Tish Tash Toys

Musing Mumpreneur in Rural Devon

Will our children have enough food?

December14

Really thought provoking article in the Guardian yesterday on food shortages in the future. http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2009/dec/13/britain-faces-food-shortage

“People do not quite realise the scale of the issue,” says Professor Mike Bevan, acting director of the John Innes Centre in Norfolk. “This is one of the most serious problems that science has ever faced.” In Britain the lives of hundreds of thousands of people will be threatened by food shortages. Across the globe, tens of millions – if not hundreds of millions – will be affected.

Over the next 40 years Britain’s population will rise from 60 to 75 million while the world’s will leap from 6.8 to 9 billion. Feeding all these people will stretch human ingenuity to its limit. Crop yields will have to jump, a goal that will have to be achieved in the middle of global climatic disruption. At the same time, farmers will find many aids – in particular, chemical fertilisers – that they have come to rely on will no longer be available .

Maybe having less children would help? See my blog How Many Children Should We Have?

How many children should we have?

December10

Hi Florence, thank you for your comment on my previous post Stopping at Two – A Pledge to my Two Children.

Florence says “Well.. my mother had three children and she would never regret having any of us. If the government recommended we should only have 1 child, would you wish you had never had your son?”

My mother never regretted any of us too Florence, but in hindsight she says she might have planned her life differently. Of course I wouldn’t wish I’d never had my boy. I’m not saying anyone should TELL anyone else how many children they should or shouldn’t have but perhaps now is the time for us to start talking about how many children we are all having and their future – all 9.15 billion of them in 2050! We should debate the issue don’t you think?

I have met several mothers who told me their third child was an ‘accident’ and not intended.

We need much much better birth control services – yes…. in this country, in the UK!

I had a scare a few months after having my son (now aged 4) when I thought I was in the early stages of pregnancy. I called a helpline for advice on a very early chemical termination and was basically told because I was a mother of two in my thirties, I should just get on with the pregnancy. I was basically wasting their time. Had I been my normal self I would have made a complaint, but I was a vulnerable confused woman looking for advice and guidance. Luckily for me I got my period, or perhaps had a very early miscarriage, as so many women do who don’t even realise they’ve been pregnant (see http://www.bbc.co.uk/health/conditions/miscarriage1.shtml)

I had never wanted a baby less in my life when this happened or was more distraught at the thought of being pregnant – with an unwanted child. Both my children were meticulously planned and desperately wanted. After this scare, I changed from the unreliable pill (or unreliable me – I kept forgetting it, probably due to having a very young baby!) to having an implanon contraceptive implant put into my arm. The doctor who put it in was very surprised to see a thirty three year old mother of two having an implant as they are still extremely uncommon and generally given to 18 year olds. She said it was great I was having it though as it was such a reliable and convenient new method. At the time I had it, only about 2% of women in the UK were choosing that method (or even aware it existed maybe?). I’ve told lots of other women I have it, as I recommend they can get an impant too, especially if they want to avoid getting pregnant by ‘accident’.

Talking about population control is such an emotive subject isn’t it. My best friends will tell you how they remember me saying I wanted at least 4 or 5 children as a teenager. I feel as a young woman, my supercharged female hormones controlled me and my desire to have lots of children was, well ridiculously HUGE! If you had said to me back then, you know it would be so much better for the planet if you just had one or two children, I would have screamed at you!

I do understand anyone who desires to have lots of children, I really (really) do BUT this is not just about us, it’s about the future of these kids we bring into the world. It’s about a world that’s too small for all these people. It’s about animal species becoming extinct because people are chop-happy with the forests they live in. Do I need to go on?

If you want lots of children – why not adopt them, there are about 85,000 children in care in the UK right now.

Sharon Pavey – Green Party Candidate?

December9

I’ve been asked to consider being the parliamentary candidate for East Devon for the Green Party at the upcoming General Election. As much as I’d like to think this was a reflection of how incredibly fabulous I am, it’s not…


Basically the Green Party need candidates to run for every constituency in the country. The fact is in most places they won’t stand a chance of winning BUT it’s about representation for everyone in that area who believes in true green politics and wants to get their voice heard. It will also raise the profile of the Green Party in every area where someone stands. With the next TEN years being the time we NEED to get something DONE about climate change NOW is the time to vote for your beliefs, and secure a better future for your children and your grandchildren, We CAN make a difference. We really can.

If you live in the constituency of East Devon and would like a candidate from the Green Party to stand – please pop your comments on this blog, see below. I’d love to hear from you.

For everyone else – pop over to my Facebook page and leave your comments there

Click here to find out more about joining the Green Party – you can join from just £10 and make a difference http://www.greenparty.org.uk/


How to Save the Climate

November26

To tackle climate change we need to take action on every level – big, bold action that changes the way our cities use energy, and simple small actions we can each take that will all add up to big energy savings.

The truth is that we need nothing less than an energy [r]evolution.

This new brochure from Greenpeace is being published around the world to show how we can protect the climate. From how singing in the shower can help save the climate, to modern, efficient electricity and heat distribution – you’ll find all the answers here.

Read the brochure today and MAKE A DIFFERENCE – http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/blog/climate/your-personal-guide-to-helping-save-the-climate

Meat Free Mondays

June15

Spreading the word about MEAT FREE MONDAYS !! I’ve been vegetarian for over 25 years now, my two kids aged seven and three are veggie too. So great to see this new campaign which I will be backing 100% http://www.supportmfm.org/

So what’s it all about? It’s a food campaign to encourage the nation to help slow climate change by reducing their meat consumption by having at least one meat free day a week. Having a MEAT FREE day every week is a simple way to start making a real difference in the world. The more people who join in, the more difference we can make.

But how can we all help? It’s easy, just devote at least one day a week, or more, if you like eating meat free. We’ve materials you can use to promote MFM and run your own meat free Monday’s, along with ideas and recipes for you to enjoy. If you’re vegetarian or vegan already, please use the campaign as an opportunity to get others involved by sharing with them your delicious dishes with them.

The UK’s Food Climate Research Network suggests that food production from farm to fork is responsible for between 20-30 percent of global green house gas emissions. Livestock production is responsible for around half of these emissions. The more meat we produce and eat the bigger that carbon footprint will get. A sustainable future demands that we cut down – and yet between 1961 and 2007 the world population increased by a factor of 2.2, but meat consumption quadrupled, and poultry consumption increased 10-fold.

As a result the United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has concluded that the livestock sector is ‘one of the top two or three most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems, at every scale from local to global’.

To build a better world in the future we all need to make changes in our lifestyles now. Not all the changes we have to make are easy; and not all the easy changes we can make are meaningful. But making just one day a week a meat-free day is really is the little thing that can make a big change. For instance, the group Compassion in World Farming estimate that if the average UK household halved its consumption of meat this would cut more emissions than if car use was cut in half. By making a simple change in the way you eat, you are taking part in a world changing campaign where what’s good for you is also good for the planet.

Agents needed all over the UK – great part-time job for parents www.tishtashtoys.com

Debating Plastic or Wooden Toys?

May10

Choosing an Alternative to Plastic Toys.

By Jennifer Wells
Tish Tash Toys Representative
Hanslope, Milton Keynes

 

Before “Made in China” was molded into every piece of plastic on every toy in the high street stores, there must have been traditional toys, wooden toys? As a mum fed up with naff plastic toys around the house, I went on a search to find out what alternatives are out there today for mums like me who would like more old fashioned toys making my toddler and me smile again.

In ancient history such as the Graeco-Roman era, wooden horses on wheels were popular amongst children of the higher classes. As were toys that can still be found in many homes today, for example: dolls for girls or soldiers for boys. Wooden toys were, and are, long lasting and used to be handed down through generations – a tradition I would like to reinstate in my own family as I have nothing from my own childhood to share with my children, except one or two books.

 

 

Toys through the ages have been associated with teaching and practicing skills that will be useful to the child as an adult. Learning about the environment surrounding the child at the time is also reinforced through play.

Pretend kitchens and the associated equipment are still best sellers. Children’s pans, plates, play food and even ironing boards and kids pretend irons are popular too.

 

 

Other hits with kids today include toy swords or toy cars but the material used to make these classic toys is often different. I’m left questioning why, so back to the history books to find out…

 

The demise of the wooden toy seems to have been gradual to start with, but then a period of rapid change stems from a post World War Two Britain. The need for cheap pocket money toys was the primary concern in a post war Britain and the mass production of toys on a global scale also took off. New materials had come to the fore during this industrial period and in the name of modernisation, products continued to be developed in these mediums rather than returning to traditional crafted materials such as wood. The handcrafted unique nature of cherished toys was not seen as so important anymore, as the focus had moved onto making toys available to all. This was all about affordability over quality.

I still hold on to hope though, with the 21st century shopping experience not being limited by the high streets around you. The online world traverses the country without racking up roadmiles and here a whole new world of opportunity greats me.

 

I am pleased to say I have stumbled across a range of beautiful wooden and educational children’s toys at Tish Tash Toys. A family run business, lead by a mum who wanted to spend more time playing with wooden toys with her own children. What is more sensible than to have a mum picking toys that her children enjoy to share with other families?

 

There is also an ethos of the traditional, wooden and fair trade with Tish Tash Toys. The company also raises money for Rainbow Trust Children’s Charity through offering customers the opportunity to purchase certain ‘Rainbow Range’ toys. A percentage of what you pay goes to the charity.

 


 

I have a new-found faith that these products really will live up to my expectations. To be enjoyed by my son for more than a few minutes before he toddles over, accidentally sits on it and breaks part of the plastic molding thus making the product have a sharp edge and having to be put out of reach before being glued together or considered for recycling.

These frustrations have dissipated, with hand picked toys coming from a range of suppliers – Pintoy, Wood Like To Play, Le Toy Van and many others. A plethora of toys made of wood can be found among the pages of the Tish Tash Toys catalogue. There are some plastic toys but lots of wooden baby toys, new baby gifts and children’s toys.

 

 

Fair trade soft toys and musical instruments also adorn the website, but it is the charm of the wooden toys that pulls you in. The most popular toys seem to be those that have stood the test of time like cars, or quaint little play farms, wooden play food and kids kitchen equipment along with puzzles, jigsaws and board games.

My favourites so far are the Pintoy construction toys which are wonderful and the wooden puzzles and shape sorters are second to none. I think I may need to commission a house extension for all these gorgeous toys that I feel now must be part of my sons life!!!

 


In these days of global warming, recycling and reducing our carbon footprint, why is the toy market being neglected? It surely is a multi-billion pound business so why are we not thinking about green toys or eco friendly toys?

 

There must be a market for locally produced toys and bio degradable wooden toys? This industry along with the promotion of reusable nappies could, if it so wished, make a dramatic dent in the landfill problems of our tiny Island. So let us hope that more people become aware of toy sellers like Tish Tash Toys and feel inspired to leave the plastic objects of the high street far behind and stay with wood forever! Would you consider the switch?

 

Greener Driving with Biodiesel

December9

We’re trying to look at ways to go greener and have been looking into using bio diesel in the  family car. I didn’t realise how easy it was to make this green fuel but not sure if I would have the time to actually make it. We need to research a bit further in where to buy it as it will be so much cheaper than the constantly rising prices of petrol and diesel.

Find out more for yourself here – fascinating little video!

http://www.metacafe.com/watch/957640/go_green_homemade_diesel/

How To Turn Your Children’s Toys Green…or an environmentally friendly guide to toys and their effect on the future of the planet!

July27

This fantastic article on how to make your children’s toy collection greener is by Sean Fisher and available on http://www.treehugger.com/authors/index.php?author=sean%20fisher

What’s the Big Deal?

It’s a little cliché but true nonetheless, your children and your children’s children will inherit the world that we create today. So, the stuff we give them shouldn’t make life any harder on them in the future. If that alone isn’t enough, how about the fact that your child will, more likely than not, chew everything edible and non-edible in his/her sight. Now there’s motivation to make sure your child’s playthings are green and healthy! Here we’ll give you the scoop on how to find more sustainable and less toxic toys for your little TreeHugger so you can do good for your child and the environment.

1. Look for PVC-free

PVC (aka polyvinyl chloride) seems to be everywhere we look. Some beach toys, teethers, dolls, and even (gasp!) rubber duckies are cheaply manufactured with the environmentally dubious material. A dioxin-producing powerhouse, PVC releases toxins into the environment all the way through its lifecycle from manufacturing to disposal. Many PVC toys also contain phthalates, chemical compounds that make the PVC plastic more flexible, which initial studies have linked to both cancer and hormonal disruption. Although the long-term effects of phalates on youngsters is not fully known, we fully subscribe to the idea of an ounce of prevention now over a potential pound of cure later.

2. Wood is good

Look for FSC-certified wood to find sustainable toys that will last generations longer than the cheap plastic stuff. For the little ones, untreated, unpainted wood is safe to chew unlike plastics that contain PVC. When your child is done, wooden toys can be passed on to a relative, friend, or even sold on eBay or Craigslist to give it a second life. The FSC certification is important, it ensures that the wood you buy has been forested responsibly, allowing for sustainable growth.

Many wooden toys on www.tishtashtoys.com

3. Power down

Batteries have become second nature in most toys today. Not only is this a terrible problem when these toys get disposed of, who wants to give their child the opportunity to chew on a battery? For the young ones, decide if all the battery-powered noise is worth it. Could your child stay just as entertained with a simpler toy, one that might even let you keep your sanity. For the older ones that absolutely must have the newest electronics, look into rechargeable batteries to eliminate waste.

For toys without batteries see www.tishtashtoys.com

4. The great outdoors

The most rewarding toy might not be a toy at all. It might be the act of planting a tree or a vegetable garden. Want a truly carbon neutral activity for your kids? Play tag or hide and seek. Getting your wee ones outside provides them with abundant opportunities to run around, have fun, get exercise, and learn about the urban and natural environments around them. You probably remember time spent outside with family and friends in your youth…your kids will too.

5. Second-hand magic

Just because a toy has been used once doesn’t mean that it can’t be just as much fun the second time around. Check out eBay, Craigslist, Freecycle, yard sales, or your local classifieds for perfectly good toys than have simply been outgrown. And, don’t forget that you can always give that same toy a third life (and recoup some of the cost) by putting it up for sale right where you found it.

6. Get organic

There are more pesticides and fertilizers sprayed onto conventional fibers than you might care to know about. Not only does the thought of chemically treated fabric probably raise a red flag when you think of your child, it raises a huge red flag for the environment as well. The chemicals we use to “improve” our crops often contaminate the soil they grow in and the air and water systems around it. Look for organic and naturally-dyed cotton, bamboo, tencel, and wool for toys such as stuffed animals.

7. Sometimes it’s not what’s in the box…

It is the box. Sometimes it is the stuff you already have that can prove the most fun to imaginative children. So, next time you think about throwing the box from that new toy away, think of it as a potential arts and crafts project instead.

8. Non-toxic paints

It’s not just the paint on your walls that you should think about. The paint on your child’s toys may also have VOCs (volatile organic compounds). There are a slew of new toys that use water-based and low-VOC or no-VOC paints (and nearly all of them will advertise this fact). This way a non-toxic toy gets the non-toxic paint job it deserves.

www.tishtashtoys.com toys use non-toxic paints and are safe for your children.

9. Lasting toys

When purchasing new toys, keep the toy’s potential longevity on your mind. A long-lasting toy not only means that you won’t have to buy another one in a matter of months, it also means that when the toy is no longer in use, you can always pass it along. More money for you + keeping materials out of the landfill = easy decision.

10. The color purple

Subtitled: Everything on this list can’t have a cheesy “green” pun. But seriously, what better way to go green than with the color itself. Craft projects give your kids an opportunity to use their imagination. Find non-toxic paints and crayons and let the kids loose on all sorts of recycled material from cardboard boxes to junk mail to items they find in the woods. Pet rock, here we come.

Britain’s Environment Agency: Go Vegetarian to Stop Climate Change

July27

This is an article I found today on http://forums.treehugger.com It’s written by Bruce Friedrich. Like many people these days,  I’m trying to encourage our family to be more environmentally friendly and globally responsible all the time. It’s nice to know that as I’ve been veggie for almost 25 years, and have two vegetarian children – the very fact we are not eating meat – is actually making a difference to the planet. Enjoy the article…

Environment Agency: Go Vegetarian to Stop Climate Change

I’m tempted to move to Britain, and not just because I saw an early screening of Michael Moore’s amazing new movie, Sicko (go see it; tell all your friends). What got me is that an official with the UK’s Environment Agency has acknowledged that humans can significantly help stop global warming by adopting a vegetarian diet.

Of course, the science could not be more clear. When U.N. scientists looked at all the evidence, they declared in a 408-page report titled Livestock’s Long Shadow that raising animals for food is responsible for more greenhouse gases than all vehicles in the world combined. And scientists at the University of Chicago showed that a typical American meat-eater is responsible for nearly 1.5 tons more carbon dioxide a year than a vegan.

Quote:
For those of you questioning the math here, please read this article from the University of Chicago that explains the differences between methane, CO2, and why the title of this article still holds true)
http://www-news.uchicago.edu/releases/06/060413.diet.shtml

But for someone in government to admit this is something special, since even Al Gore refuses to talk about it (which makes me think that perhaps he is planning to run). What happened is that someone posted a comment on the Environment Agency’s Web site asking, “Adopting a vegan diet reduces one person’s impact on the environment even more than giving up their car or forgoing several plane trips a year! Why aren’t you promoting this message as part of your [World Environment Day] campaign?”

In response, an Environment Agency official wrote that the “potential benefit of a vegan diet in terms of climate impact could be very significant” and offered assurances that the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs is working on a set of “key environmental behaviour changes” to mitigate climate change—including promoting vegetarianism.

Indeed, study after study has shown that animal agriculture contributes to global warming and environmental destruction, yet instead of urging people to go vegetarian, most U.S. politicians and environmental spokespeople just continue to hype hybrid cars, recycling, and fluorescent light bulbs as solutions to our spiraling environmental problems.

This is just not good enough. Vegetarians in Hummers do more for the planet than do meat-eaters who cruise around in hybrids or collect recyclable soda cans. Now that George Bush has finally acknowledged that global warming is a reality, perhaps he could follow his vegetarian niece, Lauren Bush—and former first daughter Chelsea Clinton—in adopting a vegetarian diet. I’m not going to hold my breath until this happens, but it would be gratifying for representatives of the U.S. government to acknowledge the absolute fact that what people eat is more important than what they drive.

Carbon dioxide emissions aren’t our only environmental concern, of course. There’s deforestation, water and air pollution, world hunger, and more. According to Greenpeace, chickens raised for KFC and other companies that “produce” chicken flesh are fed crops that are grown in the Amazon rain forest. And according to the U.N. report, raising animals for food is “one of the top two or three most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems, at every scale from local to global.”

To whit, more than 260 million acres of U.S. forest have been cleared to create cropland to grow grain to feed farmed animals; farmed animals are fed more than 70 percent of the corn, wheat, and other grains grown in the U.S.; and almost half of the water and 80 percent of the agricultural land in the U.S. are used to raise animals for food.

There is also the unappetizing synopsis by Scripps Howard of a Senate Agricultural Committee report on animal waste and the environment: “[I]t’s untreated and unsanitary, bubbling with chemicals and diseased. … It goes onto the soil and into the water that many people will, ultimately, bathe in and wash their clothes with and drink. It is poisoning rivers and killing fish and making people sick. … Catastrophic cases of pollution, sickness, and death are occurring in areas where livestock operations are concentrated. … Every place where the animal factories have located, neighbors have complained of falling sick.”

If that’s not enough to make you feel a little queasy, consider this: Consuming animal products isn’t just making the environment sick—it’s making us sick, too. Meat, eggs, and dairy foods are high in cholesterol, saturated fat, calories, and concentrated protein. Animal products are known to contribute to heart disease, diabetes, certain types of cancer, obesity, and other debilitating diseases.

And don’t forget that more than 10 billion animals are killed each year in the U.S. alone to feed our meat addictions. We’re talking about an awful lot of suffering.

And for what? Chicken nuggets, hamburgers, hot dogs, cheese pizza, scrambled eggs, and other foods that have healthy, humane, and environmentally friendly counterparts. I can’t imagine why anyone would cause such suffering and devastation when there is a better option: a vegetarian diet. Why not give it a try?

If you need some tips, please check out www.VegCooking.com for recipes, meal plans, cookbook recommendations, and more. It’s not too late to reverse the changes in our climate, but all of us need to take steps to reduce greenhouse gases, and we need to take them soon. Your next meal would be a good time to start.

also see:

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www.flickr.com