Procrastinators'
Gift Guide 2007
Bopping
Around the Holiday Shrub
EW's
music fiends on some of the year's best
Swift
Reads Cute,
weird, funny gift books
Not
Too Late for Toys A
last-minute tour of Eugene's non-toxic toy options
Bleeding
At the Holidays Giving
for exceptionally good reasons
Last Call Wine
advice for the final days of 2007
Not
Too Late for Toys
A
last-minute tour of Eugene's non-toxic toy options
By
Camilla Mortensen
Every mom knows the more money you spend on a present,
the higher the chances are that the recipient will spend hours playing
with the gift wrap and the box. Just as certain is the fact that
the under-five set considers sticking toys in their mouths a normal
part of their play routine. Luckily, Eugene's toy stores offer a
plethora of safe non-toxic toys for kids who like to play with their
gifts as well as the box they came in.
The Holiday Market offers one last chance to shop
for procrastinating toy purchasers who want to buy local products
direct from the artisans. From Dec. 22-24, you can choose from Sleeping
Dog Puzzles, Softdough and Terrapin Toys, or you can juggle with
Funstyx made from recycled rubber, among many other options, while
you stroll the market listening to music and sampling local foods.
Heading downtown, Sweet Potato Pie offers little
wooden sailboats that actually float, made locally by Mike's Woodworking,
along with hemp clothing for the little ones. If that doesn't float
your boat, wander one door down to Eugene Toy and Hobby, where you
can find wooden marionettes, cool American-made license plates for
your bike and Eugene-produced geodesic dome toys. Alan Agerter,
co-proprietor of the store, warns that these wooden and non-toxic
toys have been selling out fast this year.
Over at Fifth Street Public Market (and also at
Valley River Center for shoppers who choose to brave the mall) Elephant's
Trunk is packed with toys for the cautious consumer. Robin Meyers
is happy to pull out a folder full of letters from each vendor the
store buys from that attest to the safety of the toys. The store
also maintains a list of which toys are not made in China for customers
concerned with the recent lead paint issues with some Chinese-made
toys.
Wooden toys are hot this year, the stores say, and
the Green Guide (www.thegreenguide.com)suggests
going with any solid wood, as pressed woods like plywood and particle
board are made with glues that can give off toxic fumes like formaldehyde.
If you look at the edges of the toys, you can often see the layers
of pressed wood, according to the Guide.
Continuing east on 5th Avenue you'll come to Bambini,
where you can find wooden toys both local and imported. The store
sells Oregon-made wooden toys from Papa Don's, including colorful
rattles that are made with lead-free paint and a food-grade oil
finish. The store also sells wooden rattles made in Oregon by Earnest
Efforts. All Earnest Efforts wood is from discarded sources, and
no living trees are cut for their products. Earnest Efforts can
also be found back at the Holiday Market.
Bambini and Elephant's Trunk both offer environmentally
friendly Plan Toys from Thailand. Plan uses water-based non-toxic
paints and the wood from rubber trees that would otherwise have
been burned and made into charcoal. The company gets a good score
from Ethical Consumer Research Association and makes everything
from dolls to wooden cars.
Several local stores offer PVC- and phthalate-free
LEGO toys (the word LEGO comes from the Danish phrase lege godt,
meaning play well) and, for the older child, many board games offer
safe play options.
For those who want to truly avoid consumerism for
the holidays but still feel compelled to give, think about giving
an otter or a penguin — on paper anyway. Defenders of Wildlife
offers adoption packages from $25 to $100. For these and a few other
consumptionless giving options, see below. – Camilla Mortensen
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