Non-disposable Alternatives to Disposable Items

Eco-parenting, Favorites, Reduce Reuse Recycle 1 Comment »

In honor of Earth Day this year, I’m going to begin a series of posts on Things We Don’t Have to Throw Away.

Used to be, people didn’t throw away much. Honestly, Middens (ancient trash heaps) contain small animal bones, tiny bits of broken pottery, and a carbon layer that was originally spoiled food and fire ashes. That’s all that was thrown away! Everything else was used, fixed, reused, fixed again and again, re-purposed, and on and on. Even hundred years ago, people didn’t throw much away. City dumps contained coal ashes, dead horses, and spoiled food.

What do we throw away today? Everything! That couch that we no longer like the fabric, last year’s clothes, newspapers, knick-knacks, broken toys, old appliances. The list goes on and on.
Giving stuff to charity and recycling helps a lot.
But even the most conscientious of us take throwing away thing for granted.

So here’s my “outside the box” list of things we don’t really need to throw away (click on name to read about alternatives!):

Disposable Razors–the item that started the throw away craze!
Paper Towels
Plastic Bags
Home Office Paper
Cotton Swabs
Coffee Filters and Disposable Cups
Facial Tissues
Disposable Toothbrushes
Water Bottles
Feminine Products

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A new “R”

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I consider myself pretty green, but apparently, I’m outta the green loop.

There are FOUR “R”s for the environment, according to the EPA:
-Reduce
-Reuse (my favorite!)
-Recycle
(and the one I didn’t know about)
-Rebuy

Rebuy is described as: ” re-thinking your purchasing habits” to include “biobased, recycled content, and other environmentally preferable aspects.”

I’m doing this, I just didn’t realize it had a name.
It was much easier when it was just me to consume less, but with kids it sometimes seems that I have a part-time job as a personal shopper. Trying to find eco-conscious items for kids (especially around back to school time) can double the work, but if shopping’s part of my job description, then I plan to do the job right!

Green Holidays

Eco-parenting, Holidays No Comments »

Some people try to make “eco-friendly’ complicated, expensive, or “alternative.” In truth, it’s just a matter of combining common sense and frugality. Take the Holidays, for example. Most of us will spend way too much money, be stressed out, and end up hauling 12 bags of trash to the curb the next day. Not very friendly to yourself or nature. So here are some tips to make the holidays even easier for both of you.

Decorations: the “disposable” ones inevitably fall apart before the season is over, causing you more headaches. Just buy a couple sturdy nice ones that you love and reuse them every year. Resist the urge to buy junk every year. Give away to charity (in November!) all those tangled strings of light. Buy the minimum you need—and make them LEDs. Less time figuring out which ones are the ones you want to use this year, and less energy use, which is easier on the planet and your pocket book.

Gifts: the thought really should be all that counts, because even when you spend hours finding the “perfect” gift, you still can’t predict how well it will be received. Give things that get used up, like food or perfume, or a gift certificate to a restaurant or tickets to an event. You know they’ll use it, and it won’t end up in the landfill or their hall closet when it breaks.
For kids this means finger paints, play dough, art supplies, and stickers. They like these best anyways. When you feel you must buy a toy, buy something with the least amount of packaging: it’s easier on the environment, your back, and the parent’s patience. The blinky-light, vibrating, noisemaker in the flashy packaging needs a parent with tools to unwrap it, batteries to operate, and gets old quickly—except for that one sound button which the child will push over and over because it drives mom nuts!
A heirloom-quality small wooden toy, puzzle, game, or blocks will cost the same, not annoy anyone, pollute less, and will be played with again and again. And it won’t require batteries. Speaking of which, rechargeable AAs and a battery charger would be a fabulous gift for any parent on your list. If this seems too practical, throw in a gift certificate to a movie theater or a video store.

Food: have you ever actually run out of food at the holiday dinner? Neither have I. Don’t buy so much, and the less-packaging rule applies here too! The more packaging food is in, the more chance that it’s bad for you. If you want “convenience food,” order sides (or the main course!) from a local deli or grocers—you can’t get more “convenient” than that. Ask at the Farmer’s market for local meat for your main course: it’ll taste better fresher, and generate less pollution from shipping.

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Give to Charity–no cost to you, just a couple seconds per day!

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Just in case we’ve forgotten about these site, don’t forget to click daily at the Hunger Site and others like the Rainforest Site, the Child Heath Site, and others.

You “click to give” and it takes you to a page with static banner adds from sponsors. These sponsors pay per person per day for people to look at their names. And the money goes to charity! Brilliant!

Eco-Parenting: Halloween part 3: Tricks or Treats for the Earth

Eco-parenting, Food, Holidays 4 Comments »

Halloween is sometimes the only time you see some of your neighbors. They’re busy, they live in their cars, whatever. But they come to your door for treats on Halloween night. Are you the “green” house? Or are you just like everybody else?

The treats you hand out to little kids shouldn’t be “tricked” with pesticides and preservatives, so buy all-natural, organic candy. Buy fair-trade to make sure that your candy is produced by people who work for a living wage.
Chocolate is often harvested under non-sustainable agricultural practices (slash and burn, anyone?) save our rainforests and buy sustainably harvested chocolates, like those from Endangered Species Chocolate. (bonus: fair-trade and gives money to support wildlife, too!)
Read the rest of this entry »

Eco-Halloween web round-up

Eco-parenting, Holidays No Comments »

An Eco-Friendly Halloween at http://earth-byte.com/a-fair-trade-halloween/

Eco-Friendly Halloween at http://www.naturemoms.com/blog/2007/10/02/eco-friendly-halloween/

Green Halloween at http://www.greenhalloween.org/content.php?page=host

Green Halloween at http://www.bellaonline.com/articles/art53322.asp

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Eco-Parenting in the Consume-me Age: Halloween part 2: Costumes

Eco-parenting, Family, Holidays, Reduce Reuse Recycle No Comments »

The costumes you buy at the store for your children often come with masks that are off-gassing toxic chemicals. (for info, see: Darth Vader, Dora the Explorer … or Dioxins? ) So if you buy these, make sure to not use the masks. Be wary of “Halloween makeup” also, especially with little children. Use your own make-up instead.

Of course, it’s friendlier to the environment if you don’t go out and buy these costumes!
For kids, the best costumes are found in Dad’s closet anyway! Be careful that nothing is a tripping hazard, and let them put together something. Dress them up as doctors, lawyers, mechanics, construction workers, waiters, pirates, gangsters, Napoleon, it all depends on what Dad (or Mom!) has in his closet!
Some of the best suggestions I found here.

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