free dairy and meats. Local products used as much as is available and some ingredients from our own organically grown g a r d e n . T h r e e s o u p s / w e e k prepared. Ask about special diets.
Order by Tues noon for pick-up or delivery that week. Order on-line or by phone.
THE FIT GOURMET OF NEW ORLEANS504-621-6788
FitGourmetOfNewOrleans.com
Healthy Gourmet Meals prepared by an Executive Chef
delivered to home or office Mon-Fri. Order online or call before 10am for same day delivery. Each meal prepared fresh and delivered in Microwavable Containers with Nutrition Labels and Re-Heat Instructions, plus a bottle of cold water. NEVER FROZEN. ALL ORGANIC upon request..
northshoreGOOD EARTH MARKET & CAFÉ 821 Girod St.
Old Mandeville
985-674-4329
Offer ing del ic ious organic fare at breakfast, lunch and dinner. Also try our juices, smoothies,
baked goods, and organic beers and fine wines. Our market
has gluten & wheat free products, natural and organic products, vitamins and supplements. Open 8-8 Mon-Sat and 9-3 Sun.
RUBY’S NATURAL FOODS1030 Hwy 190 West
Slidell
985-641-1620
Market offering natural & organic products and supplements. Fresh soups daily.Veggie burgers, burritos, enchiladas, veggie pockets, fresh salads, chicken and turkey salads. $8 soup & salad lunch special daily. Lunch served 10:30-3. Seating available.
TOAD HOLLOW CAFÉ207 N. New Hampshire, Covington
985.893.8711
Offering soups, salads, burgers, sandwiches & house-made desserts with wholesome, mostly organic ingredients.
Something for everyone including vegetarian and vegan selections. Dine in or take-out. Breakfast Sat & Sun 8-2; Lunch Tues-Sun 11-2; Dinner Fri & Sat 5:30-9.
consciousdining
36 New Orleans NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com
communityresourceguide
Connecting you to the leaders in natural healthcare and green living in our community. To find out how you can be included in the Community Resource Guide email [email protected] to request our media kit.
ACUPUNCTUREKELLY KIVIKO, ACALouisiana Lic.# ACA.200012530 E. Rutland St., Covington985-869-3299
Acupuncture Works! It is a safe, drug-free approach to managing many common health concerns. Specializing in herbal medicine, pain, stress, women’s health, and more.
TONYA TIGART, ACALouisiana Lic.# ACA.2000324710 Canal St & 3618 Magazine St504-224-1069AcupunctureInNOLA.com
Acupuncture is gentle and effective. Tonya offers Acupunc-ture and Oriental medicine in a relaxing environment. She is experienced in the treatment of pain, stress and allergies, plus many more conditions. Call to
schedule an appointment.
ANIMAL HOLISTIC MEDICINE
JANICE E. POSEY, DVM504-559-0141 315 Lee Lane, #104Covington, LA 70433
Offering a holistic, integrative approach to healing your beloved pet through acupuncture, herbal medicine/nutritional supplements, and food therapy. We treat the patient, not the symptoms. See ad page 29.
BODYWORK
AVIVA MASSAGE & BODYWORK SPALinda L. Strickland, BA, CHt, RM, LMT601 Lafitte St., Mandeville985-727-9665
AVIVA Massage & Bodywork SpaLogo design #2
Once again for this logo design, we used a circular motif. Circles are reminicent of the body and it's many curves. The AVIVA name stabilizes the central 'flora' figure, by means of the letter "i" as the stem or trunk of the 'flora'. The 'flora' invokes a natural sensation,earthy and calm. The circluar text brings all the elements together and reiterates the AVIVA name as a total massage & bodywork spa.
Discover the difference & feel the peace through massage/bodywork, select spa services & energy work. Integrative, intuitive, customized approach. Aro-matherapy at all sessions. LA 1479;E2445. See ad page 14.
BODY SUGARING USA DAY SPADora Ochoa, L.M.T. 1800 W. Causeway Approach., Ste. 122Mandeville, 985-626-5538BodySugaringUSA.com
Unique, painless & permanent hair removal, specializing in Brazilian bikini lines. Home of the “Slimmer You” body wrap and cellulite massage. Instant gift certificates on our website.
CHANGE IN MOTION MASSAGE,LLCMel Borne, LMT #4158Northshore Area985-869-2087Relax with personalized in-home sessions. Special-izing in Shiatsu, Swedish and Deep tissue. Custom-ized blending of techniques are incorporated into sessions. Essential oils are used to maximize the healing benefits of your massage. See ad page 14.
THE PEACEFUL BUDDHA DAY SPACarey Mischler, LMT4303 Canal St., New Orleans504-322-2482
Offering unique services that combine therapeutic massage and aesthetics in Mid-City. Discounts available to first responders. 10% of profits donated to ASPCA every Wednesday. See ad page 14.
BREATHING
JACK ANTHONY FONTANABreathing Coach 3200 Lake Villa Dr., Metairie 504-453-9161JackFontana.com
Let me guide you through a breathing expe r i ence t ha t c an r e l ea se stress,fear,suppression,anxiety and create a space of healing,acceptance and physical and emotional well be-
ing. Come Breathe, Relax and Let Go!
CELEBRANT/OFFICIANT
REV. BONNIE POIRIER985-373-2321ChurchOfPeaceInChrist.orgHolisticTherapyCenter.com Holistic, metaphysical Christian minister, ordained in 1994. Ministries include: weddings, vow renewals, funerals, divorce ceremonies, baptisms, communion, dedications and naming ceremonies.
LIST FOR RENT, ITEMS FOR SALE, HELP WANTED, OPPORTUNITIES, PRODUCTS OR SERVICES HERE. To Place a Classified Listing Email to [email protected]. Must be received by the 10th of the month prior to publication. $1 per word. $20 minimum. Must be prepaid.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
CURRENTLY PUBLISHING Natural Awakenings magazines – For sale in Birmingham, AL; Lexington, KY; Manhattan, NY; North Central, FL; Tulsa, OK; Southwest VA and Volusia/Flagler, FL. Call for details 239-530-1377.
FOR RENT - COMMERCIALOffice Space Available. Mid-City and Marigny. Virtual, Private, or Share floor space in a triple bottom line atmosphere. Competitive/below market rent for your growing business. Full amenities including WiFi/Conference room/office equip plus value added services provided! TheBuildingBlock.com or call 504-561-7525.
Perfect space for licensed massage therapist or other quiet holistic provider. 462 sf includes large 14 x 17 treatment room, closet, office/kitchen and waiting room. $600/mo (includes utilities) with an-nual lease. 3200 Lake Villa Ave, Ste 208, Metairie. 504-535-9771.
Northshore Space/Treatment Room. 10x12 includes use of waiting area, etc. $500 (utilities, wf-fi included w/lease) in well-being center. 601 Lafitte St., Old Mandeville 985-727-9665.
FOR RENT - RESIDENTIALFull or Part-Time Residence in Magnolia, MS at Flowering Lotus Meditation and Retreat Center. Private rooms. Mature women preferred. Vegetar-ian. $400 monthly. Utilities included. Yearly lease. FloweringLotusMeditation.org. 504-905-4090.
VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES
The Humane Society of Louisiana needs volun-teers. To find out how you can help contact Jeff Dor-son at 901-268-4432 or [email protected].
St. Tammany Humane Society – Help foster pets, many tasks for fundraising, help with animal social-izing, many more. Call for wish list. Contact: 985-892-7387, x 106.
The LatinoFarmersCoop.org An urban agriculture nonprofit committed to promote responses to food, farm and nutrition needs gardening and food pantry volunteers. Call 504-333-3611 or [email protected].
classifieds
37natural awakenings April 2011
CHI MACHINE
JOFFRION MITTS, M.ED.Alternative Health Consultant504-897-9670ChiMachineForYourHealth.com
Exercise with no effort! Lose weight! Relieve stress! Eliminate pain! Improve circulation! Lower blood sugar! Breathe deeper! Sleep better! Increase energy! Feel happier! Free one week in-home trial!
CHIROPRACTIC/WELLNESS
CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER & HOLISTIC HEALTHCARE SERVICESDr. Debbi Hannan101 Clearview Pkwy at Airline, Metairie504-454-2000HannanWellness.com
Experience the difference! We offer total wellness care: Chiropractic, de-toxification, nutrition, endermologie, DRX-9000 non-surgical spinal decom-pression, cold laser, EB-Cellular Cleanser, Far Infra Red Sauna. See ad page 7.
COLON HYDROTHERAPY
ALORACLEANSE1131 S. Tyler St, Covington 985-809-3133AloraCleanse.com
Colon Hydrotherapy removes stagnant fecal matter and toxic bacteria along with cellular debris. Get relief of unhealthy digestive symptoms and achieve
greater immunity, enhanced energy, clearer skin, improved mental clarity, and a general elevation in mood.
HOLISTIC LIFE4401 Veterans Blvd, Ste 200504-885-8800HolisticLife.us
A Colonics, Wellness, Weight Loss Day Spa, Colon Hydro-therapy, massage therapy, ac-tivated oxygen sauna, ion foot
bath, reflexology, integrated medicine, and other natu-ral /spa offerings. Across from Clearview Mall in the major business area of Metairie. See ad page 13.
UPTOWN COLON HYDROTHERAPY2627 General Pershing, NOLA504-644-7376UptownColonHydrotherapy.com
PTOWN
CHYDROTHERAPY
OLONUCOnly closed system colonic in New Orleans. We offer a 60 minute appointment, because we know you cannot rush a cleanse. We provide a highly trained
therapist focused exclusively on your need at all times. See ad page 28.
VIVACITY WELLNESS SPA3333 Kingman St, Ste 102, Metairie504-885-8355VivaCityNOLA.com
Reclaim health and vitality by eliminating toxins in the body. We o f f e r O p e n S y s t e m C o l o n Hydrotherapy, Far Infrared Sauna with Ozone, Ion Foot Detox and
Hyperbaric Oxygen Chamber Therapy. Certified Colon Hydrotherapist and member of I-ACT. See ad page 26.
CONSTRUCTION
SOUTHERN HOMES, LLC Certified Green Builder1-888-660-0123SouthernHomes.com
Custom construction and renovation specializing in energy efficiency and indoor air quality. Certified by National Assoc. of Homebuilders as a Green Builder. Locally owned, 20
years experience, over 3000 homes built.
COUNSELING AND PSYCHOTHERAPY
ANDREA SCHEELE, LCSW, LMFTATTACHMENT PSYCHOTHERAPY1303 Amelia St., New Orleans504-899-2686
Attachment Psychotherapy / EMDR
“You too can move away from the past and towards a life of vitality, wholeness and fulfilling relationships.”
Individual, Couples& Family Therapy
Andrea Scheele, LCSW, LMFT1303 Amelia Street
New Orleans, LA 70115(504) 899-2686
When you experience loss, illness, depression, stress or are going through major life transitions Attachment Psychotherapy will benefit you. Individual, couples, family, parent/child and small group therapy. See ad
on page 33.
GINA L. ORIHUELA, LCSW-BACS, ND, CTN Holistic Psychotherapy & Counseling3213 Florida Ave, Ste D, Kenner 504-466-2266
Psychotherapist and Naturopath. A unique holistic approach to assist you in coping with loss, illness, stress, depression, or other life transitions. Individual, family and/or group therapy clients. Children, adolescents, and adults. See ad page 29.
JENNIFER ENGEL, M.ED LPC5002 Prytania, NOLA, 70115504-813-9130
Licensed Professional Counselor. Holis-tic Psychotherapy for personal growth, stress, transition, etc. Individual and Group Mind-Body Skills Training (guided imagery, meditation, breathing, relaxation, tapping, etc). Evening and
Saturday appointments available.
DENTIST
MIKE ROBICHAUX, DDS1101 Robert Blvd, Ste A, Slidell, LA 70458985-641-8058MikeRobichauxDDS.com
Offering a holistic and patient-centered approach to dentistry, because we be-lieve the health of the mouth and overall health cannot be separated. We help those we serve make decisions that are in their best interests, based on their
values and goals, by providing state of the art infor-mation within a trusting relationship. See ad page 19.
EDUCATIONAL KINESIOLOGY
BRAIN GYMTanya Simmons BA Ed. Licensed Brain Gym Practitioner/Consultant.New Orleans 504 309 0002/710 [email protected]. BrainGymNOLA.com
Teaching Brain Gym in Education, In-service and individually to help any learning difficulties, AD(H)D, reading, writing, attention, memory, performance, success for goals, and the joy and ease of learning. Avail-
able for teachers, parents, children and adults. See website for upcoming trainings/seminars.
ENERGY PSYCHOLOGY
MARYLOU SMITHUptown Holistic Center723 Hillary Street, New Orleans504-723-2899
Set Yourself Freewith the transformational power of PSYCH-KTM
Experience your unlimited power through the gentle processof PSYCH-KTM. Free yourself from traumatic memories,limiting thoughts and addictive behavior. Support what ismost meaningful in the journey of living your life’s purpose.
Marylou SmithAdvanced PSYCH-KTM Facilitator
Private Sessions
Uptown Holistic Center • 723 Hillary St, NOLA • 504.723.2899marylousmith.com • [email protected] • psych-k.com
PSYCH-K is a process that frees your mind of limiting and self-sabotaging beliefs and replaces them with life enhancing beliefs that lead to great joy, fulfillment and growth.See ad page 31.
FENG SHUI
LIVE, LOVE AND FENG SHUIEveline Hoffmann Feng Shui [email protected] Feng shui consultations for homes and businesses Find balance and serenity within your home .Make intentional changes in your dwellings and you will alter your life in positive wide ranging ways. Your environment will begin to assist you and you will uncover solutions to your day to day issues and life will improve. See ad page 10.
38 New Orleans NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com
FOOT HEALTH
PERFECT FIT SHOES5012 West Esplanade Ave, Metairie [email protected]
Gini Davis, Physical Therapist, Crescent City Physical Therapy (Uptown/Metairie Clinics), has specialized in treatment of foot, ankle and lower extremity problems for more than 35 years and now offers
women’s and men’s shoes with style and comfort to support healthy, pain-free feet. Gini can fabricate new orthotics, or fit your orthotics into new shoes. She and staff provide in-depth knowledge and customer service. See ad page 26.
HAIR SALONS
LIVE ART STUDIO4207 Dumaine St., New Orleans504-484-7245LiveArtStudio.com.
Need some pampering? We offer just that in our one on one sessions in hair, massage and aromatherapy. Patti Spring has 32 years of experience in helping clients to fulfill all their personal
grooming and body maintenance goals. Come experience yourself as Live Art. See ad page 14.
HERBAL MEDICINE
JEN STOVALLCommunity [email protected]
Providing holistic consultations to foster well-being and support healing using herbal medicine, nutrition, and lifestyle choices. Address acute is-sues and constitutional imbalances by creating a personal wellness plan
that incorporates medicinal herbs into your life.
HOLISTIC/ENERGY HEALING
HOLISTIC HEALING & EDUCATION CENTER, LLCDr. Roy Solomon, Metaphysician/Minister671 Rosa Ave, Suite 214, Metairie504-841-0188DrRoy@HealingEducation.comHealingEducation.com
Specializing in the healing of Mind, Body and Spirit. The Reconnection, Inner Child, Forgiveness, Meditation, FES, Monthly Education Classes, Teaching “You can if you will”.
JESSICA TREGLEHolistic Energy Healing504-352-6418EnergyHealing-NewOrleans.com
Energy Healing is an effective therapy of alternative medicine and holistic health. One releases negativity and gains positive energy! Become more healthy, and thrive at an accelerated pace! Healing occurs physically,
mentally, emotionally, and spiritually!
INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE
IRENE SEBASTIAN, M.D., PH.D401 Veterans Blvd, Suite 203Metairie, LA 70005504-838-9804IreneSebastianMD.com
Offering a holistic approach to health-care: Integrative Medicine, Homeopa-thy, Functional Medicine, Herbal Therapy, and Nutrition. See ad page 27.
ANTI-AGING, WEIGHT & WELLNESS INST. Dr. Kathleen Posey, M.D.377 Hwy 21, Ste 101, Madisonville985-845-4111KathleenPoseyMD.com
Our mission is to improve health and reverse chronic disease through hor-monal and energetic balancing and nu-trition. Offering the Ideal Protein Diet and Holistic Gynecological Care.
RAUL LLANOS, M.D.Wellness Clinic3749 N. Causeway, Metairie, LA 70002504-834-1050
Integrative wellness clinic offering ayurveda consultation, cosmetic LA-SER procedures, bio-identical hormone therapy, non-surgical treatment for urinary incontinence, best natural sup-plements on the market, other medical
spa services. See ad page 8.
THOR AGUSTSSON, D.O.232 Barry Ave, New Orleans, 70121 H 504-861-3011 * C 815-520-2891 Osteopathic.org
With a holistic approach, Osteopathic Medicine effectively treats pain with-out the use of drugs. We treat fibro-myalgia, cancer pain, birth trauma, arthritis, chronic head, neck, back, pelvic, and abdominal pain. Other
modalities: Reiki, Bodytalk, Supplement Consulta-tion. See ad page 12.
LIFE COACH
CHARLY BORENSTEIN-REGUEIRACertified Professional Life CoachCorporate & Life Coaching Services7121 Walmsley Ave, Ste D, NOLA 70125504-259-7726 [email protected]
Elite athletes and executives have coaches. Imagine how much more productive and fulfilling your life would be if you had your own Life Coach. You don’t have to imagine anymore, contact Charly today.
MARTIAL ARTS
TAI CHI-QI GONGShifu King Lam8132 Willow St, [email protected]
Asian Arts to improve health, fitness, personal safety, rejuvenate energy. Achieve a better mind, body and spirit. Serving New Orleans com-munity for 35 years. KingLamtaichi-
karate.com. See ad page 18 and calendar for classes.
MASSAGE SCHOOLS
BLUE CLIFF COLLEGEClearview MallMetairie, LA. 70006504-456-3141
Train for an exciting, new career as a Licensed Massage Therapist. Earn an Associates degree upon completion of advanced massage training. Inquire about financial aid. See calendar for
information about our $30-student massage clinic.
NATURAL BABY & CHILD
ZUKABABY2124 Magazine St., NOLA 504-596-6540ZukaBaby.com
ZukaBaby is a new shop specializing in cloth diapering, babywearing and handmade children’s items. Cloth diapering classes every Saturday. See calendar for other events. See ad page 31.
39natural awakenings April 2011
NATUROPATHIC DOCTOR
DR. LISA MARIE CHAMBERS, NDCenter For Functional Medicine723 N. Causeway Blvd, Mandeville 985-237-0277Accurate Clinic2401 Vets Blvd, Ste 16, Kenner504-472-6130DrLisaMarieChambers.com
Dr. Chambers works in partnership with her patients to discover, under-stand and address the root cause of their illness. By treating the whole person, she also offers preventive care
before serious illness occurs.
NUTRITIONIST
DANIELLE PACIERA, LDN, RD, CCN3618 Magazine St, New Orleans [email protected]
Cutting edge holistic nutrition services. Specializing in complementary and al-ternative medicine, therapeutic uses of foods, supplementation, vegetarian nu-trition, women’s health, sports perfor-mance, eating disorders, depression,
addiction, and more. See ad page 30.
REALTOR
CHERYL GAUTIER, REALTOR, GREENDorian Bennet Sothebys Int RealtyCell 504-638-7441 [email protected]
Outgoing pet-friendly Realtor with a degree in fine art and a background in health food and natural remedies, car-ing for the needs of buyers, sellers and renters.
REIKI
ELIZABETH OHMER PELLEGRIN, R.M.T.Reiki Master Teacher & [email protected] 20 years experience in Usui Shiki Ryoho, upholding the highest standards in Reiki classes and Reiki sessions. Practitioner and Teacher of Australian Bush Flower Essence. Also providing Astra-Lite massage & Reiki tables – lightweight and easy to transport. See ad page 26 and calendar for classes.
TIANNE D. LASTRAUSUI, KARUNA & RAINBOW REIKI MASTER504-909-3723AmazingReiki.com
Certified & experienced Master Teacher offering sessions & classes to the Greater N.O. Area. Healing Touch, Pranic Healing, Crystal Healing, Reiki Drumming and Animal Reiki practi-
tioner. Visit our website for full information. See ad page 25.
SOLAR
POWER EARTH SUPPLY, LLC 11 Davis Blvd., 70121504-224-0246PowerEarthSupply.com
Solar powering the Big Easy. We specialize in spinning elec-tricity meters backwards. Each house is analyzed to determine the most productive solar solu-
tion. Licensed and Insured. Locally owned and operated.
SOUTH COAST SOLAR, LLC 2605 Ridgelake Dr.Metairie, LA 70002504.529.SUN9SouthCoastSolar.com
100% locally owned and operated, South Coast Solar is Louisiana’s largest solar energy company. Call or visit our website to set up a free estimate. See ad page 21.
SPIRITUALITY
UNITY CHURCH OF METAIRIE3939-B Veterans Blvd, Metairie 504-885-7575 Daily Prayer Line 504-885-7056
Break ing boundar i e s th rough transformative thought. A Christian church celebrating the Love of Spirit while honoring all paths. (2 blocks west
of Cleary, entrance/parking in rear of bldg) Sunday service 11am.
WELLNESS COUNSELING
MICHELE CLAIBORNELife Counsellor504-330-8380HealingArtsInternational.com
Michele is today’s Medicine Woman, Natural Healer, Minister and Life Counsellor. Michele has a reputation of inspiring and showing how to bring purpose and joy back into people’s lives, along with health!
YOGA
DIVINE YOGA1223 Baronne [email protected] YogaNOLA.com
Kundalini Yoga is considered to be the most comprehensive of yogas, combin-ing meditation, physical practice and breathing exercises. All levels of ex-perience are welcome to all classes.
See ad page 15 and calendar for events/classes.
WILD LOTUS YOGA4842 Perrier St.New Orleans, LA 70115504-899-0047WildLotusYoga.com
Gambit’s ”Best Place to Take a Yoga Class” five years in a row. Over 40 ongoing classes per week for beginners and experienced taught by skilled
teachers in a peaceful, positive atmosphere. Offering courses, workshops, retreats and concerts. See ad page 15 and calendar for events/classes.
YOGA TEACHER TRAINING
YOGA SCHOOL, L.L.C.603 S. Tyler St., Covington, LA 70433985-893-8834YogaSchoolCovingtonLA.com
A state licensed school and Yoga Al-liance registered teacher training certification program at the 200 hour and 500 hour levels. Visit website for more information. See ad page 15.
YOGA THERAPY
AMY ARCHINAL, RYT, PRYTPhoenix Rising Yoga Therapy504-899-6167NewOrleansYogaTherapy.com
Phoenix Rising Yoga Therapy com-bines meditation, assisted yoga postures, breathwork and client-centered dialogue to promote self-awareness. Discover the wisdom of
your body. See ad page 15.
40 New Orleans NOLANaturalAwakeningsMag.com