Posts Tagged ‘green home’

Ten things you should not buy when living green!

When people are trying to live green, there are a few things we should try never to do.  Here are 10 things you should never buy when you are living green.  There are great alternatives to everything.


1. Styrofoam cups – Styrofoam last forever and does not biodegrade.
Alternative: Buy recyclable and compostable paper cups.  Even better, start buying reusable mugs or water bottles that you can take with you. Great option is the Klean Kanteen.

2. Paper towels – Paper towels waste forest resources, landfill space, and your money.
Alternative: When you do buy paper towels, look for recycled, non-bleached products.  Sponges made from cellulose is another option (Here is a quick look) Even better, buy organic dishtowels to wash and reuse.

3. Bleached coffee filters – Dioxins, chemicals formed during the chlorine bleaching process, contaminate groundwater and air and are linked to cancer in humans and animals.
Alternative: Look for unbleached paper filters.  Even better, use reusable filters.

4. Overpackaged foods and other products – Excess packaging wastes resources and costs you much more money. Around thirty three percent of trash in the average American household comes from packaging.
Alternative: Buy products with minimal or reusable packaging. Even better, buy in bulk and use your own containers when shopping.

5. Teak and mahogany – Every year, 27 million acres of tropical rainforest are destroyed. Rainforests cover 6% of Earth’s surface and are home to over half of the world’s wild plant, animal, and insect species. The Amazon rainforest produces 40 percent of the world’s oxygen. 
Alternative: Look for Forest Stewardship Council certified wood. Even Better, reuse wood, and buy furniture and other products made from used or salvaged wood.  At the Secondhand or antique stores you can find old pieces of furniture that you can prevent from entering the landfills.

6.Chemical pesticides and herbicides – American households use 80 million pounds of pesticides each year. The EPA found at least one pesticide in almost every water and fish sample from streams and in more than one-half of shallow wells sampled in agricultural and urban areas. These chemicals pose threats to animals and people, especially children.  They contaminate our food supply.
Alternatives: Buy organic pest controllers. Even better, plant flowers and herbs that act as natural pesticides.

7. Conventional household cleaners – Household products can contain hazardous ingredients such as organic solvents and petroleum-based chemicals that can release volatile organic compounds (VOCs) into your indoor environment, posting a particular danger for children. The average American household has three to ten of hazardous matter in the home.
Alternative: Look for nontoxic, vegetable-based, biodegradeable cleaners.  (See recommendations) Even better, try making your own green cleaner using vinegar, water, and castile soap.

8. Higher octane gas than you need – Only one car in ten manufactured since 1982 requires high-octane gasoline. High-octane gas releases more hazardous pollutants into the air, and may be bad for your car. 
Alternative: Buy the lowest-octane gas your car requires as listed in your owner’s manual.  Even better, take public transportation, ride a bike, or walk.

9. Toys made with PVC plastic – 70% of PVC is used in construction, but it is also found in everyday plastics, including some children’s toys. Vinyl chloride, the chemical used to make PVC, is a known human carcinogen. Also, additives, such as lead and cadmium, are sometimes added to PVC to keep it from breaking down; these additives can be particularly dangerous in children’s toys. PVC is also the least recycled plastic.
Alternative: Avoid plastics that are labeled as “PVC” or “#3.” Look for toys that are labeled PVC free such as the Green Toys. Better yet, purchase toys like Plan Toys that are made from recycled rubberwood trees, have formadehyde free adhesives, use soy and water based ink, and packaged in recycled materials.

10. Plastic forks and spoons - Disposable plastic utensils are not biodegradeable and not recyclable in most areas.

Alternative: Use compostable food service items.

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Please CONSERVE water!

 

Much of the Earth's Water in not safe for drinking

Much of the Earth's Water in not safe for drinking

My husband and I love to go on morning walks.  Every morning I can always expect to see quite a few yards being so over watered that it floods into the streets and down the drain.  People need to understand that water is a precious resource and its scarcity should be understood. The course of world society is likely to be substantially influenced by a single resource: drinking water.

 

The first and most obvious fact is that without water, life—animal, plant, or human—cannot exist.  Without adequate water, one’s body ceases to function. Quantities of water on planet Earth suitable for drinking are extremely limited. Less than 1 percent of all water on Earth is available as groundwater and surface water suitable for human uses such as drinking and cooking. The remainder is either salt water (97 percent) or is locked up in ice (just over 2 percent). 

 

In most developed countries, the water supplied to households, commerce and industry is all of drinking water standard, even though only a very small proportion (often 5% or less) is actually consumed or used in food preparation.  These numbers are quite disturbing considering we waste so much water and other countries would do anything for access to it.  If you see the map, you can tell how a large portion of the world’s population is in need of clean drinking water.

 

Try to do some things to conserve water.  Here are a few simple tips to help conserve water.

 

 

1.     When brushing your teeth, turn off the water.  Use the water to rinse your brush, and rinse out your mouth and turn off the rest of the time.

2.     Turn the shower on when you are ready to get in.  How many times do we turn on the water 15 minutes before so it can heat up.

3.     Time your showers.  You should be able to do everything within 5 minutes.

4.     Look into a grey water system. 

5.     Look into installing a rain barrel system. You can save so much water by not letting all that clean water go down the drain. 

6.     Sounds cliché but if it is yellow let it mellow and brown flush it down.  Imagine how much water you could save just by not flushing the toilet and extra 3 times a day.

7.     When washing laundry, make sure the load is full.

8.     When washing dishes, completely fill the dishwasher.

9.     You do not have to completely clean your dishes before you put them in the dishwater. 

10.  With watering your yard timing is everything.  Water early in the morning – evaporation is minimized and the lawn utilizes the most water.


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