quote:I was a bit surprised after I took this (partially because it added to 9 instead of 9.1). The average person in the US uses 24 acres. The world only has 4.5 biologically productive acres per person. That means that if everyone was me, we'd need 2.1 planets to keep going. Eek.
CATEGORY ACRES
FOOD 5.9
MOBILITY 0.2
SHELTER 1.5
GOODS/SERVICES 1.5
TOTAL FOOTPRINT 9
quote:Yeesh. India, Bangladesh, and China need to do something about those stray dogs!
I found this one on rabies particularly interesting and not at all surprising, given the number of stray dogs here.
quote:I think the thing that dings you in Japan is having your food "come from far away."
TOTAL FOOTPRINT 2.5 (hectares)
IN COMPARISON, THE AVERAGE ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT IN YOUR COUNTRY IS 4.8 GLOBAL HECTARES PER PERSON.
quote:Your Japan thing sparked my interest, so I redid the test based off my very limited stay in Tokyo (6 weeks). Here are the results:
Originally posted by Annie:
I took the quiz again, answering as if I were my missionary self in Japan a couple months ago. Here were my results then:
quote:I think the thing that dings you in Japan is having your food "come from far away."
TOTAL FOOTPRINT 2.5 (hectares)
IN COMPARISON, THE AVERAGE ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT IN YOUR COUNTRY IS 4.8 GLOBAL HECTARES PER PERSON.
quote:A little bit lower than in the US. It's mostly (I think) because I walked a lot and used the train for longer distances, whereas back at home I have to drive myself to get anywhere except for school. Still, it's pretty neat.
CATEGORY GLOBAL HECTARES
FOOD 1.5
MOBILITY 0
SHELTER 0.9
GOODS/SERVICES 0.7
TOTAL FOOTPRINT 3.1
quote:That sounds about right.
Originally posted by Annie:
I think the thing that dings you in Japan is having your food "come from far away."
quote:Yeah I did. Now that I look at the population map again, I see that Sri Lanka is not as populous as I thought it was; the exaggeration in the rabies map really is quite severe. The Philippines and SEA don't seem to be fairing well in that department either.
Originally posted by quidscribis:
As for rabies, did you notice that Sri Lanka, that blob under India, is also disproportionately large?
quote:I live in the suburbs, with 4 kids. I drive almost everywhere I go.
FOOD 5.4 acres
MOBILITY 0.2 acres
SHELTER 2.5 acres
GOODS/SERVICES 2.5 acres
TOTAL FOOTPRINT 11 acres
IN COMPARISON, THE AVERAGE ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT IN YOUR COUNTRY IS 24 ACRES PER PERSON.
IF EVERYONE LIVED LIKE YOU, WE WOULD NEED 2.4 PLANETS.
quote:I live in a small town in Sweden where I walk to to my office. It isn't totally accurate, since there wasn't/I didn't see an option for not having a car (which I don't), so I chose the car with the best mileage.
CATEGORY GLOBAL HECTARES
FOOD 1.3
MOBILITY 0.2
SHELTER 1.6
GOODS/SERVICES 2.1
TOTAL FOOTPRIN 5.2
IN COMPARISON, THE AVERAGE ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT IN YOUR COUNTRY IS 6.7 GLOBAL HECTARES PER PERSON.
WORLDWIDE, THERE EXIST 1.8 BIOLOGICALLY PRODUCTIVE GLOBAL HECTARES PER PERSON.
IF EVERYONE LIVED LIKE YOU, WE WOULD NEED 2.9 PLANETS.
quote:Yup. Rabies is a big problem in this area of the world. Stray dogs are rampant. Part of the problem is that the Buddhists (as one example), the majority of the population, believe it's wrong to kill animals, so even though there are dog pounds and the like, they're no-kill. Also, they capture only a very very very small amount of the stray dog population. Yet they're also against spaying and neutering. They also think it's a good thing to feed the strays.
quote:Yeah I did. Now that I look at the population map again, I see that Sri Lanka is not as populous as I thought it was; the exaggeration in the rabies map really is quite severe. The Philippines and SEA don't seem to be fairing well in that department either.
Originally posted by quidscribis:
As for rabies, did you notice that Sri Lanka, that blob under India, is also disproportionately large?
quote:It can. It's also at least partially because people here can be really really picky about their fruit. Grow your own, and it tastes better, it's fresher, and less blemished.
Do the fruit trees save on grocery shopping considerably?
quote:A single low-yield mango tree would be a young mango tree like the inlaws have at their other house which yields a hundred pounds or so of fruit a year.
Wow, I was imagining a 2 meter square herb garden and a single low-yield mango tree.
How big are Sri Lankan gardens, typically? Is it a middle class luxury to have so many plants?
quote:You've got it.
Dogs and cats aren't considered sacred in any way though, are they? I'm assuming the reluctance to harm/neuter them is more of a generic reprehension towards harming animals.
quote:Read my blog.
No doubt you've answered this question before I arrived at Hatrack, but would you mind if I ask how easy/difficult it was for you to adjust to Sri Lanka as a Canadian?
quote:While I think a separate 'Military' category would have been more appropriate, it doesn't bother me.
Originally posted by TheHumanTarget:
Does it bother anyone else that military spending is lumped into the 'violence' category?
code:(acres -- I'm in the U.S.)FOOD 3.7
MOBILITY 2
SHELTER 6.2
GOODS/SERVICES 5.4
TOTAL FOOTPRINT 17