It’s Time to Lead the Leaders!

Here’s how:

Know the facts about climate change. 20 Facts: skydayproject.com/20-facts

Write to your leaders letting them know they won’t get your vote until they offer substantive plans for promoting the new clean technologies coming to market every day and enacting clean energy policies.
Then hold them accountable.

Talk to your community about how important climate change is for your future. Help folk understand that we must ditch our old, polluting technologies for the new clean technologies that are arriving to market everyday. BUT our transition to those technologies won’t be quick enough without active government support.

SkyDay is not affiliated with any political group or organization.


Become a SkyDay citizen artist!

Create a Sky Gallery in Sky Day Project to show your community - and world leaders - that you want us to protect our sky for the benefit of all. Sky Gallery Sign Up. Then check out some these other ways to help make a difference in your community.


Help a local species struggling with climate change

Climate change isn’t coming. It’s already here and already damaging the habitats of beautiful species near you. So contact your local US Fish and Wildlife Service or your local Nature Conservancy to find out which animals and plants are struggling in your area and how you can help. You’ll be helping all of us humans too because everything on planet earth is inter-connected.

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Calling All Artists!

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It’s the job of the artist to move culture forward. One way to do this is to use your talent, your vision and your creativity to engage your community on the crucial issues of climate change and ecological citizenship. For inspiration, listen to Umesh Bajagain (Nepal), Celia Berrell (Australia) and Dan Simpson (England) share their work for Sky Day on WBEZ Chicago’s Worldview.


How do we know it’s us
warming the world
(and not something else?)

An important question that deserves an honest answer. We now know a great deal about the ‘climate forcing agents’ that have changed earth’s climate in the distant past and are doing so now. Check out this interactive graph published in Bloomberg Businessweek. It uses findings from NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies to show how much different factors, natural and industrial, have contributed to global warming between 1880 and 2014.

Then open things up for discussion. Did anything surprise anyone?

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Interview Family and Friends

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Did you know that one of the best ways to help with climate change is just to talk to parents, friends and family about it? Are you curious about what they think? And why? What have they heard? Are they concerned? Share with them what you know and what your concerns are.

Our advice - be respectful and a good listener. Consider sharing what you learn with others in a blog or in an essay. Did the conversation surprise you in any way?


Hold a Sky Concert

Unclouded Day, The New Trier Concert Choir

CO2, Jim and the Povolos

Nothing moves people like music. Use your talents - your voice - to reconnect us to our magnificent sky and celebrate the way it connects us all as one global family. You will have done your community a great service for we only protect the things we care about and only care about the things we are connected to.


Host a Sky Show and help with climate change

Students saw sky photos sent in to Sky Day Project by a school in Puerto Rico just before they were hit by Hurricane Maria. They wanted to help so they painted sky paintings, exhibited them and then sold them to family and friends to raise money for that school. Why not do something similar yourself? You could donate the funds you raise to a worthy climate helping cause like donating to a carbon offsetting charity? The sky’s the limit to what you can do to help!


Plant a Tree
(Better yet, plant two)

It sounds so simple doesn’t it? And maybe you’ve heard it before? But the fact remains, if you really want to help counter the effects of all that carbon dioxide in the air then plant a tree or two for Sky Day. Trees can remove as much as 48 pounds of carbon dioxide from the air each year. Learn more.

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Lightning Critiques of
Environmentalist Art

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Offer this idea to your science teacher. Change gears for a day and talk about art. Students search the web for art that deals in some way with sky, climate change or the environment. Then ask everyone to show a slide of it in class and talk about it for three minutes. What is the art conveying? How do you guys respond to it?
No rules! Just lots of appreciation for whatever they have to say.


Switch to a more
Climate Friendly Diet

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Take a Hike

 
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We live increasingly disconnected from our environment. So leave the phone behind and re-connect to your planet and sky. And while you walk, notice how every day is a unique symphony of light and atmosphere unfolding right above our heads. Take some time to reflect on how much we rely on our thin atmosphere functioning naturally every day. Doesn’t it only stand to reason we should take care of it for each other?

 

 

Tell Your Story

 

A friend was driving to her father’s funeral through a very heavy rain storm with a very heavy heart. She remembers the clouds and the eerie darkness. It felt to her as if the sky grieved with her. And then, all of a sudden, there was a break in the clouds and she saw a magnificent rainbow. The sight of it filled her heart with a new sense of inner peace. It hadn’t replaced her grief, of course, but something had changed within her and she has never forgotten that moment.

Is there a time in your life when the sky has impacted you in a personal and memorable way? Let us know @skydayproject (Twitter, Instagram)

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