You can really cut your laundry chores back if you simply wear things several times before washing them. In my house the rules are it only gets washed if it meets on of the following criterea:
1) It’s visibly dirty (if it just has a little spot sometimes I’ll just wash out the spot instead of throwing the whole thing in the laundry)
2) It smells. Try hanging your clothes in the bathroom or someplace by an open window when you take them off at night. The next morning give them the sniff test. If they pass, put the hanger in the closet, if they don’t throw it in the hamper.
3) if it’s hopelessly stretched out. I have a few pairs of dark colored jeans that never show dirt. But after you wear them 5 or 6 times, the knees start getting really stretched out so I end up washing them. Sometimes you can get a few more wears out of them by hanging them in a steamy bathroom and they’ll get a little of their shape back.
By following these simple rules, I only do about 1-2 loads of laundry per month.
This post was submitted by Rebecca.
Eat locally, eat organic, eat vegan.
Hang dry clothes.
Wash clothes in cold water.
Take own bags when shopping.
Buy less stuff.
Eat organic.
Converted backyard to a big vegetable garden.
Reduce size of lawn.
Ride bike or walk more often.
Use a reusable water bottle (absolutely no plastic water bottles!)
Recycle everything that is recyclable.
Reuse stuff that is not recyclable as much as possible.
Buy whole unprocessed foods as opposed to packaged processed foods.
Use CFLs.
Use thermostat.
Quick 2-4 minute showers.
Don’t pre-rinse dishes before loading dishwasher.
Use a reel lawn mower.
Buy eco friendly laundry detergent, cleaning products and personal care products.
This post was submitted by Anu Kamath.
It took 12 years but I am finally car-free and loving it! I started by commuting one, then two days a week by bicycle from Hayward to Redwood City across the Dumbarton Bridge on San Francisco Bay. You’ll need wicking clothes (ski underwear is good and cheap, and looks pretty cool actually if you layer them aesthetically); rack & panniers for long commutes like mine; drink lots of water 24 hours before the ride; 75 - 100lb armadillo tires inflating them every 5-7 days; and “crystal stick” mineral deodorant if there are no showers at your worksite. When I moved to Oakland and recalled a fellow bike commuter who rode 5 days a week from Alameda to Palo Alto (BART to Union City), I said “I can do that”. So I slowly increased to 3 and 4 days/week and by 2005 I was my doing my 4days/10hr. work schedule all by bike and train in a loop around the Bay. About 30 miles of bike riding and 45 miles of train. I was able to read everyday for an 1-2 hours and get much better information than via TV, was physically fit and relaxed at work, and eating and sleeping like-lovin-life.
Then last year my car was stolen. I had tried to share it with folks in my area, but seems folks are addicted to 24hr access and haven’t learned to decouple from car tyranny, so I just let it go. No more $600/yr auto insurance for a car I never used. No waiting in traffic, no gas stations or repair nightmares. I figure now that I have taken an early retirement and live locally my car-free live-local lifestyle is saving me about $3000/year in car costs and about $200/month in groceries and meals. I shop at the market, go to movies and meals and travel anyway in the Bay Area on bike and train. I even commute to see a girl friend in Portland, bringing my bike with me on Amtrak. It’s so much fun and stress free, I wish I had been doing this my entire life.
Here’s a link to Carbusters Magazine so you can keep up with the latest in Car-Free developments across the globe…
http://www.carbusters.org/index.php
Happy Trails!
Sandy Sanders
This post was submitted by sandy sanders.
I wanted to have a measurable effect on the impact of more than just my family’s lifestyle. As soon as I had the down payment and income, I bought a 4-plex and we moved out of the similar apartment we had been renting to our very own eco-plex! Over the last year, My partner, my 6-year old and I have been greening the 1960’s era building located in a very walkable, low income neighborhood in midtown Anchorage, Alaska. Now we provide an increasingly energy efficient place to live to others with compost, recycling, permaculture gardens, potlucks, and other amenities. This has saved us a lot of money over buying a typical single family house, provided increased social interaction, and the central location, near my work, my child’s school, and some of my tenants’ work saves us all time. I blog on this project at the webpage above, with the hope of offering it as one model of a way to live more sustainably while giving those who must or choose to rent the option to reduce their impact.
This post was submitted by Michelle Wilber.
Eating vegan/organic and local foods and dumpsterdiving for Foods. Not buying clothes, shoes, accesories, etc . Using my bike, walking and taking public transportation 95% of the time instead of driving a car. The extra 5% I carpool with friends and family. No drinking bottled water. Using recicled and used stuff instead of buying new. Not using AC at home, watching 0 TV. I have been shopping for food and medicines mainly and want to reduce every day the number of things I buy that aren’t food or medicines; right now the number of things I buy dayly is almost cero so I am almost there!
This post was submitted by Gerardo Tristan.
well, honestly this came about for convenience’s sake, but it works. i have a 180-year-old philadelphia rowhome and a dehumidifier is necessary for the basement or else it will grow a mold coat. the washer and dryer happen to be next to the dehumidifier. so i use the water collected by the dehumidifier to wash my clothes. been up to this for about a year now, the clothes don’t seem to mind.
This post was submitted by brynn.
I put a timer on my water heater, turning on before showers and off afterwards. The water in the tank stays warm enough to cover our needs until the next on cycle. This cut about 20% to 25% off our energy use.
This post was submitted by Stephanee.
Also here in Italy we’re working on reducing our impact, some useful tips I follow:
In winter*turn on the heating only in the evening, two three hours a day,(but where I live it’s not very cold), turn off the light when watching TV,
use the washing machine just after seven in the evening or during the week ends(in Italy saves) at low temperatures, on Saturday and Sunday I get around by bike, I bought an ecologic car, Use cooking water of pasta and rice to wash dishes and cutlery, starch is an excellent degreaser, use the vinegar as anti limestone and water and baking soda to clean stainless steel and ceramics, is also sanitizing. Since last year do the shopping through a group of collective purchase directly from producers of the area, a sort of short chain from the producers of organic meat, organic vegetables, and organic soaps to buyers, it’s less expensive and more safe!
I use cotton bags to do my shoppings. I try to do my rubbish collection for recycling….Little things to stay better!
This post was submitted by monica.
One of my wackier energey saving ideas is my solar oven. A friend told me you could buy a solar oven and I became obsessed, but I really didn’t want to waste the money/carbon on purchasing one. Then I discovered that you can build one yourself! There are plans for all different sorts of solar cookers here: http://solarcooking.org/plans/
My oven is made from a few cardboard boxes and some aluminum foil with a piece of glass for a cover. It’s really wonderful during the summer months because not only can you cook without using power, you also don’t heat up the house in the process of cooking! I’m told you can also use them in the winter, but I haven’t tried yet.
My cooker gets up to about 275 degrees Farenheit so it cooks at about the speed of a crock pot. There are several design changes I could make to improve its efficiency, but I’m pretty content at the moment. I’ve made rice, veggies, soups, casseroles and all sorts of things it it! Believe it or not, my only disasters have been overcooking a few things!
This post was submitted by Rebecca Miklich.
One of the hardest things for me to give up in my eco-concious lifestyle is long hot baths. So I’ve found a way to justify my luxury.
In the winter time, when I indulge in a bath I leave the hot water in the tub when I’m finished. The heat from the water dissipates into the house and it also helps to humidify that super dry winter air. I also use some of the “grey water” for cleaning and for watering house plants once it cools.
The way I figure it, for the same amount of hot water, I can indulge in an hour long bath instead of a 10 minute shower. And I’m not just letting all of that heat go down the drain. It’s even better if you turn off all of the lights and bathe by candle light. That’s an hour spent in complete self-indulgence with no TV, computer, stereo or lights burning electricity!
This post was submitted by Rebecca Miklich.