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This summer, my children and I went to a sleep-away camp in the beautiful Poconos of Pennsylvania.  What a neat way to get back to nature!  My kids spent most of their days outside!  They swam in the lake, went horseback riding, did arts & crafts, and more.  This was an experience that I was able to provide them with because of my background in education.  While they were playing with friends, I was checking on campers,  supervising counselors, and communicating with parents.  Sure, it was hard work, but I got to spend my summer with fabulous kids in a place that was completely different from Orlando.  For the most part, the weather was beautiful, and like my kids, I got to spend most of my time outdoors!  I know it makes me sound like I’m 12, but I made some really good friends at camp, too.  What a neat experience! We were in PA for 9 weeks.


When I started this blog many years ago, I planned to get new posts up weekly, and for a while, I did exactly that.   My goal was to write about every new “green” business in Orlando, along with covering local events that would interest CFGG readers.  I also wanted to see our site have great content that relates to green living and holistic health.  Therefore, I recruited a number of individuals (mostly moms) who were interested in blogging about such topics on a regular basis.

Writers have come and gone, contributing what they could when they could–leaving when they could no longer make time for blogging or to start blogs of their own.  My life has changed dramatically over the years, and this has resulted in inconsistent writing on my part.  Having started this blog as a full-time parent, I found it hard to keep up when I returned to my teaching  job in 2008.  I’m home with my children again, but now I’m working towards another degree in education at the University of Central Florida.   I spend my weeks with my children and my weekends doing homework, so blogging regularly about natural living has been a bit of a challenge.

We’ve been back from PA about a month now, and we’re having fun reconnecting with family and friends.  Now that the kids and I have found our homeschool groove, I’m looking for ways to get more focused on green living. One idea that interests me has to do with my 4th grader, David.  I’m thinking about helping him write some articles for the Green Guide. This would be a great way to integrate language arts and science.  I might be able to involve my 1st grader as well! We’ve never had a kid’s perspective here at the GG!


We’re visiting Our Vital Earth (a worm farm) next week with our homeschool group.  I’m ashamed to admit that we have not been composting. It’s been on my “to do” list for years.   I need to just go ahead and get started.  I’ve also been talking about a rain barrel for too long.  What else?  We moved to a new home and need to look into water filtration again.  I’ve been so out of touch–I don’t even know what’s out there.

Oh, and if you’ve been wondering, the site’s name change was not intentional.  This website is designed for those living in Orlando and the surrounding areas.

The Orlando Green Guide is a labor of love.  If contributing appeals to you, please email me to get signed up AFTER reading the Guidelines for Writers.  This is a non-profit site, but you will be allowed to add your link in exchange for monthly contributions.  Do you have a child who would like to submit an article that relates to a green topic?  What about a book review?    We’d love to hear from you!

Fun for vegetarians and non-vegetarians alike, the Central Florida Veg Fest is a great place to learn more about healthy living, and local green businesses.  The Veg Fest offers live entertainment, cooking demonstrations by local vegan chefs, health and wellness exhibitions, and kids activities.  

The Veg Fest will be held October 22, 2011 at Loch Haven Park from 10am to 6pm.  Admission is free to this family friendly and smoke free event.  

Visit a state park FREE on Sunday, Sept. 11. Just bring a library card, a book checked out from a library or donate a new or gently used family-friendly book. Many state parks will host special events, such as book exchanges or reading with a park ranger.

A Peaceful HypnoBaby

Words such as HYPNOSISCHILDBIRTH HYPNOSISHYPNOBIRTHING… HYPNOBABIES…
Often conjure images of old movies, silly sitcom plots, grown men dancing like ballerinas, little babies staring at swinging pocket watch, or poor birthing women clucking like chickens. Yet, as leery as people often are about the ‘H’-word, anyone who has ever wondered how the heck they are already at their exit while driving down I-4 has simply entered into a state of everyday hypnosis. Ditto for someone who is caught daydreaming or is completely engrossed in a movie, book, or video game. And who hasn’t drifted off during a really boring conversation? Again, everyday hypnosis. Hypnosis is simply a state of deep relaxation and focused concentration. It is a natural state anyone can access if they want to.

So, what is the one word besides “BREATHE” that can cause a laboring woman to issue threats of rendering her partner sterile if he says it to her one more time?– “RELAX!”.  Yet how many of us know how to even begin to relax or what true relaxation actually feels like? Add to this the fact that we live in a country which bombards us with TV commercials for the newest wonder drug promising an instant, effortless fix for tired, overworked, stressed-out people. No need to change your lifestyle or learn relaxation &/or stress reduction techniques—just use the drugs. Hmmm… seems familiar. That is also the prevailing attitude around birth. Unfortunately, many people are shocked and, even worse, often scornful to hear a woman is choosing to give birth without an epidural or some sort of pain medication. So often pregnant women hear someone almost gleefully exclaim, “You just wait, you will be screaming for that epidural the minute you hit the hospital sidewalk!”? Few understand that mainstream birthing practices coupled with a woman’s own attitudes, fears, beliefs, and expectations play such a huge role in birthing. Feeling safe, supported, honored, and confident makes all the difference in being able to give birth ‘naturally’.  Pair these factors with deep relaxation skills and slow deep breathing practices that come easily as habit, and a woman has the edge she needs to give birth without medication and often quite comfortably.

The gift of hypnosis is the profound relaxation and fear release techniques it provides. (The same medical hypnosis techniques used to create anesthesia in such cases as pain relief for burn victims, dentistry, and minor surgery aren’t too shabby either.) And truth be known, those Lamaze instructors are right, the way to a more comfortable birth is not to get pregnant in the first place. Oops, just kidding—relaxation and breathing techniques. While most childbirth education programs teach many wonderful relaxation ideas and tools, they lack the proper compounding and practice necessary to build a relaxation HABIT within the body. Nor do they provide access to the most powerful of all tools: your imagination- your subconscious mind. The subconscious is the part of your mind that influences how you think, how you feel, the choices you make, and the habits you hold. Hypnosis allows access to your most important ally. With access granted you can release limiting beliefs, fears, and negative programming, thus creating positive change and expectation. Hypnosis also enhances the mind-body connection. It can do such things as reduce stress, speed healing, increase a nursing woman’s milk supply, or even alter the perception of pain.  Another benefit of hypnosis is that when someone is in this relaxed state, breathing automatically deepens and slows. This contrasts markedly with the fast paced, upper-chest breathing taught in traditional Lamaze classes. Over time shallow breathing results in emotional distress and physical exhaustion.  A woman loses oxygen, energy, and perspective. Just attempting to remember the contrived patterns is enough to produce panic in most laboring women, and it has also been know to contribute to the broken fingers of well meaning birth coaches.

The beauty of childbirth hypnosis is the greater comfort and control it affords a woman during her birth process. Comfort, focus and control not typically realized by other birthing women. The benefits also extend to her baby. The practices of profound relaxation, deep slow breathing, and positive expectations during pregnancy and birth reduce the amount of stress hormones that can negatively impact the mother and her child. A HypnoBirthing mommy is better able to enjoy her pregnancy and dare I say, joyously anticipate giving birth. But perhaps the greatest benefit is the life enhancing skills she now forever more possesses. And who wouldn’t want to cluck like a chicken while giving birth? ; )  ; )

If you like farm fresh produce, the Sanford Farmer’s Market is a must see.  Here you will find everything from organically grown carrots and goats milk dairy products to local raw honey. (Locally made honey is a natural treatment for environmental allergies.) There are native plants and flowers sold by gardeners who give lots of great advice on how to keep your garden green. You will also find live music and lots of arts and crafts. Vendors offer a wide variety of products including jewelry made from recycled items like game tiles and bottle caps and hand-made clothes and purses.  The market is held in historic downtown Sanford Satuday mornings from 9am-2pm and Wednesday evenings from 6pm-9pm.  Hope to see you there!

Three green sea turtles were released back into waters of Florida’s east coast on Wednesday. All three turtles were rehabilitated by SeaWorld Orlando’s animal rescue team.

The first turtle to be released –a quite large, 20-inch turtle– was brought to SeaWorld’s rehabilitation facility in January of this year with pneumonia. Considered a sub-adult, this female green sea turtle was given around-the-clock care by the Park’s turtle specialists. She was released today in Eddy Creek, and the aquarium team has confidence she will do just fine back in the wild.

A turtle that was recently brought to SeaWorld for a shell infection and barnacles also was released. Barnacles can cause stress and disable the flippers of the turtle. After carefully removing the barnacles, the aquarium team nursed the young turtle’s shell back to health. Turtle specialists are optimistic about the turtles release back into Cape Canaveral.

The day of turtle releases ended with the third green sea turtle which was rescued in December of 2010 for fishing line ingestion, which is a common injury for sea turtles. SeaWorld’s care team aided this turtle back to health by removing the line and monitoring the turtle’s weight until it reached a healthy benchmark. The fastest of the three turtles took off into the waves, which aquarists say is a good sign.

“Today’s release went well, and we’re happy that the turtle’s are fully recovered and are safely back into their natural habitats,” said Dan Conklin, SeaWorld Orlando’s Supervisor of Aquarium.

Since the sea turtle rescue program began at SeaWorld Orlando in 1980, more than 1,530 sea turtles have been cared for by the park’s vets and turtle experts. Each was either rescued by the staff or brought to the park due to cold stress, injuries from nets, fishing line and hooks, ingestion of trash such as plastic bags, boat strikes, natural causes and oil contamination. The team’s success rate in caring for turtles with such a wide variety of injuries is amazingly high: 68% of the turtles brought to SeaWorld in the past 30 years have been returned to the wild after hands-on care and TLC.

Coinciding with the release is Friday’s June 24 launch of”Turtle: The Incredible Journey”, the first movie from SeaWorld Parks & Entertainment’s newly formed SeaWorld Pictures division, in theaters across the country and atPointe Orlando and Oviedo Marketplace in Central Florida.

It’s a stunning family documentary and award-winning film that follows the life and migration of a loggerhead turtle from hatchling to maturity on a two-year adventure of more than 9,000 miles guided only by instinct. The film is a remarkable example of wildlife documentary filmmaking and is narrated by Academy Award nominee Miranda Richardson.

Y360 Health is hosting a “Raising Healthy Kids Workshop” on Saturday, June 25th at 11:30am. The workshop will be presented by Dr. Leif Martensson, a Chiropractor at Y360 Health. Dr. Martensson will present topics on family health and wellness including information on childhood vaccines, the effects of posture on children, and the top healthiest snacks kids will love.

Y360 Health is a chiropractic center focusing on overall health and wellness for your entire family. Headed by Dr. Dan Yachter, they believe in treating the root cause of sickness and disease and not just the symptoms.

Their workshop will be held in the Y360 Health Center located on Lake Emma Road in Lake Mary. Register to attend the workshop by calling them at (407) 333-2277 or  visit their website at http://www.y360health.com.

Y360 Health Center

3621 Lake Emma Road

Lake Mary, FL 32746

(407) 333-2277

http://www.y360health.com

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