I have long been absent from this blog, I am ashamed to admit. So this Going Green Update is to update you readers on what I have been up to, my further attempts at being and acting environmentally conscious and why the prolonged absence!
Due to my growing interests in environmental issues and aspirations to help save the world, (the reasons why I started this blog) I decided I wanted and needed to learn far more and gain the skills to enable me to follow these interests in a future career. Therefore, I decided to undertake an MSc in Environment, Science and Society at University College London. I was sad (still am) to leave my beloved Cornwall behind, yet it has been one of the best decisions I have ever made. I looked at many environmental courses, many sounded great. Yet when I stumbled across UCL's course I found it was exactly the course I would have designed for myself if possible! So here I am, living in central London, surrounded by shiny dominating skyscrapers and the trundling sound of constant traffic (my introvertism and claustrophobia a little more active too), studying what is technically a scientific geography masters. Possibly, the last place I thought I'd end up.
Yet I am loving it, though London living is tough at times for me, the country girl. I feel I have learnt more in a term than a year of study at undergrad level. It is so refreshing to be finally studying something I am so passionate about, appreciating every ounce of knowledge and insight my lecturers and peers provide me with. This course is very multidisciplinary, an approach I have always valued, everything should be explored and understood from multiple perspectives. How else can things be effectively understood, analysed or problems solved? Most of my presuppositions about nature, environment and conservation have vastly changed. I have also realised dealing with environmental issues is even more complex than previously imagined.
So there's a little insight into my current life. My MSc demands most of my time and attention, resulting in the neglecting of this blog (not to mention social life and my many hobbies!) Yet now, the apparently more intense term and all its coursework are over, my New Year's Resolution is to be more of an active blogger. So watch this space!
As for my attempts at being green in the city? I would suggest they are going surprisingly well. At an urban planning session I attended yesterday, a Friends of the Earth local group member suggested that dense city dwellers have much lower carbon footprints than the more suburban and rural. I certainly feel that's true of my current lifestyle. I walk almost everywhere, and when I can't (which is rare) I take public transport. London prices also serve as the perfect deterrent to excessive and wasteful consumption! And when you live so close, you realise Oxford Street is really not that exciting. Exploring London on foot, without spending a penny, has become one of my new favourite pastimes. Although where I live has not made recycling very accessible (no door to door collections, we have to carry it to recycling dumpsters down the street), London public streets are covered in recycling bins. I also now try to eat as little fish, chocolate and hoofed animals as possible. I also never drink bottled water. Overfishing is of huge detriment to delicate marine ecosystems, which lowers biodiversity and resilience to the impacts of climate change. The meat industry has a very large carbon footprint due to imports, deforestation for pasture and methane production. I also wish to do it for animal welfare reasons. The majority of chocolate is made with palm oil, which is farmed unsustainably and results in the destruction of rainforest. The bottled water industry is one of the most unsustainable and completely senseless. Tap water is subject to far more health and safety regulations, is free and taste can be improved with filtering. In many cases bottled water is just tap water put in a bottle! However, despite my best efforts, it is difficult eating sustainably when you are a poor student in London!
So there we go, I hope to keep you posted with many more blog posts soon, and share my new insights into environmental issues.
A blog examining environmental, biodiversity and world issues.
Labels
#BintheBill
ancient woodland
animal cruelty
Arctic
biodiversity
campaigns
career
climate change
conservation
consumerism
dogs
Earth Hour
education
environment
environmentalism
environmentalist
EU law
Eurasian Lynx
farming
flooding
food
fox hunting
fun
green lifestyle
human rights
hunger
hunting
Infrastructure Bill
NGOs
opinion
ospreys
palm oil
personal
plastic
policy
politics
pollution
poverty
reintroduction
rewilding
science
Scotland
sustainability
T in the Park
thoughts
wildlife
Thursday, 30 January 2014
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment