true vintage
New in Town
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- 37
- Location
- CA
I was asked this-And now I'm asking you! I'm curious?
Which eco-friendly changes have you made in your life?
Which eco-friendly changes have you made in your life?
scotrace said:One very good thing that's easy to do: stop buying bottled water.
scotrace said:The United States is the only developed nation that sells water in bottles when there is a perfectly safe and plentiful supply of water at hand.
scotrace said:Probably the best thing any of us can do is make an effort to cut back on driving when possible. Go afoot, or get a bicycle if you are able.
scotrace said:Recycle what you can (and check to make sure your municipality is not, as many are, simply gathering the recyclables as a warm fuzzy and taking them straight to the landfill anyway).
scotrace said:Buy local produce in season (less transport = less fuel burned), etc.
scotrace said:One very good thing that's easy to do: stop buying bottled water.
The United States is the only developed nation that sells water in bottles when there is a perfectly safe and plentiful supply of water at hand. Bottled water is singularly evil - transporting it via truck wastes enormous amounts of fossil fuel. The stuff is so heavy they can't even load a truck fully with it so there are ridiculous numbers pf trucks burning fuel driving around with a half load of WATER. Then there are the plastic bottles, most of which go into the landfill no matter how recyclable they are. And it's just overly Ugly American, in my opinion, to be chugging water from Fiji at great cost when the actual people of Fiji don't have access to safe water!
Then there's Twitch's excellent point about CF lights. They are manufactured with mercury and with many more un-recyclable parts than a standard bulb. is the trade-off worth it?
Probably the best thing any of us can do is make an effort to cut back on driving when possible. Go afoot, or get a bicycle if you are able. Recycle what you can (and check to make sure your municipality is not, as many are, simply gathering the recyclables as a warm fuzzy and taking them straight to the landfill anyway). Buy local produce in season (less transport = less fuel burned), etc.
In my area there is an old gentleman of the WWII generation who gets my respect by default. Yet, he often writes to the local newspaper his complaints about a lack of "concern for our environment." The same guy drives the biggest Buick made, has his lawn treated with chemicals and mowed twice a week, hires someone to use a gas trimmer and snow/leaf blower on his property, etc. Scolding others while not walking the walk is a pet peeve.
Twitch said:We have recycling in our area so it's easy to put stuff in another trash container. I recycle used motor oil at the auto parts store and old paint or electronic waste when they have those weekend drive locations. Other than that, forget about it! I threw most of those horridly dim, drab and ugly flourescent bulbs away. I realized that they were so bad that could cause a person depression. When I changed back to incandescent it was like a cheerfull new world in my house returned. Besides I don't know where the toxic crap in those has to go. Yet another waste place?
We only drive about 3,000 miles a years so aren't contributing to many emmissions of any sort.
As far a all the rest goes I don't much give a hoot.[huh] I have no intention of living a paranoia concerning waste, pollution or the latest cause celeb. If I want to be cool or warm given the season I will regardless of the cost.
I love all the excesses of the Golden Era anyhow!lol
Tango Yankee said:I have bottled water delivered in 5-gallon bottles. I use a ceramic dispenser for it. The reason? I tried just about every filter available and could not find one that made our local water palatable for me. Can't stand the taste.
gluegungeisha said:I stopped using cosmetics with petroleum derivatives...that includes cold creme! A lot of lip balms contain the stuff, too, as well as Vaseline. I found that shea butter products (make it fair trade!), as well as quality oils, make a great substitute. My rose bud salve has been replaced with Badger Balm.
Paisley said:I like Badger Balm cuticle care, but their lip balm didn't do anything for my cracked and bleeding lips. Had to go back to Carmex today--they already feel better.