My favorite ways to go green at Easter...
1. Go vegan with your Easter eggs! For years I haven't dyed Easter eggs because I'm vegan and don't want to use real eggs. My girls have been too young too care, until now, so it hasn't been a big issue. But since Avery is about to turn four, I thought it would be fun to find an animal-friendly alternative that we could use this year to dye eggs, and boy was I in luck!
There are actually lots of options nowadays to use INSTEAD of real eggs. You can go cheap and use these plastic ones from Target for $3, or you could go fancy and get these porcelain ones from Eggnots.com for $20 for a dozen. For us, I chose the $3 option.
As you can tell they look just like the real thing. |
Someone else was convinced and very excited to get to work! |
If you look closely you can see the 6 dye tablets we used for coloring. |
Here's the steps to make and use the dye for the "fake eggs," which you may notice is different from traditional eggs both in ingredients and in results.
1. Pour 1/4 cup vinegar into a small bowl or cup. |
2. Add a dye tablet and allow it to dissolve (5 minutes). |
3. Now add the egg. |
I found this to be very frustrating...and then I had to check myself. I was getting all worked about about these silly eggs and how they weren't turning out the way I wanted them (bright, bold, super festive), but Avery couldn't have cared less. She had never dyed eggs before so she had nothing to compare it to. For her the eggs were awesome! She loved trying them out in the colors, getting messy, and being creative. I love the lesson she taught me in this. (Be sure to check the lovely song she came up of what we could do even though the dye wasn't working out as I planned.)
Here I am letting go of my "Easter egg expectations" and just having fun... let it go, let it go! |
No surprise here, Mila decided to take a break from decorating the eggs to decorate...herself (one of here favorite activities)! |
Not sure how interested Avery would be in decorating the small eggs, I knew this large egg I also got from Target ($3) would be a sure-fire hit...and it was. I got a separate sticker kit ($3) and she went to town decorating it. Be sure to see the finished egg sitting next to me in the video.
Decorating her "BIG" egg. |
My second green Easter tip is just to reuse all your Easter supplies and materials year after year. I'll be the first to admit that traditional Easter supplies are not the greenest of materials. Plastic eggs, fake plastic grass, and more plastic Easter baskets all slightly make me cringe, so to counter this I reuse them. So instead of tossing them out or losing them (which happened a lot after our first Easter with Avery), I now have an organized system to keep and reuse all of our supplies so I don't have to go out and buy them every year. This helps me keep Easter supplies out of the landfill and save some money too.
The first way I reuse my supplies is to have a designated box for plastic Easter eggs. I just use a photo box and store the eggs in there. When I need them, I open the box and fill the eggs. When Easter is done, I put them right back in the box so they are ready for next year.
Storing the plastic eggs. |
I also try to reuse the plastic Easter grass that looks oh so cute in the baskets and as decorations. To store this I keep it in two of our Easter baskets, one has the green grass, one has the pink.
Stroring the Easter grass. |
Our Easter basket selection to be reused. |
So that's how I try to go green and reuse our Easter supplies. |
3. Use healthier candy or other alternatives.
The last tip is to use a healthier candy alternative to fill the Easter eggs. As parents you have the power to choose what your put in your child's Easter eggs (unless you go to a big Egg Hunt put on by a church or community, and in that case see my tip below). So personally I try to find a balance between candy that is enjoyable for them (not just carrot sticks) but also healthier and not full of articfical food colorings, GMOs, and loads of sugar. Neither one of my girls have actually ever tasted traditional candy like M&Ms, Skittles, or Starbursts, for all they know the treats you'll see below are what they consider "candy" and so they are a little easier to please. So here's a breakdown of some of my favorite "healthier" candy alternatives...
- Annie's Cocoa & Vanilla Gluten-Free Bunny Cookies (to provide a non-candy balance in the Easter eggs)
- YumEarth Organic Pops (I will use these in their Easter gift baskets)
- Dandies Vegan Marshmallows (these do contain carrageenan, which I personally try not to eat, but for special occasions for my girls I do allow it because they love marshmallows!)
- Surf Sweets Organic Jelly Beans (taste just like the real thing!)
Usually I'll set up a little assembly line for filling the eggs... |
I keep the portions small, here's 2 bunny cookies for 1 egg and I do 2 jelly beans for one egg too. |
Obviously the marshmallow one only gets one per egg. Boy are the girls going to be excited about this one! |
One more green idea....
If you are attending a public Easter egg hunt, an idea you could try is to do a "trade" with your kids. So since you can't control what is being put in the eggs at the hunt, you could fill your own eggs at home and trade them out egg for egg so they are left with the healthier alternatives. You could then donate the candy (to someone who doesn't mind the sugar, GMOs, and other ingredients), or look into sending them to soliders overseas...similar to a program called Operation Shoebox that donates Halloween/Easter candy to soldiers. I know it's more work, but if your child has food allergies or you want them to have healthier opitions this may be your best option to have them still feel involved in the activity, while also making sure they have safer and healthier food choices.
So there you have it, those are some of my favorite ways to go green at Easter. How do you go green at Easter? Share your tips below.
To end, here's a a fun look back at past Easters with Avery...
When she was close to 1 year old I dressed her up like a little Easter bunny... |
Click here to see more of these pictures! |
This is when she was close to 2 and her personality really started coming out. |
And here she is last year when she had just turned 3, rocking her "Merida" dress from the Disney movie Brave. Love this sassy little smile! |
I can't wait to see what fun Easter memories are in store for us this year now that Mila will be right there with Avery looking for eggs (and sharing in the candy as well)! Happy Easter greenies.