Hi All,

I found this on CNN today, take a look. The good news is there are some fruits and veggies that you can buy non-organic that are just as good. The trick is to know which ones.

(CNN) — If you’re eating non-organic celery today, you may be ingesting 67 pesticides with it, according to a new report from the Environmental Working Group.

The group, a nonprofit focused on public health, scoured nearly 100,000 produce pesticide reports from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to determine what fruits and vegetables we eat have the highest, and lowest, amounts of chemical residue.

Most alarming are the fruits and vegetables dubbed the "Dirty Dozen," which contain 47 to 67 pesticides per serving. These foods are believed to be most susceptible because they have soft skin that tends to absorb more pesticides.

"It’s critical people know what they are consuming," the Environmental Working Group’s Amy Rosenthal said. "The list is based on pesticide tests conducted after the produce was washed with USDA high-power pressure water system. The numbers reflect the closest thing to what consumers are buying at the store."

Special report: Toxic America

The group suggests limiting consumption of pesticides by purchasing organic for the 12 fruits and vegetables.

"You can reduce your exposure to pesticides by up to 80 percent by buying the organic version of the Dirty Dozen," Rosenthal said.

The Dirty Dozen

Celery

Peaches

Strawberries

Apples

Domestic blueberries

Nectarines

Sweet bell peppers

Spinach, kale and collard greens

Cherries

Potatoes

Imported grapes

Lettuce

Not all non-organic fruits and vegetables have a high pesticide level. Some produce has a strong outer layer that provides a defense against pesticide contamination. The group found a number of non-organic fruits and vegetables dubbed the "Clean 15" that contained little to no pesticides.

The Clean 15

Onions

Avocados

Sweet corn

Pineapples

Mango

Sweet peas

Asparagus

Kiwi fruit

Cabbage

Eggplant

Cantaloupe

Watermelon

Grapefruit

Sweet potatoes

Sweet onions

What is a pesticide?

A pesticide is a mixture of chemical substances used on farms to destroy or prevent pests, diseases and weeds from affecting crops. According to the USDA, 45 percent of the world’s crops are lost to damage or spoilage, so many farmers count on pesticides.

The Environmental Protection Agency, the FDA and the USDA work together to monitor and set limits as to how much pesticide can be used on farms and how much is safe to remain on the produce once it hits grocery store shelves.

"In setting the tolerance amount, the EPA must make a safety finding that the pesticide can be used with ‘reasonable certainty of no harm.’ The EPA ensures that the tolerance selected will be safe," according the EPA’s website.

Although the President’s Cancer Panel recently recommended that consumers eat produce without pesticides to reduce their risk of getting cancer and other diseases, the low levels of pesticides found on even the Dirty Dozen are government-approved amounts.

Can small amounts of pesticides hurt you?

The government says that consuming pesticides in low amounts doesn’t harm you, but some studies show an association between pesticides and health problems such as cancer, attention-deficit (hyperactivity) disorder and nervous system disorders and say exposure could weaken immune systems.

The Environmental Working Group acknowledges that data from long-term studies aren’t available but warns consumers of the potential dangers.

"Pesticides are designed to kill things. Why wait for 20 years to discover they are bad for us?" Rosenthal said.

Some doctors warn that children’s growing brains are the most vulnerable to pesticides in food.

"A kid’s brain goes through extraordinary development, and if pesticides get into the brain, it can cause damage," said Dr. Philip Landrigan, chairman of the department of preventive medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York.

Can pesticides be washed away?

Not necessarily. The pesticide tests mentioned above were conducted after the food had been power-washed by the USDA. Also, although some pesticides are found on the surface of foods, other pesticides may be taken up through the roots and into the plant and cannot be removed.

"We’ve found that washing doesn’t do much," Rosenthal said. "Peeling can help, although you have to take into account that the pesticides are in the water, so they can be inside the fruit because of the soil."

All fresh produce, whether it’s grown with or without pesticides, should be washed with water to remove dirt and potentially harmful bacteria. And health experts agree that when it comes to the Dirty Dozen list, choose organic if it’s available.

"To the extent you can afford to do so, [parents] should simply buy organic, because there have been some very good studies that shows people who eat mostly organic food reduce 95 percent of pesticides [in their body] in two weeks," Landrigan said

Posted via email from Jennifer Aument, Realtor

Because every line of text on the internet helps get the word out, below is a live feed of the 2010 BP Oil Spill in our Gulf Coast.  Varying estimates put the oil gusher at over 200 gallons of crude per minute.  As I type, roughly 57 million gallons of oil have leaked into the gulf since the sinking of the Deepwater Horizon on April 20th.

Watch live streaming video from wkrg_oil_spill at livestream.com
Again, because every “tag” counts, below are the latest photos of “America’s Chernobyl.”  All images courtesy of the Huffington Post: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/04/30/louisiana-oil-spill-2010_n_558287.html
BP Oil Spill 2010
BP Oil Spill aerial
Gulf Oil Spill 2010

To all my Petaluma people, this is very cool! I found this online today and couldn’t believe it… I haven’t found the entire list yet but here’s the article:

Just yesterday, Priceline.com announced its annual list of the 50 most popular destinations for Memorial Day. Topping the list is none other than Chicago’s Millennium Park, the Loop, and Grant Park Area.

The list is based on more than 30,000 hotel room booking requests made through Priceline.com for the weekend May 29-31, 2010. It is based on actual booking requests, not polls or voting.

Because areas of a city are logged, rather than the entire city, cities can make the list more than once. In addition to Millennium Park ranking first, Chicago’s North Michigan/River North Area ranked second, while the Lincoln Park area came in 19th.

"You can still see the economy reflected in Americans’ travel plans for Memorial Day," said Priceline.com’s travel expert and blogger Brian Ek. "The big development this year is the large number of cities and towns that are making the list of the top 50 Memorial Day destinations for the first time. This should be very encouraging news for local tourism industries." Destinations making the list for the first time include Providence, RI, Petaluma, CA, Madison, WI, Atlantic City/Cape May, NJ and Princeton, NJ.

Posted via email from Jennifer Aument, Realtor

This article was published on RealSimple.com today and I found it to be very informative. We all know eating processed foods is not good for us but it can also be robbing us of our necessary calcium. Take a few minutes to learn about healthy snacking, you’ll be glad you did…

Article from RealSimple.com:

– Hint: None of these habits include chips from the vending machine. Learn the rules for getting through the afternoon satisfied and junk-free.

1. Fix your own food

Even if you need to be tied to the mast of your shopping cart (or chained to your desk) to avoid the tempting call of those cellophane-wrapped, curlicue-topped cupcakes, you must resist.

Most ready-made snacks are low in vitamins, nutrients, and protein and high in calories, fat, sugar, and sodium, which can inhibit the body’s retention of much needed calcium. (Sports and protein bars are a shining exception.)

2. Eat a balanced snack

A pear instead of Reese’s Pieces? You think you’re being so virtuous — and you are, to some extent. That pear is largely carbohydrates, but the ideal slow-burn snack has carbohydrates, protein, and, of all things, fat.

Carbohydrates are metabolized first and deliver their calories fastest — just ask anyone who has binged on a handful of Jolly Ranchers, felt a sudden and frantic spike of energy, and suffered an equally sudden crash.

RealSimple.com: 24 nutritious (and tasty) snacks

Say, for example, you grab a quick snack of saltines, which contain refined-flour carbohydrates: As soon as they’re in your mouth, the enzymes in your saliva go to work. In about 20 minutes, the carbohydrates are broken down into glucose, which peaks in your bloodstream, turning down your internal hunger alarm. Unfortunately, in about another 20 minutes, that glucose is completely burnt out or stored up, so the alarm starts ringing again.

Fruit, which has more fiber than crackers, will take slightly longer to metabolize. To prolong the satisfaction, you need to add in protein and fat (they often go hand in hand), which take longer to metabolize. So eat that pear with a chunk of cheddar or some low-fat yogurt and you’ll be set for a few hours.

3. Snack to maintain weight

Snacks can keep you from getting fat. There it is, even though it’s the opposite of what your mother spent years nagging you about.

According to a recent study in Scotland, eating snacks helps you control both your appetite and your weight, because when you don’t arrive at the table famished, you’re less likely to speed-eat, overeat, or just sit there emptying the bread basket into your gullet as fast as is humanly possible.

(Another theory is that eating more frequently burns calories, because digestion requires energy, at least briefly.)

RealSimple.com: Make nutritious snacking choices on the go

Most women need about 2,000 calories a day, including snacks. Ideally, you would have five mini-meals of 400 calories, but that’s not realistic. (Imagine riding roundup to get everyone to the table more often than you already do.)

What’s recommended is the traditional "big three," only slightly down-sized, plus two well-balanced mini-meals.

4. Keep stress in check

You may recognize the symptoms of stress: fatigue, lack of concentration, short temper, or…a minivan floor littered with candy wrappers and sundae cups.

According to a study from the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at University College London, students ate more snack foods and fewer fruits and vegetables when they were under pressure.

What triggers a stress case’s need to feed is the hormone cortisol, say researchers at the University of California at San Francisco. Cortisol is released during physical or emotional stress, and that increases one’s appetite for carbohydrates, especially sweets.

5. Once a month, allow yourself more

Is it that time of the month? Women are most likely to binge or overeat in the two weeks prior to their periods if they’ve ovulated (most women on the Pill do not ovulate).

Menstrual flow is triggered by the secretion of progesterone, which is thermogenic, or calorie burning. Thus, without so much as lifting an extra three-pound weight — or finger, for that matter — your body burns more calories than it does during the rest of the month, and your hunger kicks in to compensate.

In a study at the University of British Columbia, women ate an average of 260 extra calories a day when they were ovulating.

RealSimple.com: Healthy Snack Foods

6. Crave calcium and shun sodium

You need to start reaching for the right white stuff — the milk bottle, not the salt shaker. In other words, calcium instead of sodium. The recommended daily allowance for calcium is 1,000 milligrams, and most women don’t come close to getting enough. What’s more, the more salt you eat, the less calcium your body retains.

For instance, one 3 1/2-ounce bag of cheese puffs contains 1,000 milligrams of sodium, which will cost you 20 milligrams of calcium, something an osteoporosis-prone woman should think twice about.

7. Drink lots of water

You’ve eaten lunch. You’ve already scarfed your snack. And all you want to do is curl up and take a nap.

When you find yourself lacking energy like this, make your way to the water bottle and down a glass. Studies have shown that fatigue is one of the first signs of dehydration, and when you’re run-down, it’s easy to confuse thirst for hunger.

Airplanes, cars, and office buildings are especially arid and climate controlled, so you may need to make a concerted effort to drink even more water than you usually do. Now, get chugging.

Here’s the link to the article:

http://www.cnn.com/2010/HEALTH/05/18/seven.habits.snackers/index.html?hpt=Sbin

Posted via email from Jennifer Aument, Realtor

129 Rocca:
5 beds, 3.0 baths and ~1600 SqFt

Awesome buy here for a homeowner, but the BIG question (my question)… Would you buy a home like this fixed up for $340,000 that backs to the railroad tracks? Let me know what you think!

Would be completely fixed up…

Tons of glare, I know, but no pics online so the iPhone will have to do!

Armand Ramirez
Realtor-Associate
Century 21 Bundesen
DRE Lic. #01472012
Sent from my iPhone

Posted via email from armandramirez’s posterous

Earn over $50,000 – you’re in the top 1%!!!

I couldn’t believe it either, maybe I’ll go out and buy a new Jag now that I’m officially rich!

http://money.blogs.time.com/2010/05/03/guess-what-youre-rich/?hpt=Sbin?artId=3671?contType=blog_its_your_money?chn=us

Or go here, and see how high your income ranks in the world:

http://globalrichlist.com/

SCARY!

Posted via email from Jennifer Aument, Realtor

Test post from Posterous.com

Jennifer Aument

Realtor

Century 21 Bundesen

707-548-2011 cell

707-762-1032 fax

DRE# 01487114

 

www.Aument-Ramirez.com

 

 

Posted via email from Jennifer Aument, Realtor

Great place to undwind on a Friday night, a true Beer Garten! (now back to work)

Sent from my iPhone

Posted via email from armandramirez’s posterous

Ok.  So just set up an account for Jennifer (and she’s already done her first post from her phone), so I figure I’ll do my own.  I’m sitting at my laptop, not as exciting I know, but pretty convenient considering all that I’m doing is writing an email.  Never heard of posterous?  Just go to Posterous.com and sign up for free.  It will create a personal blog for you on their site (mine is armandramirez.posterous.com) but will allow you to automatically push your posts to other blogs and outlets, including facebook, twitter, myspace, or whatever else you can think of.  Great thing is, all you have to do is type an email and it does the “publishing” for you.  Great for you traveling musicians, photographers, and eligible bachelors I suppose.  At any rate, here’s a photo of me and Jennifer’s place as envisioned by me messing around with a cool 3D architecture program designed for homes: http://www.belightsoft.com/

Jennifer gets the pink WV … I get the yellow one :)
-Armand

Posted via email from armandramirez’s posterous

What is posterous? Apparently the next big thing for bloggers, I’m writing this from my iPhone and in a few moments, these images will show up on facebook, Twitter, here, and posterous.com.From now on, if I see something I like, you will too! So here’s the first post – 3 pictures of a very cool bathroom I saw in a Victorian home on B street yesterday, nice hardware on the shower curtain!

Jennifer Aument
Realtor-Associate
Century 21 Bundesen
Sent from my iPhone

Posted via email from Jennifer Aument, Realtor