Showing posts with label Good Thing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Good Thing. Show all posts

Friday, November 25, 2016

Thanks.Giving: Tie Your Old Scarf To A Tree This Winter

There’s an old song about a yellow ribbon, tied to an old oak tree; it was about a man who’d been away from his wife or girlfriend for a long time and if she wanted him back, she’s tie that ribbon to a tree to let him know. That idea morphed into one concerning our veterans, welcoming them home from war.

Now, there’s a new trend ... thousands of people from all across the nation are taking their old scarves, or making their own handmade and versions, and tying them around the base of trees in parks, along city roads and in neighborhoods. 

The scarves are left for homeless people who may be exposed to the frigid winter temperatures and inclement weather; the scarves are free to anyone who needs one and some even come with handwritten messages:
"I'm not lost! Please take me with you if you are cold. Stay warm. God bless!"
The trend started in Seymour, Indiana, and now church groups, schools fundraisers and kind random strangers from almost every state are pitching in to make sure a good portion of the 1.56 million homeless Americans are a little warmer this winter!

So, if you have an old scarf you aren’t using, take it downtown, take it to a park, outside a church or school, and tie it around an old tree.

Someone may come along who needs that kind of a warm hug.


Heart Eternal

Monday, April 13, 2009

If You Build It, They Will Come


I like this story:

Their livelihood was being threatened, and they were tired of waiting for government help, so business owners and residents on Hawaii's Kauai island pulled together and completed a $4 million repair job to a state park--for free.

Yes. Free.

Polihale State Park has been closed since December, when severe flooding destroyed an access road to the park and damaged facilities. The state Department of Land and Natural Resources estimated the damage at $4 million to fix, money the agency doesn't have. And if the repairs weren't made, some business owners faced the possibility of having to shut down.

Ivan Slack, co-owner of Napali Kayak, said his company relies solely on revenue from kayak tours and needs the state park to be open to operate. Slack and his company jumped in and donated resources because it knew that without the repairs, Napali Kayak would be in financial trouble. "If the park is not open, it would be extreme for us, to say the least," he said. "For us, it was crucial, and our survival was dependent on it. That park is the key to the sheer survival of the business."

So Slack, other business owners and locals decided not to sit on their hands and wait for state money, and, instead, they pulled together machinery and manpower and hit the ground running on March 23. Eight days later all of the repairs were done; it was a shockingly quick fix to a problem that may have taken much longer if they waited for state money to funnel in.

"We can wait around for the state or federal government to make this move, or we can go out and do our part," Slack said. "Just like everyone's sitting around waiting for a stimulus check, we were waiting for this but decided we couldn't wait anymore."