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The Latest

#144 May 2021/All Topics/Environment/Urban Nature

Seventeen-year cicadas are due to emerge this May. Will Philly see any?

On May 9, 1715, Andreas Sandel, a minister at the Gloria Dei Church, aka Old Swedes’ (929 South Water Street), made a note in his journal that “some singular flies came out of the ground.” “The English call them locusts,” he wrote. “When they left the ground, holes could be seen everywhere in the roads

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May 15, 2021
3 mins read
#144 May 2021/All Topics/Food/Shop Local

Germantown entrepreneur blends quality, community and customer service

Christa barfield of Viva Leaf Tea Company is a business owner who isn’t afraid of honest feedback. “I appreciate criticism,” she says. “It’s what makes you better.” It’s a good thing, too, because at an event at Awbury Arboretum in 2019, beekeeper Jeff Eckel of Instar Apiaries had some to offer. “I was sourcing my

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May 12, 2021
3 mins read
#144 May 2021/All Topics/Bicycling/Shop Local/transportation

Cycling athletes and bike shop owners explain how to get your ride ready for spring

Spring is here, vaccine appointments are available for all adults, and you’re ready to get back on your bicycle. After all, it was a long winter defined by a right-wing riot at the Capitol, some pleasant snowfall (which we hadn’t seen around here in a while) and slightly uncomfortable outdoor dining in freezing temperatures under

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May 10, 2021
3 mins read
All Topics/Circular Economy/Food/Recycling/Shop Local

Philadelphia has put a restaurant program offering reusable containers for to-go meals on pause. Operated by a regional Indian food chain, the initiative is the first of its kind in the area

In my February Grid commentary on the glut of single use takeout food containers during the pandemic, I expressed hope that local innovators and entrepreneurs would develop reusable container systems. I’m excited to report that my hopes have been answered—or at least they were for a moment On March 22, 2021 Philadelphia-area Indian food chain

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May 7, 2021
5 mins read
#144 May 2021/All Topics/Feminism

Dear Lois, How do I listen to my inner voice?

You are the voice in your head. You know that voice. Sometimes it’s loud; other times it’s whispering in your ear. We often refer to it as our “true self.” When I’m confronting an area of my home that needs attention, this little voice pipes up. When I listen, it becomes a bigger voice that

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May 7, 2021
3 mins read
#144 May 2021/All Topics/Circular Economy/Editor's Notes/Environment/Recycling/Water

Editor’s Notes: A Small Problem

When I was a kid—we’ll call this long ago time “the ’70s”—seatbelts hung unused while Mom’s arm reached across our bodies any time our car came to a sudden stop. Beer and soda were packaged in aluminum cans and had what was called a “pull-tab,” or “ring-tab.” You would put your finger through the ring

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May 5, 2021
2 mins read
#144 May 2021/All Topics/Circular Economy/Recycling

A new company is upping Philly’s zero-waste game

In 2020 the failures of Philadelphia’s recycling and waste management were on spectacular display. Sanitary workers were seen throwing garbage bags and carefully sorted recyclables into the same truck, leaving environmentally minded onlookers appalled. The city blamed a depleted workforce, ravaged by COVID-19, and a significant increase in volume due to people staying home. But

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May 3, 2021
7 mins read
All Topics/Food/Shop Local

Two couples are building a coffee and chocolate company with moral fiber 

In 2018 the Triangle Roasters workshop was minimally furnished. It had a sleek black coffee roaster, two cacao grinders, a couple of tables and a handful of green stools ready to be pulled up for an impromptu coffee cupping. Fast forward to 2021, and the space is almost unrecognizable. On a warm spring day the

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May 1, 2021
4 mins read
All Topics/Cooking/Food/Shop Local

Meet the native Philadelphian behind Amira’s Delites: a one-woman show that offers traditional and vegan baked goods

Sometime in the mid-1970s, Amira Abdul-Wakeel baked her first cake in her West Oak Lane childhood home. Her sister and a very close girlfriend all pitched in, and they beamed with pride at their pound cake. Then her mom came home, and exclaimed, “That’s the best corn bread I’ve ever had.” Slighted, but not defeated,

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April 30, 2021
2 mins read
#143 April 2021/All Topics/Environment/Shop Local/Urban Nature

Therapists help clients reflect and process using the great outdoors

Anisa George sees a strong connection between theater and forest therapy: they both involve improvisation. “You enter the rehearsal space, invite the ensemble to try different things, to engage with the environment,” George says. George was drawn to the practice because of its focus on the body and the natural world. Her career as an

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April 27, 2021
3 mins read
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