
Credit. Reverb.org
Just as the Green Music Group Challenge is winding down, the green concert gurus at Reverb have come up with another project. They're taking donations. But ... each donation of $15 or more comes with a booty-back guarantee.
John Friend and Sienna Sherman teaching yoga at Wanderlust (photo taken by Bonnie Hulkower)
Last weekend, at the heart of this year's Wanderlust Festival was Village Anusara, and in the heart of the village was John Friend, gathered with his disciples. John founded Anusara yoga thirteen years ago.

photo credit: © Xirriquiteula Teatre
The five Barcelona-based Residual Gurus have decided to fight trash with comical roaming concerts, and are touring Europe at the moment. These talented musicians know how to transform rubbish into a spiritual performance that turns the street into a stimulating yet unpredictable haven.

On this date three years ago, we launched an ongoing campaign toward solving the most critical environmental issues of our time along with dozens of partner organizations, hundreds of millions of citizens across 7 continents, and you.
Live Earth 07.07.07: The Concerts for a Climate in Crisis, featured 24 hours of live music staged concerts in New York, London, Sydney, Tokyo, Shanghai, Rio de Janeiro, Johannesburg and Hamburg - as well as special broadcast events in Antarctica, Kyoto and Washington, DC - and featured feature more than 150 of the world's best music acts - a mix of both legendary music acts like The Police, Genesis, Bon Jovi and Madonna with the latest headliners like Kanye West, Kelly Clarkson, Black Eyed Peas and Jack Johnson.
This Thursday, July 1st, artists, musicians and activists worldwide will unite to benefit those directly impacted by the Gulf Coast Oil Spill. Proceeds from all participating venues will be donated to The Gulf Restoration Network, a nonprofit committed to uniting and empowering people to protect and restore the natural resources of the Gulf Region for future generations.
Click here to watch video from the events.

Students of recycling know that one big issue in reducing waste is human nature. We are ill-informed, inattentive, or just plain lazy when it comes to getting reusable post-consumer materials into the recycling stream. Sure, only true cretins chuck their picnic waste out of the moving car's window in this enlightened age. But recycling systems are far from optimized.