I was reading through comments here on the blog last night and I found this great list of tips by reader Millie Barnes, who writes a blog about health and gardening called Optimum Nutrition. Her tips were just too comprehensive to let them languish in the comments. So here they are (I don't even mind including the plug for her products). Thanks Millie! 1) Air
dry all laundry--had to put a lock on the dryer cord to convince my
daughters I was serious--they have learned to plan ahead! I wash all
laundry in cold water, always wash full loads, and use a drying rack
inside if it is raining. It’s good for the earth and great for your
skin, a free humidifier in the house. Which also makes it feel a few
degrees warmer in winter, and cooler in summer. I use soapnuts for
laundry. http://www.zamuta.com/ 2) Buy all organic. 3) Buy all organic non-toxic beauty care products and make-up. I
make my own skin care cleanser and moisturizers. I make my own soap. My
beauty products can be purchased at http://ezchef.net/spacuisine/ 4) Use baking soda and vinegar for cleaning the bathroom. I use Ms.
Meyer Clean Day for dishes, Citri-Clean for counters and general
purpose cleaning. I use a loofah for scrubbing dishes (I am growing my
own right now so I won’t have to buy them anymore!) My sister is making
scrubbies by crocheting them, we will offer these for sale soon! 5) Take cloth bags to store for groceries and all other purchases. Take muslin bags I made to grocery store for produce. 6) Recycle, re-use, make my own and have stopped buying anything I don’t really need. 7) Don’t use paper towels, never have. Used cloth diapers for all 5 kids. 8) Don’t buy stuff in plastic, I try to buy all glass. Store all
food in glass. Re-use glass jars. I mostly buy real food (meat,
produce) try to not buy anything that needs a label, so no packaging. 9) Have been using recycled toilet paper for years but am
considering switching to cloth at home. (don’t freak, we all used that
same choice when we used cloth diapers and wash clothes on our baby’s
tushes!) 10) Make my own gluten free granola, make my own mayonnaise, salad dressings, spice blends. 11) I use a compost toilet, no toilet paper (think cloth baby wash clothes). 13) Bokashi (a way to deal with indoor kitchen scraps with NO odor
and yields compost WAY faster). I have been using the Bokashi method of
dealing with kitchen waste for about 3 weeks now…I love it! 14) Use very low flow shower heads. Ace Hardware has a 1.5 GPM with a shut-off valve. 15) Use all CF light bulbs…and use them as little as possible. I
have one evening a week that I use no lights..on Shabbat! Dinner by
candlelight! 16) Use grey water from shower (I keep a 3 gallon bucket in shower
and use it throughout the day to flush the toilet, take what’s left to
the flower beds. 17) Use water from rinsing dishes to water flower beds. 18) Use a broom on all my wooden floors instead of using vacuum cleaner. 19) Run as few errands as possible, car pool and combine trips. 20) Use micro-cloths to clean with, even on glass you do not need cleaning products! 21) NEVER buy bottled water. I bought a Kleen Kanteen for each
person in the family, we refill and take with us. I’ve had mine over a
year. 22) Go paperless or CD-less as much as possible. I provide my
clients with emails of my book, but still put cookbook software on CD. 23) Unplug all appliances not being used. Yes, that cell phone
charger and TV are using power when you aren’t using them! I use power
strips to keep them plugged in, turn them off at night, or when I’m
gone all day. 24) Use only a hurricane lamp when we sit outside at night. It gives
enough light to read by…but is perfect turned low …for just hanging
out. Very romantic, too! 25) Use candlelight at dinner, not just on Shabbat! 26) I have an outdoor solar heated shower that I built. 27) I put in a raised bed garden, square foot garden I have green
leaf lettuce in a grow box, cherry and big sweet tomatoes, basil,
thyme. I have sweet potatoes growing, beets (mmmm, beet greens),
onions, Swiss chard, purple flowering kale, nastutiums, broccoli,
cucumbers, peppers, red potatoes, a banana tree. Inside I am growing
cucumbers and strawberries hydroponically. 28) I use a non-disposable razor, an old-fashioned stainless steel,
very high quality razor that uses double edged blades. It was 24.00
from ClassicShaving.com. The blades are 10 for 5.99, and they are
double edged! They give the closest, smoothest shave you can imagine!
No disposable blade can compare. 29) Wash dishes with 2 dish pans in the sink, one for hot soapy
water, one with warm rinse water. Do glasses first, pause a moment to
let the soapy water drip off, then move to rinse water. Stop when rinse
water is almost full and rinse quickly. Repeat with silver, plates,
then pots and utensils. All with 2 dishpans full of water. Then I pour
the soapy water, with all that organic matter, onto my plants in the
garden. It helps repel pests and loosens the soil. And good for the
biceps when you carry it outdoors. 30)
My Level of Living Green
by Millie Barnies
I water my garden with buckets from the rain barrels that are under the
eaves of my garage. 10 feet from my garden. The front flower garden
gets watered entirely from the dish water.
30) I work out at home, no expensive gym memberships that I never used
anyway. I save all the expense of membership, and gas and time driving.
I have a set of weights, two exercise balls, a yoga mat and a chin-up
bar.
Colin Beavan (that's me!) is now leading a conversation about finding a happy, helpful life at Colinbeavan.com. If you want to know how people are breaking out and and finding authentic, meaningful lives that help our world, check it out the blog here and sign up to join the conversation here.