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Drew Warkentin's avatar

Drew Warkentin

Calgary Crushers

POINTS TOTAL

  • 0 TODAY
  • 0 THIS WEEK
  • 211 TOTAL

participant impact

  • UP TO
    1.0
    meatless or vegan meal
    consumed
  • UP TO
    67
    pieces of litter
    picked up
  • UP TO
    1.0
    water footprint
    calculated
  • UP TO
    1.0
    community event
    hosted or attended
  • UP TO
    1.0
    advocacy action
    completed
  • UP TO
    540
    minutes
    spent outdoors
  • UP TO
    120
    minutes
    spent learning

Drew's actions

Land + Forests

30 for 30 in Nature

Studies have shown that when we spend consistent time in nature, our health improves, our creativity increases, and our connection to the planet gets stronger. Each day of the Ecochallenge, I will spend 30 minutes outside (in a large or small patch of nature), then share my observations, reflections, and learnings on the feed.

COMPLETED 3
DAILY ACTIONS

Freshwater + Oceans

Understand My Water Footprint

Each of us has a water footprint, directly linked to our daily activities as well as the water required in the production of things we use each day. Understanding our water use is important for a healthy planet. I will calculate my water footprint and look for a few ways I can reduce consumption or waste, then share what I learned on the feed.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Biodiversity + Wildlife

Reduce Animal Products

One kilogram of beef and cheese emits 71kg and 24kg of greenhouse gasses, while 1kg of rice, grains, and legumes emits between 2-4kg. Fruits, vegetables, and nuts emit less than 1kg per 1kg. I will reduce my climate impact by enjoying 2 meatless meals and/or 0 vegan meals each day this week.

COMPLETED 1
DAILY ACTION

Biodiversity + Wildlife

Beauty and Personal Products

Beauty and personal products can create a lot of waste. I will spend 30 minutes learning about the beauty and body products I use to see if they are refillable or recyclable. If not, I will reach out to the manufacturer to advocate for those options.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Biodiversity + Wildlife

Save the Bees

Bees are vital to ecosystems. To help save the bees, I will learn which local flowers provide nectar and plant them in my backyard or in a pot on my balcony.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Freshwater + Oceans

Low Water Gardening

Grass lawns are water-intensive and on average require about 30 percent of a household’s water consumption. Native plants are water-efficient and help maintain the balance and diversity of local ecosystems. I will plant native species with water-efficient plants to conserve water and improve the habitat, then post a photo on the feed to share.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Freshwater + Oceans

Reduce Pollutants in Cleaning

Understanding cleaning product ingredients and their effect on water and biodiversity is helpful to our consumer choices. I will spend 30 minutes learning about how cleaning products affect our water and try making my own cleaning products to reduce pollutants.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Freshwater + Oceans

Cooking Oil Disposal

Pouring cooking oil down the drain can cause damage to waterways and ecosystems. I will learn how to properly dispose of cooking oil to help support healthy ecosystems.

COMPLETED 2
DAILY ACTIONS

Freshwater + Oceans

Go Plastic-Free

Millions of tons of plastic is produced each year worldwide. Each day, I will conduct a plastics audit of what I buy and use throughout the challenge (kitchen, bathroom, personal care products, etc.), to see how single-use plastic shows up in my life. I will find plastic-free alternatives to these products and advocate for alternatives to single-use packaging at local grocery stores, product manufacturers, at work, or on campus.

COMPLETED 1
DAILY ACTION

Action Track: Community

Join a Cleanup Effort

I will organize or participate in a trash pickup at a local river, beach, or natural body of water.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Action Track: Community

Borrow Before I Buy

Why buy something I will only use once or a few times if someone nearby has it for me to borrow, and why not share something I have that someone may only need a few times a year? To reduce my consumption and waste, I will create or support the sharing economy with friends, family, colleagues or neighbors.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Biodiversity + Wildlife

Plastic in Clothing and Water

Synthetic clothing can contain plastic and shed harmful microplastics into our water. I will use a microplastics catcher in my laundry, or install a microplastics filter for my washing machine.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Action Track: Community

Keep My Community Clean

At times it may not feel like it's up to us to keep our community clean and healthy, but we all have a role to play. Each day I am outside, I will pick up any litter I see.

COMPLETED 5
DAILY ACTIONS

Participant Feed

Reflection, encouragement, and relationship building are all important aspects of getting a new habit to stick.
Share thoughts, encourage others, and reinforce positive new habits on the Feed.

To get started, share “your why.” Why did you join the challenge and choose the actions you did?


  • Drew Warkentin's avatar
    Drew Warkentin 4/29/2024 10:53 AM
    I have not installed a filter, but did read up a bunch about them, and found one that I thought might be a good option, but have read a bunch of complaints about it not being effective. Over the past few years, I have been trying more and more to only wash clothes that really need it. Will I always feel a bit weird sniffing my shirts/hoodies armpits? Probably. Has it reduced how often I wash things? Absolutely.

    Having a toddler in the house has introduced us to a WHOLE NEW WORLD of messiness. My t-shirts probably get washed more than they ever had with the amount of runny noses and hands/face covered with food rubbing all over them. I try my best to focus on spot cleaning larger items like hoodies and pants to avoid having to constantly put them in the washing machine.

    Another thing we've done is opt for cloth diapers that are not microfiber, but use a lot of bamboo as well as bamboo disposable inserts for when we are expecting a #2.

  • Drew Warkentin's avatar
    Drew Warkentin 4/29/2024 10:43 AM
    I have been keeping a small pail of wood shavings outside of our kitchen door for when we have excess cooking oils that I can put in the compost. It keeps it from creating a huge mess when we go to take out the compost and keeps the compost bin from having to be scrubbed clean of the oils and fats.

  • Drew Warkentin's avatar
    Drew Warkentin 4/29/2024 10:40 AM
    I have power raked and dethatched our lawn already this spring, and will be adding soil on top of it and will be over-seeding with a bee-friendly seed mix (not just a wildflower mix with potentially noxious weeds) as well as micro-clover and will try to keep my lawn as long as 5 inches this year to allow for a more drought resistant lawn as well as a space that offers a better ecosystem for pollinators.

  • Drew Warkentin's avatar
    Drew Warkentin 4/29/2024 10:37 AM
    Have started buying eco-friendly degreaser cleaning product in concentrate and mixing it as needed in our re-useable spray bottle. This reduces packaging waste, our household exposure to chemicals, as well as reduces the energy waste from shipping large amounts of water with the cleaning agents. We have sampled buying eco-friendly toilet bowl cleaner; it does work, but isn't as corrosive as the popular stuff, and doesn't clean as well. We have tried to at least reduce our use of the popular stuff by only using it every 2 or 3 cleans.

    We have been using cloth diapers for the most part with our kid, and with that have tried out cloth wipes, and tissues. So far no regrets!

  • Drew Warkentin's avatar
    Drew Warkentin 4/29/2024 10:32 AM
    Picked up a bag of trash at Minnewanka lake.

  • Drew Warkentin's avatar
    Drew Warkentin 4/16/2024 8:41 AM
    Our friends who have lived in Canada for a year and a half now purchased a house and we told them the best time to buy yard tools is during the spring when garage sales are plentiful. I gave them an old electric lawnmower of ours, but in the meantime, brought over rakes, and a de-thatcher and we discussed how we can collectively use the aforementioned tools and even more since we live so close to each other. Less money and resources spent on products that we can both benefit from sharing.

  • Drew Warkentin's avatar
    Drew Warkentin 4/11/2024 12:56 PM
    Now that I am not a broke student, the packaging of a product impacts my decisions on purchases. I have slowly been accumulating glass containers to use in our house, donating the plastic ones little by little. We try to buy things that we know we use in bulk to cut down on unnecessary packaging. We keep a few sets of clean utensils and metal straws for when we do decide to catch a quick bite to eat somewhere. We have been trying to buy cleaning products that either come dry or in concentrate to reduce the environmental impact from shipping water as well as to reduce the waste from continuously buying new spray bottles. I have been making my own dawn dishwashing spray using distilled water, dish soap and rubbing alcohol, reducing the number of soap refill bottles we purchase. We have switched out laundry detergent to a dry soap that comes in a metal tin as that is more recyclable than plastic jugs; I want to ask the company to have a drop off so they can re-use their tins again, like rocky mountain soap co. does.

  • Drew Warkentin's avatar
    Drew Warkentin 4/11/2024 12:45 PM
    Cooking with tofu for the first time tonight! The local co-op grocery store had it on sale for super cheap as it was approaching the best before date. Going to try to cut it into thin strips, bake it in the convection oven and then make a stir fry with it.

  • Drew Warkentin's avatar
    Drew Warkentin 4/11/2024 12:43 PM
    I have tried to cut my shower time so that only once a week am I taking a shower that is 10 minutes long. The rest of my showers I try to keep to 2 minutes whenever possible.

  • Drew Warkentin's avatar
    Drew Warkentin 4/11/2024 12:41 PM
    I can use my waste wood shavings (non-treated) to help absorb cooking oils and animal fats when putting them in the compost.