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The Dirty Dozen (Guest Post from Garrick Dee)

The Dirty Dozen (Plus Clean Fifteen) Infographic

When it comes to buying produce, I often shy away from organic because these items are expensive (it can be twice as expensive) and add a lot to my credit card bill every month. But after reading the article about the dirty dozen from the Huffington post and Health Trekker, it somehow changed my views because of the risks pesticides causes to our health.
So I did some research and came up with this infographic to guide you when to go organic or conventional. Also I have bonus tips at the end of the infographic on where you can buy affordable organic produce in your area and much more, so make sure to scroll all the way down.

Dirty Dozen Infographic
There is a lot of debate about the negative effects of pesticide, critics of the dirty dozen say that these effects are minimal and should not be taken too seriously but as I dug deeper in my research I found some startling facts that should not be ignored, particularly if you’re an expecting mother.
Over a billion pounds of pesticide is used every year in the United States along and most of these have one common ingredient – organophosphates. According to an article by Dr. Mercola, exposure to this chemical has been linked to diseases like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease, even with minimal exposure because it all adds up.
Direct exposure to organophosphates has a terrible effect on pregnant women and their unborn babies. In a CHAMACOS study done, they followed pregnant women who live in Salinas Valley – a large agricultural land where half a million pounds of organophosphates sprayed every year. They found out that women experienced shorter pregnancies and their children suffered poor neonatal reflexes, lower IQ, shorter attention spans and poor cognitive function.
Pesticides are also known to be carcinogenic which can lead to diseases like cancer. Ever wonder why more and more people suffer from cancer every year? It’s because of the environment we live in – we are bombarded with pesticides from the air we breathe to the food we eat, if we can minimize our exposure to these chemicals, the better our chances of avoiding cancer.
The dirty dozen list helps us by ranking the foods with the most and least amount of pesticide residue on it. This serves as a guide for us shoppers on which foods to buy organic and which ones we can get away with buying conventional.
If you think buying organic is expensive, I’ve listed 5 tips on the infographic that’ll help you find affordable organic produce. By the way, if you’re looking for more tips head over to Foodbabe’s site where she has a monster list of 75 ways on how to go organic on a budget. Another great resource on money saving shopping tips is Bankrate where they list down 17 tips on buying organic on the cheap.
If you’re into eating raw foods or juicing you’d have to be more careful because pesticides with go into your system at full strength in the absence of heat from cooking. As always, right produce selection is paramount and don’t forget wash it well even if it’s organic.
Spreading the word!
Finally, please spread the word about the dirty dozen and clean fifteen so more people are educated when it comes to knowing which produce has most pesticide content so that they can make an informed decision whether to go organic or not.
For more information about this, check out these sources:
If you'd like to know more about Garrick Dee, visit his site at Juicing with G.

A Veteran's Day recap

Veteran's Day for us isn't really a celebration as it is more of a day to reflect on people and the ones that have given it all for us to have what we have today in America. With Skylar being active in Karate, he is was part of the Veteran's Day parade this year. We spent the night before the parade stapling and taping small pieces of candy to flyers for the karate school, so the kids can pass them out.  We finished over 12,000 pieces of candy!


Here's a recap of the Veteran's Day Parade in Albany, Oregon.







Skylar with his karate class came marching through shortly after the fire engines made their appearance.  He said he loved being right behind the vintage fire engines.



Recycled dryer sheet ghost garland

This time of year, when the leaves began to change and the thoughts if Halloween costumes start racking my son's brain, my creative nature takes over.  My son is always so creative with his Halloween costumes and make every single one of them, even his first Halloween, when he was a chili pepper.  I remember sitting and having my mom help stuff the hats with batting with a chop stick, just to get the right curve in the pepper stem.  This year my son wants to be a deer.  Not a reindeer, just a regular deer, so I am hard at work on that.  We have three more days to get this deer done, and it is coming together great!  

Along with the deer sewing and stuffing, I decided to make some Halloween decor of ghosts.  Dryer sheets are probably the most worthless creation ever once they come out of the dryer.  The serve their purpose and then they get thrown away, so I came up with an idea to use them in the "after-life." 

I used dryer sheets, cotton balls, thread, and rubber bands to achieve this garland across my fire place mantel.  

It seemed to bring the entire mantel together for my Halloween theme.

What you'll need:  Used dryer sheets (you could use new ones, but I don't think you will get the same "flowing" effect), cotton balls, and rubber bands.

Place three to four cotton balls in the center of your dryer sheet.

Bring the dryer sheet ends up around the cotton balls.

Place a rubber band around the end of the cotton balls.

And that's it!  A ghost comes alive, or comes dead, or something.

Once you have a lot made, which takes about five minutes to make 10 of them.  It goes really fast, so the more cotton balls and dryer sheets you have the more ghost you will have to string on the ghost garland.

I tossed them into the air, but my dogs were not amused.  

Oh well.  They are going to LOVE the costumes they are going to wear on Halloween night, for sure!  I hope.

Once you get all of your ghosts done, thread the heads through thread with a needle, or small twine.  Black would look awesome!

Then hang and enjoy.  Once the holiday is over, you can either add them to your decor box, or recycle them.  


Super fun, right?


Check out one of my other crafts for Halloween.  It's been pinned on Pinterest over 30,000 times and over 3,000 times in the last 30 days!



Happy Halloween!

All Aboard! the Runaway Pumpkin Express Train

Last weekend we took advantage of the nice weather and hopped aboard Albany and Eastern's Runaway Pumpkin Express.  The Rick Franklin Corporation, that owns the tracks that run from Sweet Home, Oregon all the way to Albany, Oregon, runs a holiday express shuttle that will ride you from Lebanon to Sweet Home.  We hopped aboard the Pumpkin Express to see just how the ride was.

The view of the train passing by from our backyard.





Getting our genuine tickets to ride.


I fell in love with the vintage light fixtures in the train station.

The conductor was a very nice gentleman named Pat Patterson.

The lounge car was such a fun place to sit.  We imagined how many other train passengers had been in that very location when the train was operational back in 1950.


Skylar loved walking between the train cars, and the parlor car was very fascinating.  I was in vintage heaven through the entire trip. 

The private coach had private compartments, that weren't very big, but offered a long distance trip in privacy from the other passengers.


Each private, parlor car had it's own bench seat, and a personal toilet to each compartment. Of course, these parlor cars were only available to the well off that could afford them, at that time.




We passed by the Weldwood water tower.  This area was famous for it's logging and timber processing back in the late 40s and 50s.

Cheadle Lake

Cheadle Lake is home to this town's annual Strawberry Festival, and Fourth of July Celebration.

Skylar was loving that he could share his love of trains with other train enthusiast.

Pictured here on the right.


Such a great tour of the vintage train cars.  This company also provides a train that will run at Christmas time called, "Polar Express Train," of course!  
If you live in or around the Willamette Valley of Oregon, you can read more about this Santiam Excursion Train here!