Local Business Support on Koh Phangan

by Leslie Finlay on 11/07/2017 No comments

Trash Hero Koh Phangan in Thailand has been actively organizing beach, reef and jungle cleanups since its inception, and has successfully arranged partnerships and cooperative projects with other local organizations as well. Now local businesses are throwing in their support as well.

Local businesses so often are at the forefront of our regional success stories, and their impact can have incredible effects on behavior change toward waste. Chad and Colleen, owners of Veranda Phangan, joined Trash Hero Koh Phangan to increase awareness to an ever-growing population of tourists. Within just 30 days, their yoga center distributed more than 1,200 free liters of water to its yoga therapy teacher candidates and managed to generate zero plastic through the duration of the course.

It’s steps like these that can lead to an ongoing pattern of awareness and change. Read Chad and Colleen’s story below to see what small changes business owners and individuals alike can make toward spreading awareness of the issues and reducing physical waste and plastic.

To see more news or get involved with Trash Hero on Koh Phangan, check out its Facebook page. 

Great things are happening on Koh Phangan in Thailand!

A movement of potential has dawned.

With more and more people visiting our gorgeous island, more and more trash is accumulating And more people are becoming aware of this challenge. **Progress** The awesome thing about awareness is that is also increases what people ASK for.

We are Chad and Colleen. Owners of Veranda Phangan in Chaloklum Koh Phangan, Thailand. We’ve been coming here for 15 years and finally decided to stay 1 yr ago. Our single concern becoming business owners and permanent residents of Koh Phangan was our impact on the island.

Within the first month we joined Trash hero. We were the 3rd business on the island to join and were surprised to find we were the 1st yoga and wellness related business to join.

So…we hopped on the campaign and spent A LOT of time increasing awareness through social media channels and word of mouth supporting the 2 Trash Hero volunteers who were working hard build a cohesive community here.

We ran our specialised trauma-informed yoga therapy teacher training in January and supplied our students with **FREE** Trash Hero bottles. Over the next 30 days during this intensive and professional yoga therapy teacher training we supplied over 1200 litres of FREE drinking water to our students. Amazing to realise ZERO plastic was generated in any way throughout this entire course.

What else does Veranda Phangan do to support sustainable tourism?

We clean our beach front property every day (which is common for all business owners on the island). We also know that tourism is increasing, which is great for Thailand being a tourism-driven economy. If an increase in tourism is going to be sustainable we must be aware of our Entire footprint extending beyond the environment too. For this reason we have developed a sustainable tourism policy.

What do we know for sure?

Small Family Run Businesses Do Make a Difference. Choose to support them on your travels.

What do we hope to see next?

We’re really looking forward to continuing our Trash Hero World and sustainable tourism efforts on Koh Phangan with our upcoming teacher training courses and retreats.

We also really hope people will start ASKING for recyclable bottles, or travelling with their own and making educated choices for the wellbeing of the countries they visit.

If you find yourself on Koh Phangan, stop by for a coconut and water refill. We’d love to meet you.

Safe travels

Chad and Colleen

Verandaphangan.com

#ReduceReUseRecycle #BringYourBottle #Verandaphangan #yogateachertrainingthailand #AmazingThailand

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Leslie FinlayLocal Business Support on Koh Phangan

Trash Heroes on Gili Meno

by Leslie Finlay on 27/06/2017 No comments

GILI MENO, INDONESIA: MAY 2017- One Trash Hero was visiting Gili Meno in Lombok, Indonesia, and encountered a cleanup underway. 

“If this is an indication of what Trash Hero can do, the world is in good shape.”

The group of volunteers attracted attention from tourists, as well.

“I saw at least a couple of tourists who spontaneously joined in by throwing something in one of the sacks. Later in the evening I met a couple of newly-weds from Britain. They had seen the group – pretty hard to miss! – and thought it was a good way to also meet people. The couple had been on the island all day and hadn’t spoken to anyone else than each other, as people (many couples) seemed mostly in to each other. This would be a good thing to start in the UK, they said.”

The weekly cleanup attracts many locals and their children, as well. Educating children on a waste-free way of life early on is a tremendously important part of Trash Hero’s mission.

“One man on the walk came every week for the clean-up from neighboring island Lombok. And the group of kids did this every Sunday, on their one day off from school.”

Local residents understand the value of up-cycling as well. Adina came across a man who has constructed a garden wall out of 9,000 plastic bottles, all filled with soft plastic of different colors.

“The house owner even wants to make bungalows with this, for tourists to stay in. Garbage turned into a tourist attraction! He looked very pleased when I told him plastic doesn’t break down for 200 years.”

Keep up the great work, heroes of Gili Meno!

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Leslie FinlayTrash Heroes on Gili Meno

Trash in Bali

by Leslie Finlay on 25/06/2017 6 comments

BALI, INDONESIA – This fantastic video sponsored by the Danish Embassy Jakarta highlights the problem of trash in Bali.

Bali, an island that relies on tourism for its economy and job market, is facing a monumental trash crisis. According to the video, almost everyday there are reports of marine life washed ashore with a belly full of trash. One Island One Voice, Bali’s campaign to clean up its beaches, finds trash absolutely everywhere. Most of the trash volunteers came across is non biodegradable plastic, often just tossed from pedestrians or from vehicles.

One Island One Voice suggests that lack of education is the greatest challenge. The video says that decades ago trash was made from biodegradable materials like banana leaves and coconuts, and now plastic has replaced the natural materials. Local people don’t know that their trash doesn’t decompose anymore, and so their habits haven’t changed.

Many organizations, like Trash Hero and Bye Bye Plastic Bags are answering the call to action. The Zero Waste to Ocean Initiative is intent on education children and businesses on the dangers of waste, and ways to enact change now.

Be a trash hero: reduce your plastic trash, say no to plastic bags, plastic bottles and plastic straws, and start using eco-friendly options!

 

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Leslie FinlayTrash in Bali

Trash Hero at TEDxYangon

by Leslie Finlay on 23/06/2017 No comments

MAY 21, 2017: YANGON, MYANMAR

Trash Hero Myanmar Coordinator Phone Kyaw Moe Myint, who goes by Carl, tells the audience at TEDxYangon about the words that changed his life: “Become a Trash Hero.”

The sailing champion has spent his life on the water, and admits that he hadn’t truly considered the problem of pollution very much until it directly impacted his life – a tendency he criticizes too many of us are guilty of, but understands all the same. Then the waters of his Inya Lake became so overrun with trash that it threatened his beloved sport and livelihood.

Since that day, Carl is a firm believer in Trash Hero’s global movement of mobilizing the hands and hearts of individuals to enable change. In his talk, he champions the power of building awareness and influencing others through small behavioral changes – that together we can solve the global garbage crisis.

His words are dedicated the more than 20,000 heroes out there! Check out his speech below.

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Leslie FinlayTrash Hero at TEDxYangon

Myanmar Coordinator on the Cover of MYANMORE Magazine

by Leslie Finlay on 16/06/2017 No comments

16 June 2017 – Trash Hero Myanmar

In its inaugural year, Phone Kyaw Moe Myint (Carl) led Trash Hero Myanmar to meet some impressive goals. The multiple Southeast Asian gold-medal winning sailor has had a lifelong love affair with his local Inya Lake, but now as a coach and mentor to Myanmar’s next generation of athletes, he takes its preservation even more seriously.

In its June 2017 issue – just one year after the chapter’s founding – MYANMORE Magazine featured Carl on its cover heralding his immense contributions to the country as an athlete, businessman, and now as a Trash Hero.

The article chronicles some of the chapter’s awesome achievements in the last 12 months:

  • Carl promoted Trash Hero at TEDx Yangon – May 21, 2017
  • Trash Hero Myanmar now functions in four cities** – Yangon, Mandalay, Ngwe Saung beach and Pyin Oo Lwin – with events scheduled monthly. Enthusiasm may drive weekly events soon, however.
  • Altogether the chapters boast more than 5,000 heroes and have removed more than 20,000 kg of trash
  • The Yangon chapter has cleared nearly 2,000 kg of waste from Inya Lake alone (using paddle boards!)
  • Following the successful TEDx, Trash Hero is working with City Mart to reduce the company’s plastic bag usage
  • Carl is systematically removing plastics from the Inya Lake Sailing Club and from the Vantage Tower (his office)

**Since the article, the beautiful mountain city Lashio has joined the Trash Hero family as well!

Read the full MYANMORE Magazine article below.

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Leslie FinlayMyanmar Coordinator on the Cover of MYANMORE Magazine