Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

FREE Table Top TRIPP TRAPP® from STOKKE® Highchair

stokkegraytripptrapptabletop

The Tripp Trapp Highchair from Stokke is truly the most remarkable highchair on the market with its sleek design and enduring functionality. We were first introduced to this chair shortly after opening Lundeby’s Eco Baby (now eco baby + kids) and it was love at first sight. With that being said, anytime you see a promotion on these highchairs it should not be passed. Currently when you purchase a Tripp Trapp, baby seat, and or cushion at eco baby + kids (through the website or our store in Tulsa, Oklahoma) you receive a table top, a $90.00 retail value, FREE!

We loved this chair so much that it actually prompted us to move our shop, as we did not have enough floor space to properly display this work of art. Aside from the fact that this highchair will look beautiful in your home, the Tripp Trapp Highchair will seat a child 6 months of age to an adult weighing 300lbs and all the stages in between! tripptrapp_grow_lineThe Stokke Tripp Trapp retails for $249.00 and we admit that it is not the least expensive chair on the market. However, it is the most valuable chair on the market. We have had several people say they considered the Tripp Trapp but thought it to be a little pricey, but now after buying highchair(s) and booster seats they have spent just as much if not more and don’t have anything that is worth passing on or saving.

tripptrapp_colorsSure it is a great looking highchair, but I have to have more than that to sell me on a product… We love form, but it MUST follow function. When researching the Tripp Trapp I found multiple reviews of people using this highchair for their children and now for their grandchildren. Then I began asking customers about their thoughts on highchairs, the Tripp Trapp Highchair received glowing reviews and was the only highchair ever mentioned that people were still using for their 8 year olds.

One area that people consistently ask about is the tray… or lack thereof. Stokke, a Norwegian company, has throughout their products an element of bonding and feel the child should be up at the table with the family which is why they omit the attached tray that separates the child from the family table. Little ones can be a little clumsy and messy, to say the least, which is why Stokke developed the Table Top which is an acrylic tray with a lip to go on the table so that when items are tipped and spilled they stay on the tray and protect your table. Another great feature of the Table Top is that it comes with 6 patterns 152100_tabletop_patternsthat fit between two acrylic layers. Recognizing that this tray is ideal for not only food but

crafts and educational activities Stokke developed some wonderful templates for you to use. Of course, you and your child can also create your own.

Now you can get a Table Top FREE! From November 1st, 20o9 to December 31st, 2009 when you purchase TRIPP TRAPP® from STOKKE® Highchair and Baby rail and or cushion at eco baby + kids you will receive a Stokke Table Top FREE (a $90.00 retail value). To take part in this promotion you can order through our website (www.ecobabyandkids.com) or come to our physical location located at 3516 South Peoria, Avenue in the heart of Tulsa, Oklahoma’s Brookside District.

tabletop-promo

Master Cleanse: Day 4

dsc036501Nothing especially notible to report today. Felt good overall, no hunger pains, tongue is maybe a little more fuzzy, and beginning to get a little tired of lemonade. There is talk of a “healing crisis” that can take place duing detox and I definitely felt my emotions creeping to the surface even more than usual. Keeping my eye on the goal: 4 days down, 6 more to go!

New Website: Food, Pesticides & Toxicology

photo by: adactio

photo by: adactio

Today I ran across the new website from the Pesticide Action Network, What’s On My Food? This website uses a formula similar to that on the Skin Deep Database only in relation to chemicals on food and the documented research on those chemicals rather than chemicals in skin care items. It is a great resource to click on and see the various chemicals that the USDA’s Pesticide Data Program has found in various foods cross referenced with data from the EPA and authoritative research.

Pesticide regulations in the U.S. are well behind much of the rest of the industrialized world. This is mostly because agrichemical corporations like Monsanto have too much influence in Washington, but also because pesticide regulation in the U.S. does not adequately account for things like additive and synergistic effects.

Since the Environmental Protection Agency (E.P.A.) regulates most chemicals on a chemical-by-chemical basis, the combined and cumulative effects of a mixture of pesticides are nearly impossible for them to address – and so they usually don’t. 1

In addition to this handy tool, they have  a lot of really great information and links to research. They have links and document the growing body of research on the effects of pesticides on human and environmental health from the various exposures: working or living near crops where pesticides are used, prenatal exposure, exposure through food, and exposure through runoff into streams, rivers, aquifers, lakes, and oceans.

Given the complexities of chemical causality and disease-formation, the smart solution would be to follow the European Union’s lead and adopt the “precautionary principle”2 as the basis for regulatory decision-making. Put simply, this approach prioritizes protecting human health when there is significant doubt about the safety of a product. By contrast, pesticides and industrial chemicals in the U.S. are innocent until proven guilty. It often takes decades to prove a chemical guilty.

Meanwhile, we are exposed to dozens of pesticides in the food we eat, water we drink and air we breathe. People working on farms or living in rural areas near non-organic agricultural fields face even higher exposure levels.

My transformation from someone who lived very chemically intensively to someone who works diligently to reduce the amount of chemicals in my life and the lives of others began in 2005 when I began to work with children with autism. When sifting through the research on autism it is impossible to ignore the various research linking chemicals to the condition. Then your mind stats to wonder about the rise in other health-related issues: Parkinson’s, cancer, asthma, depression, ADHD, pre-term births, endometriosis, infant mortality (to name a few). As you dig deeper and deeper the research presents a not so great picture. Instead of pull myself into isolation in some remote village less damaged from chemical pollution, I decide to do what I can and help others to realize the need to reduce the amount of chemicals we currently support through our consumption patterns.

To begin with I eliminated all chemicals from my house: the pesticides I used in the garden, the cleaners under the sink, skin care products, perfume… Then I saw the need to eat as organically as possible for me, my unborn children, and millions of farm workers around the world. And then I took a good hard look at my clothing and the textile industry and realized that if I were to buy new supporting organic cottons and sustainable fibers was the only way to go. Conventional cotton uses 25% of the world pesticides and if I truly want to live my life in a way the respects the quality of life and health for all there is no way to justify not supporting the more sustainable options. Once you see the world as a contained system in which we are all connected and realize the ill effect that can be cause by a single shirt the organic and sustainable textile industry becomes a pivotal part in the quest for a better future.

The following is an excerpt from the What’s On My Food Website:

How are we exposed?

» In our bodies
» On the farm
» In the environment
» On our plates

In our bodies

Most of us are born with persistent pesticides and other chemicals already in our bodies, passed from mother to child during fetal development. The human health impacts linked to pesticide exposure range from birth defects and childhood brain cancer in the very young, to Parkinsons’ Disease in the elderly. In between are a variety of other cancers, developmental and neurological disorders, reproductive and hormonal system disruptions, and more.

On the farm

Most of us are born with persistent pesticides and other chemicals already in our bodies. Farmers and farmworkers are some of the hardest working people on the planet. Yet they and their families bear the highest health costs and face the greatest risks of pesticide exposure. Farmworkers in particular remain the least protected class of workers in the U.S. – last year another slavery case was brought in Florida on behalf of farmworkers there. Poisoning incidents among farmworkers are vastly underreported – yet in California alone, hundreds of cases of pesticide poisoning are documented every year.

Occupational exposure to pesticides in acute cases range from dizziness and nausea to death; chronic exposures are linked to the same array of diseases listed above plus a few more listed below.

In the environment

Pesticides don’t stay where they’re applied. They drift from their target and are carried in our air, oceans, rivers, groundwater and soil. They contaminate ecosystems and can poison fish, birds and wildlife. Water supplies around the world contain measurable amounts of pesticides, including atrazine. Atrazine, a suspected endocrine disruptor recently banned in Europe3, is the most commonly used herbicide in the U.S.

Besides heavy use in industrial farming, pesticides are used in or near playing fields, parks, schools, public gardens, golf courses, grocery stores, offices, apartment buildings, hotels and resorts, airplanes, cruise ships — the list goes on. Rural communities are routinely contaminated by pesticide drift, while city dwellers may trace pesticide residues on their shoes to public parks and even their apartment’s common areas.

Coco-Cola, The American Chemistry Council, and Del Monte: The new R.J. Reynolds and Phillip Morris

photo by: estres

photo by: estres

In case you have not heard the Washington Post obtained notes from a private meeting in which executives from Coco-Cola, Del Monte, The American Chemistry Council to name a few held to devise tactics to imporove the reputation of BPA (bisphenol a). The minutes bear such resemblance to leaked information from the tobacco industry. My favorite is their presumption that it would be unlikely to get a scientific spokesperson. Then they go on to  prey on pregnant women saying, their “holy grail” would be a “pregnant young mother who would be wiling to speak around the country about the benefits of BPA”.

Why would there be such concern from the BPA industry? Well they are going to try to tell you there is nothing harmful from this chemical and that the alternatives are so much more expensive, but what they really mean is that BPA is a multi-billion dollar industry and they want to protect their money. Now I cannot say that the decline of the BPA industry will not have some negative effects, multi-billion dollar companies employ many people. Of course most of those people make minimum wage and only a few make the big bucks, but none the less there are jobs that will be lost. Which is why, given the current economic climate, I am not for an all out ban. What I am for is FULL DISCLOSURE so that consumers can make their own fully informed choice and a ban for use in products like baby bottles and sippys.

What it boils down to is years of scientific research documenting negative health effects from BPA exposure (from cancer, to reproductive damage, to neurological disorders) and these companies looking the other way instead of looking for safer alternatives. These companies are gambling with your health and the health of your children in the name of making money. If you think this is as ridiculous as I do, let everyone around you know about this deception. If not, I am sure these companies will pay handsomely for their “young pregnant spokesperson”.

Full Washington Post Article
Summary of Linked Minutes from Environmental Working Group

If you want to tell Coco-Cola and Del Monte what you think:

Coca-Cola: 1-800-GET-COKE, then press 2
Del Monte: 1-800-543-3090