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A Year Ago at Green Your ApartmentA Year Ago at Green Your Apartment 2008 Fourth "Tips for Green Living" Carnival The fourth Tips for Green Living blog carnival.

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15th Carnival for Green Living15th Carnival for Green Living Welcome to the fifteenth edition of Tips for Green Living! We have so many good submissions, so let’s get started!. dining & entertaining Sam over at Best Cheap Weddings shares some...

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A Year Ago at Green Your ApartmentA Year Ago at Green Your Apartment 2008 Back to Basics: Recycle The final post in a series of three on the basic principles of green living.

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A Year Ago at Green Your ApartmentA Year Ago at Green Your Apartment 2008 Call to Action Will you help save the earth with only one hour of your time? www.EarthHour.org Back to Basics: Reduce The first in a series of three posts on the basic principles of green living. Back...

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What are Parabens, Exactly?What are Parabens, Exactly? Labeled as one of the new culprit for many a-modern defect is a group of preservatives called parabens. You may have seen the Breast Cancer Fund site's rundown of them or just saw a lotion bottle on the...

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Thirteenth Carnival for Green Living

Category : Dining & Entertaining, Featured, For the Greenhorns, Health & Beauty, Living Spaces, Patio & Garden

Late? Yes. Unfortunately, allergies have been running amok with all this rain at the Green Apartment so last week was awful and this week was catch-up. Oh the joy!

But, I do have a fabulous carnival for you!

dining & entertaining

Mrs. Green presents Price vs principles – 6 tips for eating organic on a budget posted at Little Green Blog. It’s funny, I already implement a lot of these tips but I just can’t find a co-op we’d really benefit from yet. Ideas?

Mrs. Green also gives us another post, 11 reuse ideas for coffee grounds posted at MY ZERO WASTE. Make my hair smell like coffee? You may be my green soul mate, Mrs. Green!

Pumpkin lasagna? Yeah, she said it! Kathy Hester, a.k.a. GeekyPoet, gives us the recipe for a Slow Cooker Protein Packed Pumpkin Lasagna posted at Healthy Slow Cooking. Wow!

for the greenhorns

Need some educating? Sandra Lopez can help! Her 100 Amazing Lectures to Follow the Future of Energy is posted at Online Degree Programs.org. My bookmarks just got so much bigger!

Now who doesn’t want to save money on gasoline? Yeah, I thought so and so does The Smarter Wallet. The post Save Money On Gas With These 10 Tips posted at The Smarter Wallet tells you how! Makes me think I really should clear out the trunk of my car.

Here at Green Your Apartment, we like a bit of shock and awe every now and then. This time, Emily Moser over at Online Nurse Practitioner Schools tells us about 20 Weird Allergies That Actually Exist just after allergies attacked our apartment all last week. But allergic to water? Oh yes, people, it can be that crazy. Green? Not so much but fascinating nonetheless.

Looks like Katy Unitek is back with her inspirational post The Dream of a Child Changes a Community posted at Boots On The Roof. Amazing what some tenacity can do!

Stuff With A Purpose, a newbie to our carnival, introduces us to the Reu$e And Save Series: Plastic Bags posted at Stuff With A Purpose. This is the very reason you need to become a bag-person!

health & beauty

Ambitious much? Emily Moser is! She discusses the Top 25 Soap Making Resources Online posted at Becoming A Radiologist.

living spaces

Ah, to cook and clean. paystolivegreen talks about Being Green in the Kitchen over at Pays to Live Green. All great stuff, especially about reducing waste.

I’m going to be honest – it is a rare instance for me to find a green tip or reuse suggestion that I haven’t thought of or read about before. But Annette Berlin shows me up in this terribly clever post, 12 Crafty Ways To Reuse Phone Books posted at Craft Stew. Amusing and helpful!

To me, clutter is the antithesis of a green life. June Tree agrees in her post Cash In On Clutter over at The Digerati Life. Fabulous! (By the way, I <3 your blog!)

patio & garden

Have a pet and feel guilty about their droppings? Have no fear, Renee Benzaim is here! She explains What is a Worm Compost? posted at Compost Tumblers & Compost Making noting that “worm composting … is good for small spaces and also works for animal feces.” So looking into that…

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That concludes this edition of Tips for Green Living. Thank you all for your excellent submissions and I hope you found some useful info in this carnival. You can find a new edition posted every second and fourth Monday here at Green Your Apartment. Submit your blog article to the next edition of Tips for Green Living using our carnival submission form.

Go green and live well!

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Tips for Green Living logo image courtesy of FreeDigitalPhotos.net

It Ain’t Easy Being Green

Category : For the Greenhorns

Last Friday, we were out celebrating my father’s birthday at a restaurant. He was telling a story about trekking through the snow in some of the local mountains to perform his job when he mentioned that his water bottle had tumbled out of his pocket on the way up an embankment.

Being a good green blogger, I asked, “A plastic bottle?”

My Dad looked at me oddly. (Granted, the water bottle was not the point of the story, the nine-inch-across bear track was.) “I was probably being more ‘green’ than you are because I was eating the clean snow right from where it was!”

He laughed and I frowned. “You know you could get a good stainless steel container that you could keep with you for cheap.”

“I know, I have a thermos for my coffee!”

“Yes, Dad, but I mean for your water too.”

“But how would you refill it?” my brother piped in. “You can just take a couple of extra plastic bottles with you but what would you refill the steel container with?”

“A sink?!” I said.

This is a typical conversation with my family. My father does not believe that global warming/the climate crisis is a fact. He firmly believes that it is put out by the left wing media to… but I digress.

I am not a political animal, Internet, I’m really not. What I am is an artist and a philosopher. I think about specific circumstances, dilemmas of the individual, and personal solutions. I happen to firmly think that no change can come about unless individuals decide to change. And while, yes, you can influence people en mass in media platforms (like blogging), political change and the like, I don’t write for the masses. I write for YOU (yes, you, switching tabs in your web browser between this and MSN’s Wonderwall).

So, for those individuals who happen to believe that the climate crisis is a ploy by the <insert group here> to <insert dire and horrible controlling action here>, I want to ask you: Does it matter?

Does it matter if the scientists and liberal media et alii are wrong and the climate is just doing its thing? What would be wrong with conserving your (I’m assuming) hard earned money and the resources we have? Abundant or otherwise, shouldn’t we wisely use as little as comfortably possible so we do not tax our resources unnecessarily and spend more of our personal resources (time, money, energy) than necessary to live a comfortable life?

I guess my point is here at Green Your Apartment, I do not advocate any political party or agenda. I hope you have learned to think for yourself and have your own opinions.

What I use Green Your Apartment to advocate is ways to, yes, save our natural resources, but also ways to save your time and money. Ways to enhance your life instead of dampening the senses. Ways to set you free of harsh (and unnecessary) chemicals, expensive habits, and wasteful modern mindsets that fly in the face of pre-20th century thinking. To live well and tread lightly.

So Dad, if you’re reading this, don’t be surprised if you find a BPA-free, stainless steel water bottle like Kleen Kanteen’s 40-ouncer in with your Chanukuah or Christmas presents this year – I don’t think anyone will doubt who it’s from. While I respect your opinions, please just use the damn bottle so I won’t dream of its disposable plastic counterparts choking our landfills and littering our forests. And Mom, I swear it’ll save you at least $20 a month on groceries. (I knew you’d like that!)

EDIT: 9 Dec 09

I have been informed that canteens do indeed exist at my parents house and plastic water bottles are rarely used. I will still be razzing my father about using them and I’m sure he’ll come back with some witty, smart aleck response that I will roll my eyes at. Ah, the family dynamics.

And my Mom would like the record straight: only $5.99 a month is spent on bottled water, if that. Consider the record straight.

Happy drinking!

Establishing the Bag-Person Habit

Category : For the Greenhorns, Living Spaces

A few weeks ago I did a post on ditching both paper and plastic bags to go reusable to which Matty, from Green Eggs & Planet, left this comment:

Excellent post — I too am trying as hard as possible to get into the comprehensive habit of ALWAYS having a bag with me. Maybe a post about how to establish some new habits with regard to that?

As promised, I have some great tips to get this green habit going.

Mostly, becoming eco-friendly comes down to thinking ahead as we humans tend to be creatures of habit despite what we think. As a long time subscriber to the KISS method (thanks, Dad!) the key is to think about what you normally do, where you normally do it and adjust your routine with those two things in mind.

How to Establish the “Bag-Person” Habit
Cost: Depends – if you have enough reusable bags, then nothing; if you don’t, it’s time to invest in some (think $5-100, depending on what you need and what you’re willing to spend)
Time: about 10 minutes to think/plan, 30 minutes if you need to shop, approx. 20 minutes to execute
Energy to do this: Moderate – requires some thinking and some planting of materials around your spaces.

Step 1: Analyze your habits
Think about when you personally end up using bags. Do you plan regular weekly trips to the grocery store or do you tend to randomly hit up the market a few times a week as you run out of milk or bread? Can you not pass a bookstore or a mall or a <insert your shopping weakness here> without purchasing something? Are you a a book addict like I am? Then a bag that is small and can fit in your pocket, purse, backpack or diaper bag is what you need since you never really plan when you’re going.

After thinking about it, I want you to make this list:

Column 1: Where I shop (list “the mall”, “Borders”, “grocery store”, “Old Navy”, etc.)
Column 2: Planned or spur of the moment
Column 3: Type of bag needed (list “heavy-duty”, “compact but holds a lot”, “small and light”, etc.)
Column 4: Placement – list where a bag would be easiest and most convenient for you to remember to use it again and again

Step 2: Get the supplies you need
Now that you know what kind of shopper you are and have narrowed down what kinds of bags you need from filling out your list, you need to make sure you have them on hand.

For example, I have half a dozen canvas backs and an insulated bag for my grocery shopping. But I need some of those handy-dandy mesh produce bags from ReusableBags.com that I mentioned in my previous post. I also need a reusable bag or two to put in my purse and later, the diaper bag (which looks like a normal backpack – God bless the evolution of baby supplies!). Well, that’s when a handy little bit like ReusableBags.com’s Mini Maxi shopper comes in handy. This kind of reusable bag comes in it’s own little zippered container, which means I throw it in my purse, backpack, messenger bag or even the diaper bag. Now, being my Husband tends to be out without me somewhat often, so I do need to consider a bag or two for him to keep in the car.

After putting this all in a shopping cart at ReusableBags.com, my bag purchases will come to about $70. I consider this a small price to pay considering these bags will last me years and just the spur of the moment purchases I made last week left me with one dozen new plastic bags in my home. Even if I did that once every other week or so, I could save the world use of 260 single-use plastic bags in one year. If every person in my apartment complex did this at the same rate, just over 250,000 plastic bags would be saved from use.

Now, obviously, you can get your reusable bags from anywhere you like – your local market, a second-hand store, EcoBags, or make your own! I just happen to like ReusableBags.com because it’s one-stop shopping – and I LOVE making things easy!

Step 3: Put the bags where they’ll be used
This is simply the execution of taking your supplies and putting them in the places you listed in Column 4 on your list.

If you regularly hit up the market, for example, you can keep all of your grocery bags in the kitchen so you can grab them after you get your list and keys. More the spur of the moment shopper? Stick the bags in your car: you can hang them off the back of your seat so when you are exiting the car, you remember to take a sack in with you or stick a few in the glove compartment if that’s easier. I’ll definitely have two of those Mini-Maxi shoppers in my messenger bag or the diaper bag so I’ll always have them with me for those random trips to Borders and the market. And for the Husband? A Mini-Maxi shopper in the center console of our sole vehicle as well as  this cool Mini-Maxi backpack for heavier loads and some manly pizzazz.

Now that wasn’t so hard, was it?

My hope is that once people start taking responsibility and making reusable bags a daily habit, retailers will start to catch on and follow Whole Foods’ lead, eliminating plastic bag use altogether. It just takes some thinking to make your life a little more environmentally friendly without seriously hindering the convenience of modern life.

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Like the tips but have an even better one? Leave it in a comment!