Mother Earth Living – September-October 2019

(Joyce) #1

Sept/Oct 2019 5


FIRE CIDER TRIAL


Every herbalist has a warming,
immune-boosting “fire cider”
recipe in her arsenal. It’s typically a
combination of apple cider vinegar,
horseradish, garlic, hot peppers,
citrus, and onions. Rosemary Gladstar
first coined the name for the folk
remedy in the 1970s. But in 2012, a
company called Shire City Herbal
trademarked the term. Despite outcry
that the generic name shouldn’t
belong to any one person, a petition
to cancel the trademark, boycotts on
the brand, and claims that “fire cider”
is the intellectual property of Gladstar,
Shire City Herbals hasn’t changed
its stance. In fact, in 2015, it sued
herbalists Nicole Telkes, Mary Blue,
and Katheryn Langelier for trademark
infringement, among other claims,
and on March 25, 2019, they finally
went to trial. This ongoing case will
set a precedent for whether generic
folk-medicine terms can be “owned.”

A ZERO-WASTE


SHOPPING SUBSCRIPTION


At first glance, Loop looks like
many other online shopping services:
You add to your shipment all the
brand-name personal care and grocery
items you need, and wait for the box
to arrive at your doorstep. But when
it rolls out in 2019, Loop will stand
out, because each and every product

will arrive in a beautiful, functional,
100-percent reusable container. When
you’ve eaten your Häagen-Dazs ice
cream, used up your Dove deodorant,
or run out of Seventh Generation
detergent, rather than disposing of the
leftover packaging, you’ll simply put
the container back in the insulated tote
in which it arrived and schedule a UPS
pickup. The unwashed containers will
be transported from your doorstep to a
Loop facility, where they’ll be sanitized
and refilled for free, and then be sent
right back to customers for another
use. Learn more, and see which brands
have already partnered with Loop, at
http://www.LoopStore.com.

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BEST FOR HEALTHY EATING


| FEATURED CHARITY |


CHARITY: WATER
My.CharityWater.org

WHY IT’S IMPORTANT: Worldwide, 1
in 10 people don’t have access to clean
water. Most of these people live in iso-
lated, rural, or underdeveloped commu-
nities, where women and children spend
hours walking every day to collect water
for their families. Not only does this keep
kids out of school, but the water often
carries disease; former United Nations
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said that
more people die from unsafe water than
from all forms of violence in the world.
Clean water could change everything.

WHAT IT DOES:
✽ Works locally to find the best
sustainable water solution, whether
that be a well, a piped system, or a
system for harvesting rainwater.
✽ Trains community members to make
minor repairs to water projects
as needed, or connects them to
professional mechanics, to ensure the
lasting impact of each water source.
✽ Uses 100 percent of public donations
to fund 38,000 water projects (and
counting) in 27 countries across
the globe.

Industry News
Learn about the lawsuit over a folk remedy label, and how food
and personal care brands are joining the reusable revolution.

Charity: water tracks each complete
water project for donors to see,
including GPS coordinates and
water flow data.
Free download pdf