North Dakota “Earth Day” Festival hands out mercury bombs, otherwise gets it right

I had a little extra time tonight despite working late, so I thought I’d stroll through the Earth Day festival at the National Guard armory in northeast Bismarck. I drove my gas guzzling truck up there, of course…I’ve been meaning to ride to work on one of my motorcycles that gets 50 miles per gallon, but so far haven’t done so.

As you can see from the photo above, the event was well attended. I was dreading whether this would be some sort of ridiculous global warming convention, and I was pleasantly surprised to say that it was not. Instead I found lots of folks who want to be good stewards of North Dakota’s resources. There were a few mentions of climate change, but these days I think it’s hard to get funding without pandering to the lunatics a bit. For the most part this festival was all about displays from folks who, in true North Dakota fashion, like to take a sensible approach to safeguarding North Dakota’s treasure of clean land, water, and air.

I will cry foul on one thing before I go on praising this event: they were handing out compact flourescent light bulbs at the front. I didn’t take any pictures of the folks handing them out, and I didn’t walk up and challenge them on handing out those stupid, expensive mercury bombs. These bulbs are an environmental hazard, made in China by factories that couldn’t care less about their impact on the environment. My GE light bulbs in the cupboard say “Assembled in the USA” on the box, by the way. But if you think you’re having a positive impact on the environment by having these weak, headache-inducing compact flourescent bulbs in your house, you’re fooling yourself. Their manufacture is putting mercury into the environment, either by their Chinese manufacturing or when one of them breaks. No thanks, I’ll stay incandescent. Whew…glad I got that off my chest!

Back to the good parts of the festival. There were booths from agencies whose missions are to take care of North Dakota’s natural resources, such as the USDA, Game and Fish, NRCS, Fish & Wildlife Service, and others. I’ve worked with some of these agencies so I can attest to the good that they’re doing.

There was plenty of information on hand, and some demonstrations were given at certain booths. The Dakota Zoo had snakes and bugs on hand, and there were other opportunities for the kids.

This kid did NOT want to get his picture taken with a weed or three. Awwwwww!

This booth came complete with a fiddler. I wonder if it’s a bluegrass thing…get it? *nudge* *nudge* Okay, maybe my wife’s right…I’m not funny.

The Proclamation. It was covered with signatures. Although I had a good time at the festival, I don’t subscribe to the Earth Day thing. I think being responsible is a personal decision, one that is made every day. For instance, I recycle things like batteries, but not every piece of trash that comes from our household. I like to conserve water, buy half-sized paper towels, and turn off unnecessary lights. I do these things because they make sense, not because I’m “saving the planet.” It’s that type of rational sensibility that North Dakotans display in their care for the environment in our state, and I think this festival celebrated that nicely.

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