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18 Visions Design partners w/Trees for the Future

18 Visions Design partners w/Trees for the Future

Posted on 29. May, 2009 by admin.

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To show our appreciation to clients, 18 Visions Design is partnering with Trees for the Future to provide tree planting donations. Trees for the Future is a resource and training organization promoting sustainable agro forestry practices designed to improve the livelihoods of rural communities in the developing world.

Trees is a nonprofit organization that receives funding from grants and donations, planting beneficial trees at the low cost of .10/tree by leveraging grassroots community participation, able to plant trees at a low cost to donors because the communities Trees for the Future works with give their time, resources and labor to projects that will provide long-term benefits both locally and at a global scale.

Learn more by visiting the Trees for the Future website

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Wilson Rebound Recycled Basketball

Wilson Rebound Recycled Basketball

Posted on 26. May, 2009 by admin.

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The Wilson Rebound Recycled Basketball ($12) is a rugged outdoor ball that’s made of 40% recycled scrap rubber. The official-size b-ball is also sold in a packaging that’s made from 80% pre and post consumer recycled board. Drain some threes without draining the planet.

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Earth ball joins recycling effort

Earth ball joins recycling effort

Posted on 20. May, 2009 by admin.

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Where do old golf balls go to die? Preferably to Dixon Golf, and not your local landfill, where they could remain intact for decades.

The Arizona-based company markets a golf ball, the Earth ED, but it will also take any golf ball for recycling. The Earth ball is a two-piece construction, made of a polymer that Dixon CEO Dane Platt says is recyclable. “We grind it up until it’s fine dust,” he says. “The dust can be used for other things.”

Platt says the company received 38,000 used balls on Earth Day. Some were Dixon products, others were a variety of brands, many of which contain elements of heavy metals. Platt says a process for recycling those balls is being developed.

Joe Burbee, the director of golf at Bay Creek Resort in Cape Charles, Va., says recycling balls, other than reclaiming them from ponds and selling them used, is new. “All we can do now is throw them away,” says Burbee, who buys 2,500 dozen each year for Bay Creek’s driving range. “The problem is the expense of shipping the balls.”

The Earth ball (suggested retail of $39.99 per dozen) can be purchased at selected retailers listed at the company’s website (dixongolf.com). The company offers a $1 credit for one Dixon ball toward the purchase of a new one and 50-cent credit on a Dixon ball for any other brand returned.

By Jerry Potter, USA TODAY

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