Showing posts with label Tips For Going Green. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tips For Going Green. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

10 FREE Ways to Go Green

Sometimes it feels like making the right, green choice is about making the more expensive choice – the higher prices fetched by some eco-options in grocery and clothing stores are enough to make even the most ardent greenie stray.

But fear not! Below are 10 free things you can do to be green. Some are even fun! Others offer more practical tips that can easily be implemented and introduced into your daily routine.

1. Volunteer in exchange for local produce

Eating locally, seasonally and/or organically is great for both the environment and your health, but those costs can add up!
For some gardens, locals can volunteer their time in exchange for local produce. Photo: Amanda Wills, Earth911.com

Luckily, many small-scale farms are open to a trade: your sweat and labor for their fruits and vegetables. Oftentimes, organic, sustainable or pesticide-free farms can be short on staff and time and need the extra help.

The judicious use of large machinery and scant or non-existent application of synthetic pesticides and herbicides means these farms need more labor than a conventional farm. 

Volunteers can help weed beds, apply compost to rows, transplant starts and harvest crops (all after a few supervised training rounds, of course).

If the farm needs you, dust off the garden gloves, get out there and work for your vegetables! Nothing’s ever really free, right?

2. Trade green skills

In the spirit of swapping, see if there are people in your neighborhood with whom you could trade your green skills and assets.

For example, are you a skillful composter? (Let’s face it, some of us have trouble with those heaping piles or lack the motivation to even try.) For the avid composter, offer a few neighbors the opportunity to drop off their compostable waste with you.

You gain because you get more material to heat up your pile, as well as more end product to apply to your lawn or garden. Your neighbors gain because they help reduce the amount of waste they send to the landfill, and any extra compost you have can be shared for your neighbor’s use.

Another possible swap: Get rid of that plethora of zucchini and other vegetables taking over your backyard garden by giving any extra you have to the family next door. Reduce your workload out in the sun with an exchange that the family’s teenager mow your lawn once a week. You reduce a trip for a lawn company, and you get a free service! Think about your green skills. How could you set up a trade?

3. Go out on a bike

We all know it is fun to go out, but with driving, parking and inflated food and beverage prices, the night adds up fast. To save green and be green, organize a bike riding pub crawl extravaganza with your friends. You’re sure to have fun, not to mention save money and use less gas.

Don’t have a bike? No problem! Well, as long as you live in New York City or Tulsa, Okla., that is. In NYC, The Alliance for Downtown New York offers residents and tourists alike the two-and-a-half hour opportunity to bike the city for free. A credit card is required to ensure the bike is returned.

In Tulsa, the Warren Medical Research Foundation donated bikes to be used around the city free of charge. Tulsa has a great paved trail system, and you get 24 hours with your bike. Free mobility and health promotion – not a bad night (or day).

If your city doesn’t have a bike-sharing program, get ambitious and see what it takes to start one. Oftentimes there are municipal grants just waiting to be applied for, and cities are always looking for innovative ways to promote tourism. The trend has already caught on in Europe and Mexico.
Bike sharing programs are popping up all over the U.S. Sign up for a free bike rental and cruise the city (or countryside!). Photo: Amanda Wills, Earth911.com

4. Green get together

Treat your friends to an experience for their next birthday or a much-needed reunion. Life is all about the memories we make, not the things we have, right?

Summer movies in the park or a live band in a coffee shop (OK, you’ll want to pay for an iced chai latte) are a start. If you are really a planner, gather all your old pictures of friends and scrapbook with materials from around the house (or at least digitize the pictures so you can upload them onto Facebook).

For a real throwback, host an old-school slumber party and watch a classic movie you already own. It will cost you practically nothing and you’ll end up making the most of the day by giving fun, not worldly possessions that will eventually end up in a landfill.

5. Green elephant

We have all heard of the game white elephant – the holiday season group gift exchange game with a maximum limit on how much you can spend per gift ($5, $10, etc.). For green elephant, instead of a monetary limit, have a material limit: only play the game with gifts you can find lying around the house or crafty gifts you can make with existing materials.

That boring old picture frame you have? Add some Mancala beads for a shimmery upgrade, and bring it as your gift to exchange. Green elephant is a great way to reuse some of that old junk you have lying around the house and reduce some of the holiday-season material excess that can drain your green spirit.

6. Enjoy your own back yard

All too often we take carbon and monetarily expensive trips only to leave our home states that we have yet to fully explore. The tried and true vacation can be turned into the inexpensive staycation, helping you save money and the environment at the same time. Carpool with some friends and make an escape to the beach, the mountains or another close getaway.

To really save money, pack a tent… it’s only a one or two night stay! Use Google Maps to plan a route that is less than two hours away to save time and gas. Not only will you save cash, you will get to know your area a little better and help keep the little money you do spend closer to home.

7. Reuse your bags

We all do it every once in a while: forget our reusable grocery bags. But luckily we know how to reuse the plastic bags when they start to accumulate (doggie bag, trash liner, storage bag, you name it). Yet all that effort and attention on plastic grocery bags leads us to forget about other types of plastic bags: the freezer bag and the sandwich bag.

Typically used for items like sandwiches or leftovers, these bags receive little wear and tear and can be washed, dried and reused again and again. Using what you already have is technically free, right?

8. Experiment with homemade cleaners

Let’s face it, some of the eco-cleaning products at the store are expensive. But since you still have to clean, try making some cleaning supplies yourself from stuff that’s already in your kitchen.
Did you know some great ingredients for cleaners may already be in your kitchen? Whip up some natural deodorizers for a nice, fresh scent! Photo: Flickr/Miss Muffin

Some basic, natural, non-chemical cleaning elements: vinegar, baking soda, seltzer water and lemon juice.

With vinegar, mix with one part water to dilute, put in a spray bottle and test on a surface before applying it to bathrooms and kitchen countertops.

Baking soda can be used as a scrubber as well as a deodorizer – that’s why we call it the “multipurpose hero.”  Lemon juice makes a great smelling cleaning paste when combined with baking soda, and breaks down hard water stains when combined with vinegar.

Also, seltzer water is a great stain remover for carpets and clothes. For more tips and recipes to make your own green cleaning supplies, check out Stain-Removal-101.com.

9. Turn of the water

Whether you have a yard of fresh grass, low-water-use Xeriscape design or traditional turf, when it rains, don’t water! With natural moisture, there is no need to water on the regular schedule set by the sprinkler or drip irrigation system. Turn off the water for a day or two after a good rain storm and save mucho dinero.

10. Reset your irrigation timer

On the water note, reset your irrigation timer for your landscapes when the seasons change and when your plants become mature (they need less water once established). By doing so, you avoid over-watering and spending extra money.

Monday, January 4, 2010

50 Nifty Ways to Green 2010

Resolutions are easy to make and even easier to abandon. Righteousness gives way to guilt as my commitments fall by the wayside: disappointment clouds every February and leads me to reject my resolutions entirely in favor of a better year eleven months hence. It's a vicious cycle indeed. This year I've made a list for myself with options both small and substantial. (Some, marked (*) are even more challenging.) Since it's always easier to make sacrifices for those we love, I figured I would point all of my goodness towards Mother Earth. Join me--try one or all of these options, with the knowledge that every effort will make a difference. But be warned: this isn't your typical 'change your light bulbs' list. Some of these altercations may seem truly esoteric, but I promise, they're worthwhile. Consider it a resolution writ large, with lots of wiggle room. Pick one or several. Either way, you won't disappoint yourself.

1. Be lazy. Do less. Learn to revel in nothingness. Watch the clouds. Loaf a bit. Take a long stroll with no goals in mind. See how content you can be without producing or consuming anything.

2. If you're a man, pee outside. Make sure nobody's looking.

3. Use less toilet paper--careful folding is not that hard and needn't be messy. Make sure every paper product you use comes from recycled material.

4. Don't flush your pills--your hormone treatments, antidepressants, downers, uppers, erection-makers, etc. will end up in the public drinking water. Be a good citizen and hope others do the same.

5. Stop buying products with chemicals: opt for organic cleaners, soaps, lotions, etc. Nobody wants to drink Nair runoff, either.

6. Pick up an outdoor sport that doesn't require driving to and fro.

7. This winter, go cross-country skiing or snow-shoeing.

8. This summer, go bird watching.

9. Toss dryer lint outdoors--birds will use it for nesting.

10. Cut out the joy rides: don't drive if you have no destination.

11. Collect vintage clothes.

12. Collect antiques.

13. Take your favorite people (young ones especially) to visit a farm.

14. Teach a kid to cook something simple and seasonal.

15. Learn a seasonal dish from somebody whose cooking you admire.

16. Become a regular at farmers' markets: aim to get so close to your local growers that they ask where you've been if you miss a week. * Start a co-op with friends and neighbors.

17. Buy bulk and fill reusable containers. Ball jars are charming--have your grocery store weigh yours beforehand so you don't pay for its heft.

18. Stop buying food that comes in little packages: for example, opt for larger containers of yogurt instead of multiple tiny cups.

19. Aim to make at least 50% of your diet local and seasonal. *Try the 100 mile diet.

20. This winter, grow your own herbs, starting with everyday ingredients like parsley, basil, rosemary, oregano and mint. A few terracotta pots sprouting green will really spiff up your kitchen.

21. This spring, plant a front yard garden. You will enjoy showing off to your neighbors come July, and you'll probably want some takers for all of the tomatoes and zucchini you'll have on hand.

22. This winter, bundle up and turn down the heat. *Use a wood-burning fire only.

23. This summer, strip down and turn down the AC. *Use fans only.

24. Wash colors separately in cold water, but dry them all at once. If you have to dry two loads, do them one after the other to make use of residual heat. *Recycle your drier and string a clothesline. While you're at it, give away both appliances in favor of a washboard and wooden tub. (FYI: I will be keeping my washer dryer through 2010.)

25. BYO lunch, silverware, coffee mugs and water bottles. If you forgot your Thermos at home, forgo the Starbucks. Or stay put and drink from one of their glass mugs.

26. Invest in a good water filter and bring water wherever you go.

27. Don't order takeout. Either dine-in or cook for yourself.

28. Cook more, especially on your stove top or grill. Don't be afraid to cook small items in a toaster oven.

29. Recycle old batteries. If you do nothing else, please do this.

30. Turn off your TV. *Recycle your TV.



33. Kill your electronic Vampires. Turn off your cell at night and unplug electronics from the wall when not in use--they suck power even when they're off.


35. Buy a bicycle with a basket and use it for local errands or trips.

36. Shower with your special someone. Or at the very least, get out of the shower, fast: a conventional shower head uses up to 10 gallons a minute. *Pee in the shower--but only if you're alone.

37. Turn the faucet off when you shave or brush your teeth. (Women: this is a good time to do your leave-in conditioning...)

38. Buy better: research all of the companies you support. There are lots of ways to do it, including through the Carbon Disclosure Project.

39. Buy less of everything.

40. Get creative with gift-wrapping, card-writing and letterhead.


42. Plant a tree and sew some native wildflowers.

43. Go camping...close to home.


45. Put a stop to junk mail and solicitations.

46. Share magazine subscriptions *Cancel them and catch up at the library.

47. Get inspired to spend time outside: read Mary Oliver, Walt Whitman, Robert Frost.

48. Picnic at a local park and leave it cleaner than you found it.

49. Volunteer at your local community garden, arboretum or park. You know you want to call yourself a trailblazer.

50. Move out of the suburbs. Live in an apartment building or on a farm.

Article by Isabel Cowles Courtesy of Huffingtonpost.com For more see: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/isabel-cowles/50-nifty-ways-to-green-20_b_408590.html