So long, and thanks for all the fish
So long...
Well, this is the final post for our Great Lakes Earth Day Challenge blog. I hoped I'd have some more statistics to report on how much our participants collected at their e-cycling and unwanted medicine events around the Great Lakes, but the data is coming in gradually and will continue to do so for a few more weeks.
I'd like to leave you with a few places where you can get more information. I hope you'll continue to think about conservation and recycling long after Earth Day is past.
- The Great Lakes Earth Day Challenge web site will remain up and report the challenge results
- Earth 911
has ongoing information about recycling and a blog, too.
You can find recycling resources in your area there. - EPA has info on eCycling and proper disposal of medications
- IL/IN Sea Grant has a whole toolkit about disposing of unwanted medicines

- EPA's ongoing blog "Greenversations" is written by EPA staff
... and thanks
Thank you to the many EPA staff who worked very hard on the Earth Day Challenge, and most importantly to the people all around the Great Lakes who organized events and participated in them. You have made a difference.
Thank you to everyone who wrote for this blog, provided photos, and left comments.
- Earth Keepers: Natasha Koss
- Great Lakes Surfers: Vince Deur, Ingrid Lindfors
- IL/IN Sea Grant: Jackie Adams, Susan Boehme
- EPA: Phillippa Cannon, Cynthia Faur, Mary Gade, John Haugland, Melissa Hulting, Beth Murphy, Chris Newman, Karen Reshkin
And a special thank you to Deputy Administrator Marcus Peacock and his staff in the Office of Web Communications for setting up this blog for us and giving us the opportunity to join the choir.
Karen Reshkin manages the EPA Chicago regional Web site and edited the Earth Day Challenge blog.
A typical day on the Peter Wise R/V Lake Guardian is not like your typical day in the office. There are at least 8 people up and working at all times, as the ship doesn't dock until the end of each lake. You begin your day by waking up, showering, and then heading down to the galley (ship term for kitchen) to grab something to eat. Then you hear it: "15 minutes to station". It's the captain or one of the mates on the P.A. system letting you know that you now have 15 minutes left to get everything together for your first station of the day. So, you finish that something you were eating, drop the dish in the dirty dish tray, and head back to the lab to put on your mustang suit 
Out on deck, you get the probe covers off of the SeaBird, which is the instrument attached to the rosette, which gives us a profile of the water column (



What if you got fined for putting your old computer in the trash? That could happen in Switzerland. I found this out while visiting my sister, who lives in Chavornay. This small village near Lausanne is perched on an ancient plateau between the Alps and the Jura Mountains. Humans have been living here for 14,000 years. I wonder what the place would look like if they’d been throwing out today’s trash all that time!
Then there's less obvious stuff:








