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We've long admired Mary Cordaro of
H3
Environmental for the great insight she offers as a consultant on green
living issues and for her line of healthy-home products. “The name stands for
our three homes: the home inside oneself, our house, and our home on the
planet,” she says. Cordaro talked to Greenopia about her work and living green
in L.A.In 1989 I started as an environmental consultant, specifying building materials, troubleshooting toxic materials. It evolved into a healthy home products and education company.
Sharing information and teaching. Lecturing is an easy way for me to boil down information so that anyone can understand and share it.
Hugo’s on Riverside. It has a lot of organic produce and hormone-free meats, so it caters to everyone from vegans to people who are looking for cleaner meat choices.
My local farmer’s market, Whole Foods, and Erewhon, which is one of the oldest health food stores in L.A. and has the most organic produce.
I go to Rosali for CO2 dry-cleaning—there aren’t too many in L.A. And I love my local organic coffee shops, Village Joe’s and Coffee Fix.
I love TreePeople, California Oaks, Forest Ethics, and Bioneers. Also the Bio-Integral Resource Center in Berkeley, which educates people and amasses information about integrated pest management.
You can find the best of everything in an urban environment. We’re spoiled, with all the places to get great produce and green products. But I dislike the smog. And it is difficult to get around with no useable mass transportation.
Coldwater Park. It’s a wild place right in the middle of the San Fernando Valley, with a four-mile loop hike on un-landscaped, absolutely wild trails. It’s the sweetest place, right where TreePeople is located.
Most visitors love to go to the beach. I love to take people to Coldwater Park—no one believes it’s there!
Tassajara, by Big Sur, which is a Zen Buddhist retreat open to the public five months a year. It’s very remote, 14 miles down a dirt road. It’s full of wonderful chanting and bells, and there are no cars and no electricity in the rooms. You eat three organic vegetarian meals a day and spend time in the Japanese hot springs.
Hiking at Coldwater Park, or a long walk on the beach.
Definitely a California oak. They create the most amazing micro-climate. Sitting under an oak, the air changes and cools, maybe more so than with any other tree. They grow very old, and become more beautiful as they grow older.
My path started because of health issues. I had such terrible asthma and allergies, and was very sick. Because I was so ill in the ‘80s, I studied Bau-biologie to learn how to turn my home healthy, and I became a certified Bau-biologist. Through the door I walked into health, I learned other equally important green information about saving energy and building materials, and have been working with that and continuing to learn.
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