ThesFlishThngs
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,007
- Location
- Oklahoma City
The uninhabitable garage apartment behind my house has an efficiency-sized gas cooker and a classic, round-top fridge (Maybe Frigidaire, but I'm not certain.) They both work, sort of, and I'd presume the stove is fuel thrifty as the oven knob seems stuck, and you have to light the burners individually. The refrigerator probably isn't, but since we had to disconnect the electric wires that ran from the house to the apartment (with a spliced-in light bulb in the middle to illuminate the back garden), it's not wasting any resources. When it was operating though, the inside freezer compartment wasn't very good; my secret stash of ice cream went all runny.
In the house, my electric stove is Frigidaire from the early 60s; when we moved in I found the original owner's manual, picturing a delighted housewife in poufy dress and pearl necklace.
Our natural gas furnace is probably an 80's model, and as long as it keeps us from freezing to death, it'll stay. It hasn't used any energy for months, but one of these weeks soon I'll have to venture down there and risk losing my eyebrows and blowing the house off its foundation with the pilot lighting operation.
Otherwise we have one small television from over 10 years ago, a couple of laptops, a very basic washing machine, natural gas water heater, not much else. The a/c does hike up the summer electric bill, but only for three or four months.
fftopic: I take a bit of issue with how carbon footprints are calculated; from what I've seen of my global pals' results, it's pretty clear that simply by residing in the US, I have extra strikes against me, no matter how basically I live. While the size of my house and how many people share it are part of the calculation, the test I took didn't take into account where my house is. Living in a home that's been tucked away in the inner city for close to 100 years would, in my eyes anyway, have less of an environmental impact than buying a new one in the midst of a sprawling roof farm built on freshly bull-dozed land.
For us, it comes down to efficiency and common sense; we are not in a position to rush out and buy all brand new, trendy, retro-inspired gadgets and appliances, nor would we do that if we were rolling in $. As things wear out and break down, we replace when we can't repair.
In the house, my electric stove is Frigidaire from the early 60s; when we moved in I found the original owner's manual, picturing a delighted housewife in poufy dress and pearl necklace.
Our natural gas furnace is probably an 80's model, and as long as it keeps us from freezing to death, it'll stay. It hasn't used any energy for months, but one of these weeks soon I'll have to venture down there and risk losing my eyebrows and blowing the house off its foundation with the pilot lighting operation.
Otherwise we have one small television from over 10 years ago, a couple of laptops, a very basic washing machine, natural gas water heater, not much else. The a/c does hike up the summer electric bill, but only for three or four months.
fftopic: I take a bit of issue with how carbon footprints are calculated; from what I've seen of my global pals' results, it's pretty clear that simply by residing in the US, I have extra strikes against me, no matter how basically I live. While the size of my house and how many people share it are part of the calculation, the test I took didn't take into account where my house is. Living in a home that's been tucked away in the inner city for close to 100 years would, in my eyes anyway, have less of an environmental impact than buying a new one in the midst of a sprawling roof farm built on freshly bull-dozed land.
For us, it comes down to efficiency and common sense; we are not in a position to rush out and buy all brand new, trendy, retro-inspired gadgets and appliances, nor would we do that if we were rolling in $. As things wear out and break down, we replace when we can't repair.