Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Green Summer Progress

I am eating differently, keeping my meat consumption to three times a week per less, and by the end of the summer extinct from my lifestyle.

I am growing organic produce. Purchasing local foods from the farmer’s market and composting as many scraps as possible.

What should I tackle next?

One of the most important parts of living a greener life, RECYCLING!

As a person who already recycles there are a few more steps that I can take. But if you haven’t recycled before, or your town doesn’t have curbside pick-up don’t worry, you can still have those pretty blue and green bins.

To start with, get some containers for separating. You will need at least 2, but if you want to go all out you can have 4 like I do.
Minimum:
Bin 1) Glass, plastic (#’s 1 and 2 in RI), and aluminum – the blue bin
Bin 2) Paper and cardboard – the green bin.
My House:
Bin 1) Glass and plastic
Bin 2) Aluminum (including empty cans, clean aluminum foil, and empty soda cans)
Bin 3) Paper (including newspapers, cardboard, envelopes, junk mail, receipts, brown bags, etc)
Bin 4) Re-use – I save things that might be useful for a craft project or for the students at my other job to use as art supplies (including magazines, some newspaper, paper scraps, Styrofoam peanuts, bubble wrap, some cardboard, shoe boxes, string, applesauce and yogurt containers, empty cans, soda bottles, milk jugs, etc)

My goal: to recycle anything and everything that Rhode Island Resource Recovery will take. All clean paper (it can be drawn on, just no food), cardboard, aluminum, #1 and #2 plastic, glass bottles and jars, etc.) I want to double my recycling and half my trash.

If you want to learn more about Rhode Island Resource Recovery, the Recycling Center and recycling programs for your home, office and child’s school visit: www.rirrc.org

Did You Know? For a small fee you can become a member of the Recycling Center and go there for discount office and craft supplies? Including pens, pencils, binders, cloth, ribbon, etc.

Plant an Organic Garden

Let’s plant an organic garden!

If you’re interested in starting a garden for the first time it’s fairly easy. Like with anything else you need to decide what your goals are and the amount of time, energy, and funding you’re willing to contribute to the project. If you’ve never gardened before and you’re indoor plants are only the cut flowers from the florist then start small. If you have experience taking care of your yard and maybe growing some herbs or strawberries in a pot then you can probably go a little bigger with ease.
You also need to consider the amount of space you have in your home and yard. If you live in a house with a fairly large plot of land you can grow almost anything. If you live a small apartment or a dorm room your choices will be more limited, but you can still start using your green thumb.

For small spaces without a yard:
· You can start an herb garden inside using window pots.
· You can use slightly larger pots and grow lettuce and mustard greens. Make sure the pot is at least a foot deep and can be placed in a very sunny window.
· If you have safe access to a rooftop you can even use children’s wading pools. Punch some holes in the bottom for drainage, fill the pool with soil, follow the directions on either the seed package or plant container (if you’re buying starter plants) and in time you’ll have some delicious veggies.
· If you live in a dorm room check in with your RA or your Housing Director, you might be allowed to have a small collection of pots in your dorm’s courtyard.
· If you live in a city you can look into joining a community garden, in which you help tend to a garden as a group and reap the organic benefits together.

For larger spaces with our without a yard:
· If you live in a house or a larger apartment building you can grow strawberries in pots on the front stoop or grow lettuces in window boxes.

Homes with yard space:
If you are lucky enough to have some land at your disposal you have multiple options.
· You can still plant in pots or wading pools.
· You can still have an indoor herb garden.
· You can also create beds and designate one for each different type of crop.

Creating bed:
There are two options for creating vegetable and flower beds.
· In ground beds: Dig into the ground about two feet deep and turn the soil. Continue turning the soil until you have a patch approximately the size you want. Add some of your compost to give the bed more nutrients. Smooth out the earth slightly and plant your veggies.
· Raised beds: Take 4 wooden planks, at least 6 inches wide. Build a frame. My father’s are about 6x3 and we have 6. Place the frame on the ground and fill with soil and compost. This method takes more soil to fill the frame instead of using the ground beneath your feet. But is faster to create if you have soil on hand.

Choosing plants:
When you choose the plants you would like to grow be sure to read everything on the packages. Some plants need sun, some need shade, and some need a combination. You need to make sure that your environment offers the plant what it needs to survive and thrive.
Lettuces, strawberries, carrots, radishes, parsnips, and other greens are almost fool-proof. Plant them properly, water them as needed and they’ll do the rest. Plants like tomatoes, peas, and peppers take a little bit more care since they need stakes or frames to help them stay up, but even that is not terribly difficult.

For more information:
Go to your local library and check out books about organic gardening, compost and natural fertilizers and pesticides. For instance, did you know that you don’t need poison to get rid of slugs? Just put out some saucers of beer. Seriously.
You can also talk to farmers at your local markets to get tips about their growing practices and what they recommend.

Have fun using your green thumb!

Composting

Composting.

We’re doing great in our attempt to lower our carbon footprint. You’re eating better, you’re producing less waste and you’re buying locally, but you still have all those food scraps from making dinner at home. Compost them! Anyone can compost. You just have to decide what works best for you and your family.

My father has had a compost heap since I we moved into our house 18 years ago and he started his garden. We just have a 4x6 foot space behind the garden and the heap gets bigger and bigger every day. Inside we have a small compost bucket to throw food scraps in and at the end of the day we bring the bin outside and add the scraps to the top of the pile. We also throw in the droppings from our miniature bunnies, lawn clippings and wilted flowers. Every weekend when my dad goes out to tend to the garden he turns the compost with a shovel and over time we have extremely fertile soil for our veggies. My dad even uses empty clam shells from Saturday night dinner. He puts them on top of the vegetable beds because the shells add important nutrients and help the plants grow.

If you want to start your own compost it’s simple. Today there are many options depending on your goals and the size of your property.
· You can buy an automatic composter that uses sawdust pellets to help the scraps break down in a bin that fits in your kitchen.
· You can buy a compost container that sits outside, it looks a lot like a large garbage can, fill it with your scraps, turn it every once in a while and not worry about it taking up space in your yard.
· You can also build a compost container with 2x4’s and chicken wire. I work at a school during the week and our compost is a 3x3 foot square that is about 3 feet high. Use four pieces of 2x4 to create a frame, roll the chicken wire across and staple down with a staple gun. Make five of these frames, one is for a lid. Use hinges or corner brackets to put four of the sides together and then just plop the top on.
· You can also use my family’s method. Choose a spot in the yard or behind the house and just make a big ol’ pile.

What can be composted you ask?
· Fruits and Vegetables
· Coffee Grounds
· Lawn Clippings
· Leaves (dry or green)
· Biodegradable paper products
· Omnivore pet waste * there is debate about the type of climate needed to break down pet droppings successfully. Everything will break down in time but if you live a cooler climate it will take longer than in warmer climates. –My family throws the hay and bunny droppings right on top without any problem, but we leave the dog and cat waste out since you never know what they’ve eaten and it doesn’t break down as quickly as little bunny waste. Carnivorous animal waste can also carry disease from the animal products they ingest. You don’t want that going into your yard.

What can’t be composted?
· Fats (butter, oils, excess animal fat)
· Meats (contain fat and get really smelly)
· Grains (most of the time breads, crackers, pastas, etc have fat from the cooking process)
· Carnivorous animal waste

What do I do with my compost?
· Start a garden!
· Use it to plant flowers in window boxes or pots by your door.
· Use it to help grass grow in your yard.

Stay tuned for tips on how to start a garden of your own, whether you live in a three-story mansion, a small colonial, an apartment, even a dorm room. And check out the indoor compost bins and biodegradable compost bags we carry here at The Did You Know Store.

Car Facts

It’s been a little while, but now it’s time to continue on my path to reducing my carbon footprint. It happens to be perfect timing for me to tackle my worst offense, my car. I have to bring the car in tomorrow for an inspection so that I can still legally drive it, but there are a few other simple things I can do to ensure that my car is as green as possible.

My Car Facts:
-2005 Hyundai Elantra
-53,127 miles driven
-purchased at 24,634
-I have driven 28,493 miles since September 2007. By September 2009 I will have driven about 30,000 miles, or 15,000 miles per year, which is 3,000 more miles per year than the average American.
-I get about 30 miles per gallon of gas. That means in 2 short years I have purchased about 1,000 gallons of gas. So I have been to the pump 80 times with my little 12.5 gallon tank. YIKES!

Since my car is going to the mechanics on Monday anyway, I’m going to ask him to check a few other things (though they’re usually routinely checked by my mechanic anyway).
-My tire pressure
-My filters
-Change my oil

What I will continue to do is pick a day each week to check some of these things myself – like my tire pressure. If I check that every Sunday, along with my oil I am helping to ensure that my car is running as efficiently as possible.

Also, I am going to take all of the junk I have in my car’s trunk, out! I don’t mean trash, but just odds and ends and bags of things that I had to move from my backseat to allow passengers to sit in my car. But the added weight cuts down on my car’s fuel efficiency.

So if I can keep my trunk empty, my tires filled and my filters clean I’m doing much better than before.

Next step:

How to stop driving?

A Lesson in Simplicity

A Lesson in Simplicity.

Living in the United States as a member of my middle class family means that my everyday life consists of using an electric coffee maker, a television, an air-conditioner, a cell phone, a laptop, a car, an iPod and an assortment of other electronic devices. It’s not uncommon for my family to fill up an entire 30 gallon trash bag in two days or to use two rolls of paper towels a week. Though I’ve started to “green” my life, getting my family on board takes time. But with all of this, life starts to seem rather complicated.

When I was in middle school, even my first two years of high school, before my license, which led to my cell phone, before college which led to my laptop, my television, my film collection, my alarm clock, etc, I didn’t pay any attention to meeting deadlines, other than homework. I didn’t worry about getting in touch with someone immediately or trying to drive, talk, change the radio and choke down my lunch before work all at the same time. As my assortment of electronics, my number of deadlines and my hours spent working increased, my ability to stop, take a breath and enjoy simple pleasures decreased. Living the average life in America was taking its toll without my even knowing it.

But the summer before my sophomore year at the University of Rhode Island started me on a different path, one that is hard to stay on at times, but one that I am constantly striving for. That summer I took a vacation to Greece. A friend’s grandparents lived in Athens and she invited me to stay with them for three weeks that July.

When I landed, Athens was like any other busy city in the world, congested from cars, buses, taxis, pedestrians and stray animals, bustling from street after street of retail stores and restaurants, and people sandwiched together from overpopulation. Young women dressed in the most incredible clothing, every household seemed to own a car and stuffing 50 people onto a bus was normal. As my friend and I traveled away from the airport and downtown area things slowed down a little. There were fewer cars and shops and more churches. When we walked up to her grandparents’ house I was stunned.

It was tiny! The entire property was probably about 50 square feet, with a small concrete porch, a bathroom smaller than that of the URI dorms, and an adorable flower garden about 5 feet wide. We walked in and were greeted by her grandmother, Yaya, and her grandfather, Bapou. I can’t explain it, but I felt at home immediately. That night we had genuine Gyros (pronounced year-ohs) from a street vendor and I called my parents just so they knew I was in Greece safe and sound.

The next three weeks were incredible. We traveled to beaches where the water was turquoise! I have never seen something so beautiful. I had always thought the beaches in RI were good. In Greece you could see through the water to the ocean floor. You would go for a swim with fish! And not yucky slimy looking fish, but beautiful gold fish, like the kind you see in fancy home aquariums. The water looked un-natural, I had never realized how grey and murky the Narragansett Bay water was! We ventured to Monasteries and walked the same paths as Socrates and Aristotle. But even more incredible than my new surroundings was my new home.

Every other morning Yaya ventured out to the local market. The market was unlike any I had ever been to in Rhode Island. Entire blocks were designated for specific vendors. There was a block for fish, a block for meat, and multiple blocks for fresh produce. Every single bite of food and sip of a drink that I had, except for the beers at restaurants, came from Greece. Yaya bought fresh bread every single day from the bakery across the street. Every time she went she brought the same bag she had used the day before. The bags from the market were used as trash bags for the week.

When Yaya got home she would do the laundry and clean the house. She washed all of the clothes by hand and had to do it every two days because between Bapou and herself they had fewer clothes than me, and all of my clothes fit into a single tall laundry basket. The clothes would then air dry on the line outside. After the laundry she would clean the house. She used vinegar and baking soda to scrub the entire house until it was spotless! No fancy mops or scrubby sponges, just a rag and piece of steel wool.

In the afternoon Yaya didn’t slave away, she relaxed. The four of us would sit out on the porch and play cards, listen to the radio, and drink Ouzo, licorice liquor that is extremely strong. If it was hot Yaya hung sheets to create shade and sprayed the concrete with a hose, no fan, no air conditioner, and it was perfect. Around 5, Yaya would go in and start to cook dinner, lots of vegetables, rice, legumes, and fish, with very little meat. Every night we would have traditional Greek salad with chunks of tomatoes, cucumbers, olives and feta cheese, drizzled with olive oil. By the end of the meal there would be so much juice left in the bowl from the tomatoes we would soak it up with the bread Yaya had bought that morning. Nothing went to waste. If there were leftovers we ate them for lunch the next day or on Thursdays we would have a buffet of leftovers from the previous few nights.

After doing the dishes, since there were only six plates, bowls and cups in the whole house, Yaya would take out the trash. Guess how much there was? Less than half of a plastic grocery bag. Less than half! The only things that got thrown away were fruit pits, peelings, tissues, and a cardboard juice container every few days.

In the evenings we would watch reruns of American shows from about five years earlier and old movies on a tiny 20 year-old television. We would sit on our little twin beds and munch on fresh apricots, nectarines, and cherries.

In three short weeks I had forgotten about my cell phone, my computer, and ensuring that I saw the latest episode of “Law and Order”. I didn’t care that there was not a constant stream of hot water for showers but instead a cool drip from a metal hose. I didn’t care that we didn’t get Starbucks every morning. I was much more content sitting on a folding lawn chair on a damp concrete porch, playing cards with people who could not understand more than 10 words of what I was saying. Life was simple. I wanted for nothing, I missed nothing, and without even realizing it, I was surviving without the things I had always considered necessities. And in the end…

Living simply is the most important step towards living green.

So I raise my next glass of Ouzo to Yaya and Bapou, saving the world just by simply living their lives.