Hang washed clothes outdoors whenever possible, mainly summer in our neck of the woods. In winter, hang them on wooden clothes’ horses in front of our wood stove or in front of our little Eden Pure heater (which saves us money too). Only use the dryer to fluff wrinkles out of “permanent press”, 20 minutes on low setting, but take out before “cooling” which can reset some wrinkles. Ironing in our little house with many animals is an impossibly complicated affair, so I’ve worked out the above formula for as little impact as possible on the environment while still looking presentable (at least in our rural community!).
This post was submitted by Kathy Butler.
Our focus is on reducing household waste to landfill. Although we do other things such as growing our own food and using a solar panel for lighting, the focus of our site is on reducing waste.
18 months ago we put out 100-150 litres of waste per week. Now we put out less than 100gms which I can hold in the palm of my hand.
It’s been a fascinating journey and next week we are celebrating with our second ‘National zero waste week’.
In addition to saving the landfill, it saves money too - for example growing and making your own food, reusing things rather than buying new, using reusable products rather than disposable - the savings add up!
This post was submitted by Mrs Green.
Gather up all those little hotel soaps and the too-thin-to-grab soap ends and one of those mesh plastic bags used for garlic from the supermarket. If it has a sharp metal clip on one end, turn it inside out. Dump all those tiny soap bits in the bag, twist the top and fold it over, then secure the whole works with a couple of rubber bands. Now you have a really good self-lathering scrubber. I keep one hanging by the hose faucet in the garden, as well as at the kitchen sink.
This post was submitted by Irene Bensinger .
Give all things you don’t need anymore to someone who need them. As you buy clothes from second hand, when you don’t need your stuff, don’t throw them away, give them to others who are missing them.
This post was submitted by iulia.
I love getting my AM coffee in hand fast but was NOT loving all the paper and plastic waste I was generating. I also didn’t like the cash I was socking toward my habit.
So I took a small chunk of change, purchased a french press, and now keep coffee at work. We have a hot water dispenser, so every day I can have coffee without the waste. To make it tastier, I have also brought in cinnamon and cocoa powder to sprinkle in. Yum. Next plan- to take the coffee grounds to my local community garden. They add the grounds to their compost!
Yay less guilt and more money in my pocket.
This post was submitted by Susan.