Posts Tagged ‘recycling’

The Three R’s of greener living…

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle-Tips for a Greener 2010

Global warming, climate change, carbon footprint, sustainability… we all know the buzzwords and if you are reading this post it means you want to live a greener life.  But the question for most people is where do I begin?  Saving the planet is not an easy task, but the road begins with small steps.  Therefore, I present to you a list of some small steps that you can take to make your life a little greener in 2010.

Reduce your energy consumption. It seems pretty simple because it is.  Turn off the lights when you leave the room.  Wash your slothes in cold water.  Turn down your thermostat in the winter by a couple of degrees and put on a sweater.  Get a programmable thermostat.  The easiest thing you can do is change out your traditional light bulbs for CFL (Compact Flourescent) bulbs. For every incandescent bulb that you replace, you will save about $30 a year in energy costs. If everyone in a city the size of Chicago replaced just one main light bulb with a CFL bulb, we would save the greenhouse gas emissions of about 200,000 cars on the road. If everyone in the country did it, we would save enough energy to light 2.5 million homes for a year and it equates to the emissions of over 3/4 of a million cars.  Replacing just 16 bulbs is like not driving your car for a year.  Trade out one in four bulbs in your house and the amount you spend on lighting will be cut in half.  Only 10% of electricity used in an incandescent bulb is given off as light, the rest is heat:  a big waste on a hot summer night!

Reduce your packaging consuption. Packaging amounts to a huge portion of a products carbon footprint.  If you think about all the things that you buy, they come in packages.  The more the packaging, the more the waste that mostly goes to landfill.  Ideally, we would all be able to buy in bulk and have relatively little impact.  Unfortunately, most of us do not have that option.  But with some simple planning and thought, all of us can reduce our packaging consumption.  Buy in the biggest package available that works for you.  Avoid small individually packaged items.  Things like snack packs have a ton of packaging.  But buying in a large package and breaking down into small tupperware that is reusable can have realatively small amounts of packaging.  Buy products that are concentrated.  A concentrated detergent has less packaging than the same washing amount of less concentrated liquid.  Look at your purchases for packaging that ahs recycled content.  Who cares if the cereal that you buy comes in a box made from recycled paper or virgin materials-only Mother Earth.

Reuse everything that you can.  Can that jar be used for something else?  They make a fine vase.  Save those margarine containers for use as a food container.  Wash out your ziplock bags and use them again.  Instead of buying individual hand soap containers, buy a bulk package and refill the small one.  Paper sacks with handles are an instant gift bag.  Newspapers make fine gift wrap.  Write on the back of scrap paper, or print on the back side of all the things you print.  Try sewing a small hole in clothing or invest in a good stain fighter to reuse clothes that you thought were not salvagable.  Still can’t save them?  Try making a wuilt or cut into smaller pieces for dust cloths.  By using everything at least twice, you can cut your consumption of virgin materials significantly.

Recycle. If you are reducing and reusing, then your need to recycle is dramatically lessened.  Still, recycling can have the biggest impact on the environment in that everyone can do it while having the least impact on their everyday life.  If you do not have a curbside recycling program available, make the extra effort to take your old goods to a drop off location.  Recycle all your jars.  Glass is one of the easiest things to recycle and making recycled glass uses 40% less energy than making glass from virgin materials.  Remove your lids and rinse your jars.  When it comes to plastics, all containers have a universal recycling number on the bottom.  While there are not uses for all the numbers so far, emerging technologies are finding ways to make new polymers and diesel fuels from assorted plastics.  In the meantime, Amricans use 2.5 million plastic bottles every hour and most (estimates are about 65-70%) end up in the landfill.  Remove your lids when recycling bottles as they are generally a different type of plastic than the bottle and in some cash strapped communities, it is cheaper to toss bottles with a lid still on than to pay someone to sort and remove lids.  Paper accounts for half of the waste we send to landfill.  If Americans reycled half of that, we would save 125 million trees every year.  Over 48 % of the Earth’s surface was once covered with forests.  Half of those forests are gone and only 1/5 of native forests are left.  Making a ton of paper from recycled stock saves 50% of water used and 17 trees.  For every 38,000 bills paid online, 5,058 pounds of greenhouse gases are avoided and two tons of trees are preserved.  Stop your junk mail!  17.8 tons of junk mail is delivered every year by the postal service.  44% of that goes unopened and less than 25% is recycled.  Recycle all your metals.  All steel has some recycled content.  It is generally at least 25% recycled content minimum, so the systems are all in place already.  Aluminum is easily recycled, and aluminum cans will make it back to the shelf in as little as 90 days.  But it isn’t just cans; foil counts too-even the foil on the 20 million Hershey’s kisses that are produced every year.

The road to a greener life is a long one.  But the journey of a thousand miles begins with one step.  What is your next step?

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Recycling can be useful!

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

This video is simply brilliant.  While you may not find the use of bottles as a building material particularly useful in your neck of the woods, it is a great concept.  Imagine what a little design help could do to make this even more beautiful.  I especially love the light!

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Recycle this!

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

I saw something similar to this on television. Surprising that we can recycle styrofoam, but who does? I wish we had programs for this kind of thing in Ohio.

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How green is your restaurant?

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

I was looking through the EcoWatch Journal the other day-a great publication, by the way, and highly recommended.  I was reading a great article about Crocker park and how it does not recycle.  In case you do not know, Crocker Park was a combination live, work, shop community built in Westlake, Ohio.  The idea was to take the concept of a “lifestyle center” which is the name for an outdoor mall, usually constructed to look like a city, and add to it.  They added office space and residential units.  This essentially made Crocker Park a miniature town.  I love the development.  It is constructed like many developments in the Seattle Metro area.  Being more than just shopping, the residents and office dwellers have restaurants, art events, town square activities and there are places to sit and just watch the world go by.  That is why I was so disappointed to hear that this one of a kind development did not offer recycling to its residents or its commercial tenants.  It is bad enough for retail and offices, but when you throw busy, popular restaurants like the Cheesecake Factory into the mix, and you have a lot of materials that are going into the landfill.

There are heroes to celebrate.  Many of the employees of places like Trader Joe’s actually collect their own recycling and take it home or to drop off stations on their own time.  This is the kind of dedication that we need to make real change in the region.  For the management team at Crocker Park, though, it is more of business as usual.  It truly is a shame, too, because a recycling program could actually save them money.  It cost less in garbage fees to have someone take all of the glass, plastic, and paper out of the mix.  Charities actually make money on paper waste, and some churches have included can and bottle collection in their fundraising programs.  Why then, would a company whose job it is to make money bypass the obvious and pay more to have their trash hauled away.  It is plainly laziness and shortsightedness at its best.  If you think of all the recyclable waste generated by restaurants and bars in a major metropolitan area, the need for commercial recycling is more important than a residential one.  Let’s face it, vodka doesn’t come in a biodegradable bag and McDonald’s uses tons of paper goods.

On the other end of the spectrum, comes The Greenhouse Tavern.  Now if you are the type that like to read this blog, then you already know about The Greenhouse Tavern.  You know about the design features, like rescued reused barn boards and the poured concrete bar with glass from their own bottles.  You know about their efforts to celebrate local ingredients and use fresh local foods.  You must know about how Chef Jonathan Sawyer is creating delicious dishes and promoting fine cooking in the region.  You probably know about  the plans to add a greenhouse to the roof to be the only restaurant in the region who grows their own herbs and maybe the first at all inside a major city.  What should know that they are the first Certified Green Restaurant in Ohio.  But what you may not know are some of the things that they do to get that designation.  The highlight for me is the attention paid to waste.  In order to recycle in that little slice of restaurant heaven (E 4th), they had to convince someone to give up their valuable parking spot to accommodate a dumpster.  Then to keep from adding to the waste stream outside their doors, they looked at to go containers and doggy bags.  From an email that I received:

At The Greenhouse Tavern we take our green restaurant certification very seriously.  We use a sugar cane photodegradable to go box.  It is compostable and can be tossed in your garden.  We do not offer to go silverware or napkins.  We recycle and reuse all of our glass.

Now, The Greenhouse Tavern sits in Cleveland, in a downtown location, in a city that doesn’t offer full curbside recycling.  Still, these guys show such a commitment, that it puts the restaurants of Crocker Park to shame.  If any one of the major tenants at Crocker demanded recycling within the project, the management would cave and offer it.  Still, no one even tries.  So how green is the restaurant that you like to go to?  Have you asked?  I say skip the trip out to the burbs and keep you money flowing to those businesses who are doing the right thing…

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Is “Green” your mantra, mindset, or buzzword?

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

I know I am the oddball in the room.  That is fine.  I accept it.  I am that weird guy who has his own name tag, tries to bring his own cup, and often will not take your business card, because I don’t want more paper.   That’s fine.  I don’t mind being different from everyone else, and I don’t mind being the weird one in a group.  I also don’t expect others to be like me.  That being said, I have been to 2 separate sustainability events that were hosted by the local chapter of the USGBC, and it amazes me that people do not even think about their trash or their transportation.  I am that crazy person that drinks draft beer if a location doesn’t recycle, or who takes his juice bottle home.  But when I go to an industry event promoting sustainability, I at least expect people to recycle.

When I last went to Greenbuild, the entire event recycled.  They even had most of the garbage stations manned on the first day to instruct people that their coffee cups are compostable and go in one can, their water bottle is recyclable and that very little actually goes into the garbage.  Care was taken to provide cups made from sugar cane and water was available by the glass, not by the bottle.  At local events, though there is often not even a recycling bin.  We went to an event where a new park was being dedicated.  A building was being taken down and a new green space was going to be created along the towpath.  They provided refreshments, but there was no place to recycle the pop cans or water bottles that we being given out.  Funny, when the whole point was to support new green space and land re use.  So they were a little short sighted.  At least this was not a sustainability event.

So, two events hosted by the NE Ohio chapter of the USGBC.  Both attended by building industry professionals.  Both had recycling bins stationed near the garbage.  Both were well attended.  Both had piles of recyclables in the trash.  I get it when the food is served with plastic forks and you don’t know if they are recyclable or not, or if the plates can be recycled because there are food remnants attached.  But for pete’s sake, if you are going to a “green” event why would you not take the care to toss you glass bottle into the bin on the right that is inches away?

Sustainability and green are not new concepts.  In fact, most of the basic ideas that we are promoting these days were big in the 1970s.  Remember driving less, cause you could only get gas on certain days of the week?  Remember the push for the bottle deposit?  Carter put solar panels on the White House.  Even the “Give a hoot, don’t pollute” campaign is decades old.  But much of the progress that we made in the 60s & 70s was replaced by consumption and consumerism of the end of the 20th century.  Now everyone seems to be on board again.  While the USGBC has been around for nearly a decade, and the building concepts that were behind its formation even older, it has only been the last couple of years that we are seeing the idea of building more sustainable becoming mainstream.  As was said in a presentation today, if  Wal-Mart is doing it, then everybody better be doing it.  But in a room full of building professionals who aspire to do better, why is there obvious recyclables in the trash?  It makes me wonder if this is more about business as usual.

Since buildings account for nearly half of all CO2 emissions,  any reason to build greener is a good reason.  That being said, when we are most concerned about just ourselves, the results are often fleeting.  Are we doing the right thing, because it is important, or because we are trying to find a “leg up” in a tough economic time?  Are we creating real lasting change, or like the fuel efficient cars of the past, are we just waiting for our chance to start buying Hummers again?  As a business, as a  household, as an individual are you using ‘green” as your buzzword, or is it a way of life?  These are the things I wander when I see the parking lot of a green event filled with SUVs and the trash full of aluminum cans.

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Upcycled to the Max!

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

In an effort to make this blog more interesting I am reaching out to fellow bloggers across the net. This is a guest post by a fellow blogger, Danielle Brycz. She is the co-owner of Verde Lifestyles, an online store selling eco-friendly home décor.  Drop by their site ans see some of their great products-the bed linens are absolutely awesome!

Upcycled to The Max

Guest post by Danielle Brycz, Co-Owner of Verde Lifestyles, an online store selling eco-friendly home décor.

Over the last year or so there have been so many new products that use more recycled content. Which is great for consumers and the environment!  But there has also been more of a shift towards upcycling, which takes using recycled materials in products to a whole new level.  The definition of upcycling is “the process of converting waste materials or useless products into new materials or products of equal or better quality.  The goal of upcycling is to prevent wasting potentially useful materials by making use of existing ones.  While the goal of downcycling, which is the other half of the recycling process, involves converting materials and products into new materials of lesser quality.”  (Upcycling definition via Wikipedia.) Aluminum and glass are great examples of materials that can be easily upcycled because they maintain the same level of quality in their second life.  While there are thousands of examples of upcycled products, I wanted to highlight the more creative designs.

Upcycled Nike Sneakers Made From Metal Circuit Boards

These Junk-Metal Jordans by Gabriel Dishaw are truly one of a kind. Made of metal and electronic scraps, unfortunately they were not designed to wear.

Canopy Upcycled from Plastic Cups

This beautiful design by BIOS Design Collective is a great DIY project.  They actually used discarded cups from the OutsideLands concert in San Francisco to create the canopy.  Then using plastic clips, the cups were attached to steel cable mesh.  So while the project was on a larger scale, I’m sure you could apply the same concept to any outdoor space.   

The Crate Man Cometh: Recycled Milk Crate Art

Now this is definitely something you don’t see everyday!  As the name implies, this bizarre creation is made of discarded milk crates. He currently lives in Australia and pops up in the most random places.  Crate Man even has a Facebook page so you can see what adventures he’s’ been on lately!

Gold-Plated Shipping Container Bling Bar

Who knew there was an entire discipline dedicated to shipping container architecture.  This particular design is from designer Andreas Strauss in Austria.  The goal was to create an upcylced mobile food establishment.  It even has a hydraulics system that opens the bar with a push of a button!  Equipped with beer taps, storage, a cooler and place to wash dishes, who wouldn’t want to come to this bar?  They also had to have a permit to be an upcycled mobile bar that mandated it had to be less than 16 feet.

Junior Fritz Jacquet

This artist uses all recycled cardboard and toilet paper rolls to create these unique characters.  “He explores and experiments with folding and crumpling techniques, innovating methods to create forms and craft poetic objects, that visually enhance any surrounding. The origins of his unique technique are still heavily inspired by the traditional art of origami, using only one sheet of paper.”  (Via Upcycled Design Showcase)

Guest post by Danielle Brycz, Co-Owner of Verde Lifestyles, an online store selling eco-friendly home décor.

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Thanks Danielle!  Being involved with Wastipedia, this is exactly the kind of art and upcycling that is the core of our business model.  We need more great ideas like these!

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Used up your gift card? Don’t throw it out just yet…

Monday, January 4th, 2010

One of my faithful readers asked me if gift cards were recyclable.  The answer has been no for a while.  The plastic in credit cards and gift cards usually ends up in the garbage and it is PVC, so not readily handled by recyclers.  So what is a green minded individual to do?  There is one great option that I know about.  Enter Earthworks.  Earthworks is a simple concept that is a brilliant idea.  They melt down old PVC cards and create new ones.  I first read about them on the Mother Earth Network.   Did you know that 10 billion new gift cards are printed every year with the potential to add 75-100 pounds of PVC to the waste stream?  And with he popularity of gift cards the number goes up every year.   Earthworks can take those empty gift cards, old credit cards, ID’s grocery program cards, etc and make new ones out of them.  Here is a brief reprint from the Mother Earth article:

It absolutely does not create any waste. It’s a really simple process that involves securely destroying the material by chopping it up and then melting the plastic down. There’s no chemical waste because we don’t use any chemicals in the process, which a lot of post-consumer products need in order to clean the material. The other great thing is that recycling a card and making it into a new one saves about 80 percent of the energy that would be used to make a brand new card. That’s because our product is made from 100 percent recycled materials with no raw materials and no petroleum.

So yes, readers, there is an answer.  Consumers can send in their old cards, and retailers can collect their old gift cards to sell for scrap.  Now that the holidays are over, for the price of a stamp you can keep your share of the 10 billion gift cards out of the landfill and put them back into circulation.  If you work for a store, show them the Earthworks website and encourage them to use collect old cards and buy the recycled sheets for their own cards.

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Because we are lazy…

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

We recycle.  Everything we can.  I even bring recyclables home from my travels to make sure that they get recycled and don’t end up in the landfill.  I have ranted on and on about restaurants and food vendors like Starbucks and Chipotle that sell beverages in containers and do not recycle, so if I dine at one of these places I have to bring a bottle or plastic cup home to make sure it doesn’t end up in a whole in the ground.  Sometimes, however, I forget.  Or worse, sometimes I am just lazy and do not feel like hauling that glass bottle with me for the next couple of hours while I do my grocery shopping or whatever.  But we do better than many, and some people (even my friends-yes, you know who you are) still do not recycle.  I die a little each time I see them toss a can in the trash or that plastic container not even reused once before it heads to the curb.

That is why I am a big advocate of the bottle deposit law.  What is that?  Well, if you live in a state with a deposit, some or all beverages that come in a container have a deposit attached.  That means that when you buy a soda, you pay an extra nickel for the container.  When the container is empty, it can be returned for the five (or in some states ten) cent deposit to be returned to you.  This is not a new idea.  When I was a kid, we used to go bottle hunting.  We would scour the areas around the parks, pool, or that spot where the older kids used to hang out and drink beer on Friday nights.  We would take our dozen bottles, cash them in, and buy ourselves a treat.  I grew up in Kansas, that had a bottle deposit until sometime in the 80’s.  In most of the states on the west coast, it is still a law.  Just look at your can of Coke and you can see the eleven states that offer deposits.  But why should every state have a bottle deposit?  Because we are lazy (and greedy).

Why do we even have this debate at this stage in the game? It seems natural that we should all be recycling, so we do not need a deposit bill, right? Wrong. While those reading this may be avid “greenies” we often forget that we are still in the minority. The only way to get more recycling to be done is by making it easy, mandatory, or profitable. By adding a 5 cent deposit to every container of soda that we sell in the US, most of us would not feel it a bit. Beverage producers would need little to add to their system, as they have all the tools to implement a program in every state, as they do it already in some. Your case of beer or soda would cost you an extra $1.20. But when you return to the store, you return the cans and get your $1.20 back. In places like Oregon, I saw folks at a more difficult stage of their lives surviving by collecting those nickel containers. Parks are cleaner, roadsides have less litter, and recycling is up. Way up according to the Container Recycling Institute.  According to their numbers, states with mandatory deposits have recycling rates hovering around 60%.  On the other hand, states that do not have deposit laws have recycling  rates that only reach about 24%.  That includes progressive states like Washington that recycle well, but still have no bottle deposits.

So with the stroke of a pen, we could increase recycling rates in all states.  Why do we not do it?  Once again, laziness and greed.  Store owners hate bottle deposits as it does add to their operating expenses.  Does that mean stores in Oregon are less profitable than those in Ohio?  No.  The impact on the bottom line of stores is minimal, as they do not have to pay that deposit refund, it comes from the manufacturer.  With the simple addition of automatic bottle counting machines, the work goes back to the consumer in most cases-and consumers are lazy.  Besides, if we had to rely on store owners to do the right thing on their own, I am sure there would be complaints of food expiration dates and mandatory breaks as eating into their profits.  The real opposition comes from big business lobbying.

The American Beverage Association has gone so far as to produce a report.  But this report has issues for me.  First off, I never rust a report that is produced, commissioned, and reported by itself.  Secondly, I do not support their conclusions.  According to the report, money would be better spent to expand community recycling programs than spent on bottle deposit implementation.  While that may be true, ABA member companies would be forced to invest in bottle deposit programs, while there is no way legislation will be passed that will force bottlers to give money to the communities of the country to expand their recycling efforts.  Their report also states that 73% of Americans have curbside recycling and 83% have access to drop off recycling.  I find those numbers hard to believe, but considering the high population numbers in urban centers it could be true.  That being said, it really is slight of hand.  Even in Cleveland we have access to drop off locations and some access to curbside.  Even I find recycling difficult in this town.  So those who are less motivated or who have less time are even less likely to recycle.  But, were there a bottle deposit in place, even my non recycling friends would be likely to start.  Or at the very least, would be likely to put their cans out for the homeless to pick up and return for cash.

The ABA is a lobbying group that represents its members.  They say,“three decades of data and practical experience have undeniably demonstrated that imposing mandatory deposits on beverage containers is a poor way to increase recycling and address solid waste issues.”  Of course mandatory deposits would force their members to implement deposit programs, so not a huge surprise that their findings fell this way.

The truth of the matter is that we sell 200 BILLION beverage containers in the US every year.  Out of these, 130 billion end up in the landfill or are incinerated.  We know what we are doing, yet are too lazy to do anything about it.  That is why I support a national bottle deposit.  In a time when national corporations are doing just fine, but local recycling programs are struggling, I say that we can let Anheuser Busch and Pepsico pay the bill to take some of our waste out of the waste stream.

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Ways to make the holidays greener in 2010…

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

The winter holidays are almost completely over. As we round out the year, I am thinking about next year. I made a stand this year and sent no paper cards this year. While I enjoy hearing form all my family and friends, I just can’t justify the paper trail the holidays leave behind. My mother always saved the bows and usable paper from the gifts. This was to save money, but little did we kids realize how sustainable she was being. Every year the world creates this huge spike in trash around the holidays. Check out this video by Ed Byrne. He is funny, but makes some good points:

So how do you make an impact, without losing all the fun and magic of the season?

  1. Shop smarter. Instead of buying stuff that is funny or cute, but will end up in the bin on December 26, shop smarter.  Buy gifts that are usable and lasting.  If you are the kind of person that finds gift buying difficult or exhausting, try buying gift cards.  If you think that that is too impersonal, then be sure to buy something that can easily be returned or donated-and include a gift receipt with every gift.  While you may think that Christmas sweater with the snowman is delightful, the receiver may not.  Allow them the opportunity to return it for something they will use, rather than have an ugly sweater in the bottom drawer that will only see the light of day when they meet up with you next year.
  2. Make gifts and cards from salvaged materials. For those of you that are creative, this is not a difficult task.  It can be fun to make a nice bracelet by weaving old Christmas tree light strands together, or stringing that cool doodad on a leather strap to make a unique necklace.  You can make your own cards by reusing the fronts of cards that are glued onto simple construction paper that is folded in half or quarters.  Some can even become holiday postcards by simply cutting off the front.  Wrap your gifts in old magazine pages or newsprint, and make bows from interesting doodads, fried flowers from your yard or a freshly clipped pine branch.
  3. Use less materials that will be thrown away. Why use wrapping paper from virgin materials when there are so many other options available?  I wrap gifts in things I find in my travels.  Vintage (or even brand new) dishtowels make great wrap, as do pillow cases and table cloths.  Pick them up cheap at flea markets and garage sales throughout the year.  Skip the ribbons and use raffia that will bio-degrade, sea grass, or clipped and dried flowers from your garden that are saved throughout the year.  Hydrangea blooms and baby’s breath are both ideal gift garnishes.  Or try some pressed fall leaves as gift tags.
  4. Don’t use a cut tree.  Sure most trees are made of chemicals, but properly taken care of, and a fake tree can be used and decorated easily year after year, saving tons of CO2 emissions in the cutting, hauling and disposal that comes with a cut live tree.  If you must have a live tree try using a tree that is truly alive and potted.  Water it and it will survive nicely and can be planted in your own yard or donated to a local church or other charity to beautify a green space.  There are plenty of other alternatives as well, and now that Christmas is over, you can scan the internet for a great deal.  I ran across trees made of cardboard that fold up flat that I thought were ingenious. My buddy Jim Fish even made his own “tree” from materials that he salvaged.
  5. Send e-cards. While there is something nostalgic and fun about having a real Christmas card in hand, it is a tradition that we need to start phasing out.  E-cards can be sent from a variety of sources for free or for cheap.  You can create your own form templates, so it can be truly personal.  Or if you like, make your own Christmas ecard that can be saved as an attachment and sent out from your email client.  Want a card that is truly personal?  Create a card that is made from pictures of your family from throughout the year.  Even better, dust off that video camera and capture all the moments of your life and edit it into a video that you can post to a site like YouTube.  send the link to your family and friends.  For our business, I have vowed to create a video card for 2010 that will be fun to watch.  Who knows, maybe it will go viral….
  6. Donate to charity. Giving a gift in the name of someone you live can be touching and personal, without adding to your carbon footprint.  For those who have lost loved ones due to illness, donate to a foundation that is searching for a cure to that illness.  There are charities for animal lovers, for treehuggers, for the young and the old.  This is really the true meaning of giving anyway, isn’t it?
  7. At the very least recycle! There are plenty of ways to reuse some of that wrap, those bows, and cardboard boxes.  But if you don’t, at the very least make that trip to the recycle center to divert them from the landfill.  Even that Christmas tree can be recycled.  Most areas have a boy scout troop of other charity that will recycle your tree.  In Cleveland, I am told, the city will grind the trees put out on the curb into mulch that is free to residents in the spring-just get it out there before Jan 30.  You can put it in your yard to give cover for birds and insects, and it will decompose at its own rate.  Here is one more video to give you more helpful hints:

Being greener and making a difference is not easy.  But with plenty of thought, you can make your next holiday season one that is greener and cleaner.  And if you think about it all year long while you are out and about, you can enjoy the holidays all year long!

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Make your holiday greener with Second Time Designs

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

The holidays are almost here! Where did the year go, anyway? While the music, decorations, lights and gatherings can all be fun and exciting, they also generate a ton of waste. Anything that you can do to reduce your environmental footprint at this time of year is a good thing. That is why I am trying to feature some great ideas for gift giving this year. So far, I told you about the Cleveland Clothing Company and From the Blue Bag. Today I want to tell you about Second Time Designs.

vinyl flooring flowers

Second Time Designs is a company by Nicole McGee. I first ran across these designs at Aladdin’s Restaurants. If you have ever eaten there, then you have seen her flower centerpieces on the tables. These eco-chic decorations not only require little upkeep, but they are made from flooring and wall base materials that were destined for the landfill. You may have seen her at the Tremont Arts and Cultural Festival showing flowers and cool light switch covers. She just opened her etsy store and you can see here newest stuff at the Tremont Farmer’s Market, Tuesday November 24 and Dec 15th at the Pilgrim Church. She has added cool new hair clips, too! Pictures do not do justice to how lovely these items really are.  Word on the street is that she is premiering some new holiday wreaths from recycled materials, and I can’t wait to see them!   Hand crafted, unique and eco friendly, why not give a gift this year that is useful and beautiful? Planning a big design project? Nicole is great at doing commission work and special orders!

Remember that every time you support a local artist, you support the local economy. Wouldn’t you rather give something from close to home, rather that a cheap piece of tat that had to hauled all the way from China? In addition, these Items are made from materials that were diverted from the waste stream. Upcylcing allows us to rethink the way we create, and rethink the life cycle of the products that we use. Imagine the impact on the planet if just a portion of all the holiday purchasing was made from recycled or upcycled materials! Start here with a funky light switch cover or a chic hair clip, and make 2009 the greenest holiday ever….

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