Collared GreensHow to green your pet18 Mar 2008
Can man's best friend be a friend to the planet, too?
Photo: iStockphoto
Without pets, the world would be such a pale, less playful version of itself. No Wallace and Gromit videos. No Fluffy purring in our laps or Fido fetching his Frisbee. No cheerful creatures welcoming us home and adoring us unconditionally. (OK, we'd still have mom.) So we love them, there's no getting around it. But can we lighten the eco-pawprint of our pets? Why yes, we can: today's marketplace offers everything from eco-friendly kibbles, collars, and chew toys to beds, leashes, and kitty litter -- all of which promote better pet health without hurting the planet. If you're less inclined toward consumption, we still have ideas for greening your goldfish bowl (and a handy list of resources, too). Here's how to start. Level One: The Baby Steps
Every bunny a wanted bunny.
Photo: iStockphoto
Spay it forward. More than 50,000 cats and dogs and untold numbers of other animals are born every day in the U.S., an overpopulation crisis that takes a major toll on the planet. Outdoor cats kill huge numbers of songbirds; feral or unleashed dogs harass and kill other wildlife; and surplus pets in general spread disease and foul the landscape with their waste. Life is no picnic for the unwanted, either: an estimated 3 to 4 million of them are euthanized at animal shelters each year. So snip this population crisis in the bud -- literally -- and spay or neuter all your pets, including those repro-crazed rabbits. They'll live healthier, longer lives as a result. Don't spend bills at mills. Huge numbers of pet stores and other retailers get their animals from puppy mills, the notorious mass-breeding outfits that spark over-pup-ulation and produce sick, badly bred animals. The best way to muzzle the mills, not surprisingly, is to boycott them. So pick a pooch from a shelter or animal rescue group instead. Online resources like Petfinder or Pets 911 can help you find the right match. Level Two: The Next StepsKeep it simple. Choose toys and tidbits made and packaged with recycled, organic, or earth-friendly materials (hemp doggy Frisbees and leashes, anyone?). Rejoice in the growing variety of natural pet shampoos, potions, and flea and tick products, which are free of organophosphate insecticides. Nix the vinyl and nylon. Spot doesn't need that raincoat with matching collar and leash, and the atmosphere doesn't need the nasties that result from vinyl production and disposal. If every pet toy sold each year were made of 100 percent recycled materials, according to The Green Book, it would save enough virgin materials to make a Frisbee more than two miles in diameter. Fetch!
Image: iStockphoto
Level Three: The Next StepGo organic. Conventional pet foods come with ingredients you may not have bargained for, including pesticides, herbicides, hormones, antibiotics, and -- last year's addition -- melamine, a contaminant that killed 1,950 dogs and 2,200 cats and sparked one of the biggest pet food recalls in history. (Note to vegans or the easily nauseated: you might want to skip the next sentences.) These mainstream brands often also include items coyly described on their labels as "meat or poultry byproducts" or "reconstituted animal byproducts" -- industry-speak for grisly waste materials (hair, blood, and worse) culled from "4D" animals: the dead, diseased, dying, or disabled.
Finicky felines insist on organic kibble.
Photo: iStockphoto
ResourcesGet a new leash on life with our list of handy -- or should we say pawsy -- resources. And add your own suggestions and ideas in the comments section below. Spaying guidance Humane Society of the U.S. Spay USA Green pet products Only Natural Pet Worldwise Earth Dog Urban Leash and Treat Biodegradable waste bags Eco-Products BioBags Poopbags Organic pet foods Organics 4 Your Pets Natura Pet Products Heidi's Homemade Newman's Own Organics Premium Pet Food Castor & Pollux Pet Works
Grist claims no responsibility for the safety and effectiveness of these tips -- especially if you dive headfirst into your compost pile. If you've got tips of your own, or questions about a topic we haven't covered,
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