How "GREEN" are you?

BoilerGirl

March 17, 2008 by BoilerGirl

+1 vote

As a person trying to “Go Green,” I thought St. Patrick’s Day was an appropriate time if there ever was one to ask people if they recycle. I do, but it takes effort.

Things I do-
*I use Green Power through IPALCO
*Shop with reusable bags
*Carry recyclables to bins in grocery parking lots
*Print on both sides of paper at work
*Turn off lights/electronics I’m not using
*Wait for a full load of dishes or laundry to run a cycle
*Wash my clothes on cold with a cold rinse
*Use CF light bulbs when my current ones die
*I drive a small car
*Signed up for www.earthhour.org to turn my lights off for an hour on 3.29.08

How do you go green? Got any tips for lessening our impact on the world around us environmentally?

What are the reasons you find it hard to go green? I hate driving my recyclables to a bin, instead of having them picked up.

Posted in groups: Green

Forum: Green & the environment

Tags: 

green, recycle, environment, city, living, housing, lifestyle

Follow this thread

38 comments

middlewest
middlewest, March 17, 2008
0 votes

I do many of the same things (reusable bags, reduce paper consumptions, recycle via pick-up and drop-off, drive a small car, convert to CFL over time...), and I also compost. At our house, this has really reduced the amount of garbage that goes to the landfill.

For me, my office is the biggest place that I see unnecessary consumption, but I think some of that is generational. It can be challenging to persuade some older co-workers to be conscious of their paper and energy consumption.

frogmajik
frogmajik, March 17, 2008
0 votes

I like to think I live a green life,I ride the bus to work. I only get the car out when it's absolutely needed.I take my own bag to the grocery. If I can reuse any containers or bottles I do.I also put out a garden.

BoilerGirl
BoilerGirl, March 17, 2008
0 votes

Wish I had space for a garden. I put any food waste down the disposal since I'm in an apartment and don't have land to compost on. I really enjoy Trader Joe's raffle for a bag of their food when you bring your own bag. And Wild Oats gives you "Wooden Nickles" to either donate to the local charity of your choice on your way out of the store or to get 10 cents off your purchase!

ride4life32
ride4life32, March 17, 2008
0 votes

Im new to the green thing, my vehicle is def not enviromentally friendly, but thats not going to change. I could run E85 but thats not much better in the bigger perspective of things. But me and my gf we recycle paper cause we can drop it off at the dumpster, but we are starting to look into the curbside pick up, its only 5 bucks month i think and they will come to you. We have been saving our plastics and glass (washed of course so you dont get little critters coming around) But i think recyclying is a must since we consume to many resources. we do reuse as much as possible.

benjamindy
benjamindy, March 17, 2008
0 votes

I ride my bike/walk almost 95% of the time.
I recycle most of my plastic, paper, cardboard and glass. I switched my IPL to 100% green power. I use a human powered mower.

I guess that's good enough for now.. I would like to get one of those rain barrels to collect rain water to water my lawn/flowers/plants.

Ideally I would like to eat 100% local and organic as well, but that's just not in the cards yet.

Nicki
Nicki, March 17, 2008
0 votes

I use my own bags for groceries and drive as small of a car as my daughter's car seat allows. I'm looking into the possiblity of taking the bus, but havent' worked out the details to get us to the daycare & work on time! I try to keep as many of my work files electronic as possible, and use the back of printed sheets for faxes and scrap paper. I wash clothing with cold water...and I feel like there are a couple other things I can't think of right now. The biggest challenge I have is recycling in an apartment. I don't have anywhere to store my recyclables (is that a word?) until I can take them to a bin.

Cornelius
Cornelius, March 17, 2008
0 votes

In addition to riding the bus, recycling, use my own bags for groceries, etc. I like to air dry my laundry (and I live in an apt), living in a space that is not more room than I need, shop organic and try to buy a lot of local (traders point, farmers market, etc.), hand wash dishes, unplug unnecessary appliances (including tv, computer, etc...they suck a lot of energy even when not being used). There's a food delivery program where local farmers send in-season produce through this company to your door in certian quantities (can't remember the name of it), but until we can get it delivered to our apt. w/o it getting taken...maybe someday. I like to think that what I do is making a difference.

Cornelius
Cornelius, March 17, 2008
0 votes

And I almost forgot the thing thats been, of late, very important to me...eating no meat. It's suprising how much pig, cow, chicken, etc. farms effect the environment. Cow's produce more carbon dioxide then the transportation industry. Between their waste, transporting them before and after slaughter, etc, even the amount of food and water they use...that's a lot of effects for a hamburger. If you're interested in more information, Micheal Pollen wrote a couple of really good books. Even eating less meat would help lessen the effects on the environment.

BoilerGirl
BoilerGirl, March 17, 2008
0 votes

I'd read a bunch about how environmentally unfriendly being a carnivore is. As that TV ad puts it, "The More You Know.....""

I'm aiming for eating as many organic or locally grown products as possible. Can you recommend any farmers markets as spring edges closer? Heard about community gardens? I'll be posting more as weather warms for it...

eh
eh, March 18, 2008
0 votes

Container gardens or hanging gardens are good for the yardless.

www.localharvest.org/ lists tons of csa's, co-ops, family-run farms, etc. You can search by state, city, zip code…

Cornelius: Farm Fresh Delivery is the service you're thinking of maybe? It's a nice service (you can order & pay weekly, whereas most co-ops require payment of the full season -- or at least 50% -- all at once) and you can get more than just produce.

But I'm partial to picking up my produce via local food co-ops -- I find it offers quantity, more variety, and if there's something I don't care for (like hot peppers) I know someone else will take them and make good use of them.

As for plastics, I don't know all the fine points, but apparently recycling oil-based plastic isn't as simple and straight-forward a process as it seems.

Products and foods packaged in biodegradable corn- or potato-based plastics are becoming more widely available, though. They're supposed to be a greener alternative, since they decompose within months instead of years.

baggles
baggles, March 18, 2008
0 votes

I just read that all of the Patachou restaurants are now using the corn-based plastics for carry out containers. They also now use "green" cleaning products, energy saving light bulbs and recycled paper products.

As far as my greenness, I do pretty much the same as others on here... recycle (curbside), wash with cold water, keep my thermostat low, have energy saving lightbulbs, use "green" cleaners, etc. The one thing I can't do is walk to work. I work in Greenfield, so I have a 45 minute commute both ways. I wish I could bike to work, that would not only be better for the environment, it would make me less crazy and stressed (and save on gas!).

I'm a big fan of farmer's markets in the summer. I need to look more into the delivery service maybe. I also have recently been researching ways to have my own little urban garden. I live in a rented duplex, so I want to at least try to grow a tomato plant, a pepper plant, and maybe a couple of green bean plants... and I really want a countertop herb garden!

I also don't eat meat... the more I find out about the meat industry, the more I'm glad I don't eat meat.

Sewer_Harpy
Sewer_Harpy, March 18, 2008
0 votes

I turn condoms inside out and get another use out of them.

s.h.

obeythedoberman
obeythedoberman, March 18, 2008
0 votes

I'M REPORTING ABUSE! That is some gross, yet hilarious shiz!

BoilerGirl
BoilerGirl, March 18, 2008
0 votes

eh- What a great tip. Love www.localharvest.org! I would not have found that site on my own. As far as corn based product goes, I ordered something from cooking.com and they shipped with corn based packing peanuts. I got curious and dissolved one in a cup of water in seconds. AMAZING! I held on to them for use in other personal shipping but commend them for their awareness!

Allison
Allison, March 18, 2008
0 votes

I do most of the same with addition of 'green cleaning' I try to use earth friendly cleaning products. I am amazed what vinegar and baking soda can clean...

JL Kato
JL Kato, March 18, 2008
0 votes

One small thing I do (among several small things) is to NOT use drinking straws at restaurants. I don't know if this really helps, but it seems a waste to me to do so.

BoilerGirl
BoilerGirl, March 18, 2008
0 votes

Allison- I need to know how to use the vinegar/baking soda/borax method. Any hints? I bought the Clorox Green products but they aren't impressive yet.

JL Kato - I don't use straws either, I avoid lids on fast food cups and simply dodge pot holes if I take it to go ;-)

BoilerGirl
BoilerGirl, March 18, 2008
0 votes

Oh, and want a reality check on what just recycling plastic water bottles does to save landfill space? Check out this Cornell University animation of bottles per year! http://www.cs.cornell.edu/~djame...

middlewest
middlewest, March 18, 2008
0 votes

This website has lots of home-made cleanser formulas. Otherwise, we're big fans of the Ecover and Seventh Generation products at our house.

I'm on the fence about the Clorox thing. I know that, with the purchase of Burt's Bees (yep, they're owned by Clorox now), Clorox said they were committing themselves to "greener" behaviors, but it's hard for me to shake the feeling that there might be green-washing involved.

BoilerGirl
BoilerGirl, March 18, 2008
0 votes

Seventh Generation products are pretty good, leave a bit to be desired. Their dishwashing detergent etched all my glasswear. :-( Big thumbs down to that. I don't think a solution will be created quickly and genuinely enough for me to believe in it.

Thanks middlewest - I'll look into the cleanser formulas

or register to leave a comment.

Logo_colophon

© 2009 Star Media
All rights reserved.

Use of this site signifies your agreement to the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, updated December 2008.