Coloring Easter Eggs. It's hard to resist the traditional egg dying kits adorned with cute litle bunnies that make egg coloring so darn easy. But I have to onder, what the heck is in those fizzing little tablets? So I am skipping them from now on along with other artificial food colorings, even ones from the grocery store. Personally I am trying to limit Why? Well for one, Red Dye #40 is thought to cause behavioral issues in children. Not that anyone is eating egg shells, but you don’t know what can leak into the egg and in general, I just like to avoid it. Visit your natural food store of choice and see if they carry some all natural food coloring. In my online searches, unfortunately they do tend to be a bit pricey. Though I did find a plant based egg dye kit at Nova Naturals.
Feeling a little daring? You can also try using foods to color your eggs. You will need several stainless steel pots, one for every color, water, white vinegar and of course eggs. For colors, you can use the following:
Red onion skins (for red)
Yellow onion skins (for orange)
Red cabbage (for blue)
Spinach (for green)
Carrot tops, orange peels or lemon peels (for yellow)
Purple grape juice (for lavender)
Beets or cranberries (for pink)
Put enough water in the pot to cover your eggs and add one teaspoon and the item you are using for the dye. Bring your eggs to a boil and then let simmer for 15-20 minutes. Not only is this natural, it is also fun and educational for your kiddos. If you have compost, you can throw the scraps of onion skins, spinach, etc. right in. I haven’t decided if I want to color eggs this year, but if I do, I’ll be sure to take pictures to share.

Baskets. Head into most stores right about now and you’ll find loads of plastic baskets. Now instead you could make your own, but personally I am not gifted enough to do that. I bought some wood Easter baskets a few years back and I just reuse them every year. They are not a very green choice, but I already have them so I’m gonna use them. Another idea I had was buying a reusable shopping bag and then putting all the goodies inside. Envirosax
Easter Grass. Please, please skip the plastic grass. After you toss it in your garbage it is going to sit in a land fill for thousands of years. I’ve read some things about

Candy. Now I am not one of those crazy people that doesn’t let my kids have treats every now and then. Heck I am a chocoholic so it would be quite


So there you have it, just a few tips to have an eco-friendly Easter. Do you have any tips of your own? If so, I would LOVE to hear them. So please share them with us and have a happy, hoppin, green Easter!

Hi,
ReplyDeleteFabulous to have a Eco-friendly Easter! Love the idea of using shredded paper as grass. You could color it using green "food" color. Paper does dry rather quickly! Another idea is to use half a egg box/carton (half dozen) as a Easter Egg Basket. Make the handle from "old" paper. Not sure how to go about describing "how to", my 4 year old loves making chains out of 2 long strips of paper which gets folded over each other! Does that make sense? Hopefully you remember doing it when you where a "children"! Embellish with paper flowers & put in "shredded" grass.
Have a super fabulous Easter!
Awesome !
ReplyDeleteI love your ideas! Thanks.
ReplyDeleteOh I like the egg carton basket idea. thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteI'll be laying down a green playsilk at the bottom of my son's (second hand, wooden) basket. We reuse the same basket year after year, and my mom did the same thing - I had the same Easter basket from the time I was a tiny little girl until I was moved out of the house and arguably too old for an Easter basket!
ReplyDeleteThese are great ideas, especially the reusable bags. I've dyed my eggs for years with onion skins and beets with nice results. I'm partial to subtle colors anyway.
ReplyDeleteGreat ideas! I love the coloring eggs ideas.
ReplyDeleteHi. Glad you'll be joining the Green Moms Carnival this month. I love the shredded paper instead of plastic grass idea. One thing to keep in mind: shredded paper is not so great at most recycling facilities. Better in the compost. Why? Because the shredded paper makes a mess and flies everywhere. I've seen this with my own eyes. Large quantities of baled shredded paper from businesses is one thing. Little bits dumped in our home recycling bins, though, is not so great. I compost mine, as it's great "brown" material.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for pointing that out about shredded paper!
ReplyDeleteLOVE IT!
ReplyDeleteHi, that's quite an interesting post
ReplyDeleteGreat Ideas! I will check out those websites.
ReplyDeleteAnother good idea for lining the baskets is a bright possibly Easter themed fabric - you could use it every year and wash it in between uses (if necessary).
What a wonderful article, I love all the Envirosax bags!
ReplyDeleteWe're already a little green, we've had the same Easter Baskets since we were little :)
ReplyDeleteI'm definitely going green this easter!
ReplyDelete- Paige @ Green Global Travel