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€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides. |
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#1 |
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Living greener
Inspired by the Gore thread, I thought that perhaps we could all share tips for living a greener/more simple life. What do you do that puts a bit less strain on the earth?
My favorite living greener tip is get rid of your cleaners. White vinegar and baking soda can clean nearly anything. Vinegar disinfects too! Use vinegar for wipey jobs and baking soda for scrubby jobs. Yes, vinegar smells, but so do commercial cleaners. The vinegar smell evaporates rather quickly. To make the smell a bit more pleasant, and boost your cleaning power, add 20 drops of tea tree oil and 20 drops of lavender to your vinegar/water solution. It's dirt cheap, you aren't spraying pesticides onto your counters and contributing to environmental pollution, and you aren't using a new plastic bottle everytime you refill your solution. Here are more uses for vinegar and baking soda. The only cleaners we buy are laundry detergent, dishwashing soap, and glass cleaner. I'm sure I'll think of more later.
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#2 |
L'Hédoniste
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I use public transit to get to work - today it was an American Airlines MD-80. Tomorrow, I will carpool.
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#3 |
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 13,354
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Most of my environmental tips boil down to one underlying principal:
Don't confuse "discomfort" as a synonym for "anything less than complete, perfect comfort." Much of our energy inefficience comes from never wanting to experience any inconvenience or discomfort where anything less than perfect comfort is labelled as uncomfortable and anything less than perfect convenience is labelled as inconvenient. Thus we want every gadget to do everything that might concievably be wanted and we want it to do it immediately. Therefore we frequently end up making purchases based on the less than 1% outlying anomolies than for the 99% standard uses. God knows I'm not an anti-car activist (I've driven 50 miles just to have dinner and then drive home) but people are really stupid an wasteful in choosing their cars. For most people, 95% of their driving falls into a single type and need. Go buy a car that fits that need and then figure out how to get by when the other 5% comes up. Existing electric cars would be ideal for 90% of all driving but people won't buy them because sometimes they want to drive 300 miles to Vegas. Or 400 to Disneyland. Ok, so buy the electric car and then rent a car for long trips. Or buy a small car and then rent a truck for the day when you need to haul a couch. You're never going to be trying to outrun an invading alien army so you don't need a car that can go 185 miles per hour. If you live in the city and near your job then ride a bike and rent cars for weekend travel. You don't need air conditioning every time the temperature rises above 75 degrees or a heater every time it falls below 70. Don't run the dishwasher half full. Don't do small loads of laundry. If you have the space consider line drying your clothes, at least for the bulkier stuff that takes the longest in the machine. Every once in a while just walk to where you're going. Even if it is kind of far away. Amazingly it isn't as hard as you probably think, you'll eventually get where you're going, and you'll form a stronger bond with your neighborhood. But mostly, while the all the little things are good, until people begin to behave rationally in their transportation choices the inefficiency most people have there far outweighs any gains (for most people) elsewhere in their lives. So I think the two biggest things you can do are: 1) Drive the most efficient car that meets 90% of your needs (and be honest about what you're needs are). Lani and I are fine with a "compact" car since we hardly ever have other people in it. We got a hybrid set up for highway travel (as opposed to the Prius which gets better city mileage) since most of our car miles are highway miles) and didn't worry about the low horsepower because 80 miles an hour is really the fastest I ever need to go. 2) Live where you work or work where you live. Once it became feasible we moved so that Lani's commute is only 3 miles each way instead of 30. |
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#4 |
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 13,244
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I take the subway as often as I can.
We only drive our truck on Saturdays to do shopping. We follow the "if it's yellow let it mellow, if it's brown flush it down" rule in our house. Ralphie makes me recycle. Ralphie shops at TJs. We use the Monterey Bay Aquarium's Seafood Watch card. We reuse grocery bags to pick up Frodo's poopage. I brake for endangered otters and I don't shoot whales. |
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#5 |
8/30/14 - Disneyland -10k or Bust.
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Short term I suppose those are all good ideas but they are not going to win the battle.
What we need is a true leader for this country that understands not only that "it's the economy stupid" but that we are getting to the point that the economy depends on the environment. Environmentalism is no longer just a "Feel good" issue but is now a real world life/economy issue. What this country needs is NOT more people on public transit or for everyone to stop using air conditioning. What we need is an Apollo style incentive program to get this country off fossil fuels and onto some combination of clean energies (hydrogen, solar, wind). Until that happens we are just using umbrellas to ward off a hurricane.
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#6 |
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 13,354
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Support a massive push into developing nuclear power.
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#7 |
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 13,244
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The problem I have with 'green' is the same problem I have with 'red' as in red state. There's a lot of preachiness going on. Lots of lectures, guilt, making you feel like the can of tuna you're about to eat is the last one ever...
I think working at the Monterey Bay Aquarium did that to me. Everything was such a downer. Otters are going extinct, tunas numbers are dropping, don't eat orange roughy, shark finning is horrible, kitty litter kills marine life, lobsters are smaller than they used to be. I mean, I know all this stuff and I do my best to spread the word and follow the rules but... sheesh! I just get so tired of people telling me this and that. Such a drag. (This isn't a commentary about the thread starter or anything. Just me thinking out loud.) ![]() |
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#8 | |
8/30/14 - Disneyland -10k or Bust.
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Quote:
Now I think that's a pipe dream, at least in our lifetimes. If fusion ever works at all it will be so expensive to create a plant that it will leave us right back at the hands of big corporations who will set the price per/kilowatt as they see fit. They technology I'm banking on is fuel cells powered by Hydrogen created from solar cells on my roof. Right now all the pieces are in place to use this technology to create all the energy I need to run my house and cars except one. The solar cells that use light energy to efficiency separate hydrogen out of water. Right now that technology works, but it's only effective in the ultraviolet range of light. As soon as that range can be moved down to visible light (where 90% of the suns energy is) then we are in business. There is some promising research in that area going on right now.
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#9 |
ohhhh baby
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Traci - we've been using vinegar to clean the bunny's litter box and I'm so impressed with how well it cleans. The smell does vanish immediately and I never have to scrub. I've also cleaned carpet stains with it. I keep thinking I should buy a spray bottle for the stuff, and I think your post is the final push for me in that direction.
My biggest environmental pet peeve are all the recent disposable cleaning cloths - Swiffer, Clorox wipes, etc. Not only are you throwing away tons of fabric but those things are loaded with chemicals. I use rags when I can and save paper towels for truly nasty jobs. The wipes also enforce the idea that every surface in the house should be sanitized. The commercials I'm seeing for these products frighten me - wiping children's toys, wiping the baby's play area, wiping every piece of food... I do not want an absolutely sanitary life for my kids, I want their bodies to be able to fight disease by themselves. I think this ties in to what Alex was talking about: overkill. Not to mention OCD.
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#10 | |
ohhhh baby
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Quote:
But I'm with you on the personal solar power thing. At least in places like sunny CA, it's become a real alternative.
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