Monthly Archives: January 2010

11 Things to Rent (or borrow!) Before You Buy

Last week Recycla discussed ways to simplify life–and one way to do that is to OWN less.  Every time we buy stuff, we increase our carbon footprint on the planet–from mining the resources to make things to manufacturing to shipping and handling, the STUFF we NEED to HAVE burdens the planet.  An important way to live green is to buy less.   Ownership is a drag–you have to deal with storage, maintenance, repairs, warranty paperwork–why bother when you can rent?  Obviously some things are better owned than borrowed (toothbrushes spring to mind), but think of all you might save in storage space and money and hassle if you rented the following things before you bought them:

1.  Video games.  Sure, Little Timmy says he wants the latest X Box offering, but for a fraction of the cost you can rent it for a week at a local video store.  If he loves it, great!  Go buy it.  If not, you’re only out a few bucks and you’re not stuck with it collecting dust by your game console.  GameFly is one online site where you can rent games.

2.  Movies.  The truth is, we almost never watch a movie over again–unless we’re a kid and addicted to Pixar.  Just like with video games, renting a movie will give you a good idea of whether you like it or not–and if it’s that good, then go buy it.

3.  Heavy duty lawn and garden equipment.  Need to roll your lawn?  Cut a bunch of brush?  Till your garden?  Lawn and garden equipment can run to hundreds of dollars and it takes up a lot of space in your garage.  Many hardware stores and rental shops carry this equipment–Enviro Girl has found equipment for all kinds of work on her 60 acres for rent, saving her thousands of dollars.

4.  Camping equipment.  Unless you have a season pass to the state parks, you’re probably an occasional camper. In that event, borrow or rent your camper/tent/cooking stove.  If you’re new to camping as a hobby, renting will inform you of what features you should invest in when you buy the gear you want to own.

5.  Sporting equipment.  From skis to hockey uniforms to skates to golf clubs–you can rent it all.  If you’re a novice to a sport, just starting out and not sure you want to commit to buying the gear, rent it or borrow it.  Just like with camping equipment, renting will give you a good idea of what you want to invest in (or not) when you take up the sport more regularly.

6.  Party and event supplies.  From sound equipment to tents to tables and chairs to tanks of helium–why buy it when you can rent it?  Enviro Girl has seen everything from food service equipment (roasters and serving trays and place settings numbering in the hundreds) to inflatables available for rent.  She has rented a porta-potty, a tent, sound equipment and inflatables for various events at her place and was happy each time to use these things, but saw no reason to own them permanently.

7.  Cars.  That’s right, you can rent cars.  Enviro Girl has a sister who doesn’t own a car.  She lives in a metro area and owns a bus pass, a bike and cab fare.  Once in a great while she needs wheels and she spends a couple hundred to rent a vehicle when she needs one.  She probably saves thousands of dollars a year doing this.

8.  Carpet Cleaners.  Unless you own an apartment complex, you probably don’t need a Rug Doctor more than twice a year.  Rent it.

9.  Books.  Duh.  Borrow.  From the library.  Enviro Girl especially does this with unknown writers or writers whose work she’s certain she’ll read only once.  (Don’t let her fool you, though, she has shelves full of books.)

10. Toys.  That’s right, they’re little for such a short time or perhaps they’re visiting your house.  You can rent toys for babies and toddlers online at BabyPlays.

11.  Designer handbags, sunglasses, and jewelry.  Instead of shelling out for the latest trend, you can rent the latest look and satisfy your inner fashionista at Avelle.

Quick Link: Urban Beekeeping for Beginners

For any of you Eco Warriors who are thinking of keeping bees, here’s a helpful link to get you started.

Plan NOW for your garden

Recycla has written before about how she is an avid gardener. Her goal for this year is to grow as much of her family’s food as she can fit into her 10′ X 40′ plot, as well as some containers and a few other locations in her yard.

Even though it’s still cold and snowy outside, Recycla and some of the other Eco Women are already working on various gardening projects, all of which involve reusing materials and saving money in the process.

For example, Recycla is saving her plastic gallon milk jugs. She’ll cut off the bottoms and wash them thoroughly and then have cloches to protect her tender plants this spring. A gardener could also use 2 liter plastic bottles for this purpose.

Recycla is also saving her Stonyfield Farm yogurt tubs. Later on, she’ll cut the sides into strips to make ID markers for her plants.  After that, when the markers outlive their usefulness, Recycla will recycle them with the rest of her #5 plastics.

Recycla will occasionally have an aluminum pie pan and she’s saving those to tie to her tomato cages and (cross your fingers) scare off the deer. If any of her CD’s chip or scratch badly, she’ll use them for the same purpose.

Recycla also saves all her newspapers, tears them up, and puts them in her compost bins to add as more “brown” matter. Eco Lassie is saving her newspapers too, in order to use for suppressing weeds.  She puts down a thick layer (8-10 sheets) and covers with mulch, compost, pine needles, straw, etc.  In addition to killing weeds, the newspaper also attracts earthworms, which will not only eat the newspaper, they’ll improve the soil with their castings.

Enviro Girl reports that she is saving her egg cartons to start seeds in. She also uses ice cream cartons, sour cream tubs, and other food containers to collect her harvest in and then share the bounty with friends and neighbors — particularly when it’s berry season and she has pints and pints to share.

These are just a few of the many possibilities available to you.  Tell the Eco Women:  What materials do you save and then reuse in your garden?

Seedy Thoughts

Gardens. Not my priority these days with the snow blowing and the ground frozen, but the seed catalogs call and I’m getting ready to crack them open and begin making lists (you know, things I need, things I want, things I lust for but will never grow in Zone 5…).

But before we begin the annual foray into garden catalogs, I’m impelled to speak on the subject of seeds. Heirloom seeds, that is. The au natural, free range, cage free organic seed.

Most seeds on the market are hybrid seeds. Hybrid means they’ve been tweaked genetically to perform a particular way. Hybrid seeds are native plant seeds adjusted to:

* produce their fruit faster
* tolerate cooler/warmer climates
* resist pests and diseases
* produce MORE than their granola-crunching, hemp-wearing Heirloom cousins

Hybrid seeds are also genetically altered to be used only once for that year’s growing season, so you have to buy new seeds every season and remain a constant customer to Monsanto.

The benefits of hybrid seeds sound pretty great, and in many cases they are, but often the genetic alterations bring on other side effects such as:

* blander, less flavorful fruit
* one huge harvest time (1-2 weeks) and then the plant is spent
* sometimes less productivity as the plant’s strength is disease/pest resistance, not fruit production

I’ve been planting Heirloom Seeds, seeds native to our planet, seeds best suited for where I live and seeds that produce wonderful tasting food for me throughout the growing season. The Heirloom Seeds are the same sort our ancestors planted in their gardens and the seeds keep from season to season, as long as 3-5 years sometimes.

I harvested the Improved Tendergreen beans I planted last spring every week starting in July through October. I’ve never heard of a hybrid bean plant with that capability–usually they produce a bushel of beans in a 1-2 week period and then they’re done. Late afternoon when I wanted a side dish of beans with supper I’d head into the garden with a bowl and pick until it was full. I did this as often as I wished and I still had plenty to freeze for using in the winter. I’d rather eat freshly picked all summer and into the fall than eat fresh picked for a week or two and have so much at one time that I start hating it. This is a problem many gardeners have (hence the Zucchini and Cucumber Assaults from well-intended and desperate neighbors every August) and a good reason to quit vegetable gardening altogether.

If you want a garden that produces a harvest for a few months, in amounts that don’t bring you to your knees begging for mercy, Heirloom Seeds are the way to go. Unlike my neighbors who were buried in bland-tasting zucchini plants for a couple of weeks, I had one or two to harvest every week over a few months and mine had a bright, crisp flavor the hybrid zucchini lack. Mine weren’t as big, but as is the case with many things, bigger isn’t better. Especially with zucchini!

The Red-Cored Chantenay carrot also treated me pretty well last summer, coming up in a gradual fashion. I’ve enjoyed Turk’s Turban and Delicata squashes that have unique flavor and excellent staying power when stored in a cool dry place. Progress No. 9 peas performed just like their bean cousins, coming in slow and steady all summer and early fall. I can’t rave enough about the Bloomsdale Long Standing spinach or the Mr. Stripey tomato’s fabulous flavor. My taste buds woke up when I ate the produce from Heirloom plants and the variety available–over fifteen varieties of tomatoes, a dozen kinds of squash–it’s really astounding.

Try planting Heirloom Seeds or Plants this spring. You’ll enjoy a more flavorful harvest and a longer season of fresh produce from your garden. And you’ll continue a tradition that goes back thousands of years.

In closing, an old garden joke: What do you call a man with no arms and no legs sitting in a hole? Phil.
(groan)

Homemade lip balm and moisturizer

Ever since the Green Mommy became pregnant with Girl Wonder, she has started educating herself on safer personal care products. She searched through Skin Deep, trying to find better alternatives to the cosmetics, lotions and deodorants she used.

When it comes to the products she uses directly on Girl Wonder, though, she works even harder to find the safest options. The Green Mommy knows she can’t put her in a bubble and protect her from every toxin out there, but for things she has direct control over, she’ll do her best to go the healthiest route.

This winter has been especially windy and cold here in Metropolis, which is doing a real number on their skin. Moisturizer and lip balm are a must these days. Many moisturizers on the “safer” side still often contain chemicals that the Green Mommy just doesn’t feel comfortable putting on her baby’s skin. She had heard about others making their own lip balm but she thought it would be time consuming and difficult. Well, it’s neither! It’s so easy, in fact, that she’s now making moisturizer — and shampoo is next on the list!

There’s no “icky” stuff like chemicals in these gems below. The most time-consuming part is purchasing all the ingredients. With your first batch, you may ask if it’s worth it with each of the  individual purchases, but when you then think about how many batches you’ll get from it all, you’ll change your mind. These make perfect gifts, by the way, and they’re a great project to work on with young girls who you want to steer in the direction of “safer” personal care products. Visit your local health food store — they should have everything you’ll need.

The following recipes have been taken from The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Organic Living by Eliza Sarasohan and Sonia Weiss. The book is fantastic and has recipes for your face, body,hair and more.

Use recycled small jelly jars for the lip balm or other glass or plastic containers (#5 is best since they can take the heat) from used personal care products. Just be sure to wash them well before using them. If you need to buy containers, check out this site.

The “Balm” (lip or cuticle cream)

1 Tablespoon beeswax
3 Tablespoons sweet almond oil
1 teaspoon honey
8 – 10 drops of essential oil

1) In a small saucepan, melt beeswax with sweet almond oil over low heat. When the wax is melted, remove from heat. Add honey and stir well. When the mixture begins to cool, but before it gets too thick, add essential oils a few drops at a time and stir to mix. Pour into small jars and let cool.

2) The glossiness of the lip balm is determined by how much oil you use. This recipe has a slight gloss. If less is desired, reduce the amount of sweet almond oil by 1 teaspoon.

Variations: If making lip balm, try combining a couple of drops of peppermint essential oil with orange, lemon or lime; if making cuticle cream, benzoin essential oil helps heal cracked cuticles and works well with one or more of the following: lavender, Roman chamomile, tea tree, neroli, palmarosa, sandalwood, jasmine.

Yields: 1/3 cup balm
Cook time: 10 minutes
Serving size: 1/4 teaspoon balm

Lube Ya (moisturizer for hands and body)

A very rich, very smooth lotion with a slight coconut scent (smells like chocolate!) that dry skin will eat right up. A good one for areas that take a beating and where skin can get especially dry, like knees and elbows.

1/2 cup grated coconut butter
2 Tablespoons coconut oil
4 Tablespoons sesame oil
2 Tablespoons avocado oil
2 Tablespoons grated beeswax

Combine all ingredients in a medium bowl and set in a pan filled with an inch or two of water (this is a bain-marie, or water bath). Melt over a medium heat, then pour into a glass jar. Stir and let cool.

Yields 1 cup plus 2 Tablespoons lotion.
Cook time: 15 minutes
Serving size: 1 Tablespoon lotion

If you’re not able to whip up batches now, check out Recycla’s post from this past Tuesday on great winter skin care products you can buy in stores.

Simplify your life

Every year at this time, Recycla craves simplicity and order.  After the excesses of the holidays (food, decorations, parties, etc.), she’s ready to have LESS in her life.

Based on the magazines that Recycla is seeing in the grocery store check-out line, most of us want to simplify our lives.  So with this in mind, Recycla and the other Eco Women have come up with a list of ideas to help you achieve your goals, as well as reduce your footprint on Planet Earth:

First of all, pick up all the stuff that’s lying around and declutter like crazy.  Recycle all your old magazines and newspapers.  Clear the mess off your kitchen counters.  Pick up whatever is lying on the floor.  Clean out your closets.  Check Earth 911 to see what you can recycle.

Think about your possessions.  Do you really all that stuff?

Do you have anything you can sell on Craigslist or eBay?  Alternately, give your excess stuff to someone else, donate it to a nonprofit, or Freecycle it.

Next, give your house a really good deep cleaning.  Click here, here, and here for more on eco cleaning products.

[For more suggestions about cleaning and de-cluttering, check out the Fly Lady, whose website is a godsend for busy people all over the world.]

Once your house is cleaned and de-cluttered, don’t bring more stuff in.  Seriously, do you need more knick-knacks or throw pillows?  No, you do not.  Buy only what you need.  Think long and hard about what comes into your home.

Use your local library instead of buying books.  If you really want to buy a book for keeps, support your local used bookstores.  Also, check out Paperback Swap.

Instead of buying big ticket items, like power tools, steam cleaners, and more, either borrow from a neighbor or rent one.  Why buy and store something that you only need once or twice a year?

Take a good long look at your life.  Are you happy with it?  What can you change for the better?  The Eco Women suggest that you slow down a bit and enjoy each day as much as you can.

Drive less, walk and bike more — it’s good for you and good for Planet Earth.

Eat real foods and not processed garbage.  Plan your meals once a week so that you know what you’re eating each day and are not tempted to buy McCrap.  By skipping fast food and cooking more, you’re taking care of yourself and, again, Planet Earth benefits.  Your meals don’t need to be elaborate multi-course affairs; for example, a pot of soup can be simple to make, while still nourishing your body.

Plant a garden or simply grow some herbs in your windowsill.  Having that connection with nature is important for everyone.  [For tips on getting started, click here and here.]

Finally, bird feeders kind of slow a person down.  As Enviro Girl recently told Recycla, “I feed the birds in the winter and going outside once a week to fill the feeders and standing at the window to watch them fly through every day for a few moments is a peaceful, very Zen thing.”

Tell the Eco Women:  What steps have you taken (or plan to take) to simplify your life this year?

Photo credits, top to bottom:  MarthaStewart.com, Yahoo Images, Yahoo Images.

Eco Hero: Beth Terry

I first heard about Beth Terry about a year ago when someone directed me to her blog Fake Plastic Fish.  Beth is a modern day crusader–her mission?  To rid the world of plastic.  She began at home and documents with unflinching honesty the plastic she uses EVERY MONTH.  At first I was skeptical, I mean, our lives are entrenched in plastic–everything my grandmother once bought a metal/wood/cloth version of is reproduced in plastic today.  In fact, it’s incredibly difficult to find an alternative.

But the environment matters THAT MUCH to Beth Terry.  The Great Pacifc Ocean Patch worries her.  Clogged water ways concern her.  Overflowing landfills disturb her.  Chemicals leaching out of plastic products and irreversably into our environment bother her.  On the top of her blog you read this:

Our oceans are filling up with plastic: plastic that harms wildlife and never biodegrades; plastic that enters the food chain and leaches toxic chemicals. This blog is a record of my journey to live with as little unnecessary plastic as possible. Won’t you join me? Fake plastic fish may be cute, but if we don’t solve our plastic problem, they could be the only kind we have left….

Beth Terry does more than reduce her use of plastic every year, she galvanizes support for plastic-free living by getting behind plastic bag bans (and for this Enviro Girl adores her–plastic bags are the bane of her existence living in the country like she does–she picks up hundreds of them on her property every year).  She suggests alternatives to plastic products and plastic-packaged products.  She’s a zealot, but she’s not unrealistic.  She researches her topics well and applies herself to this mission of A Plastic-Free World with breathtaking singlemindedness.  She contributes to BlogHer and convinced Brita to begin recycling their water filters.  Beth Terry IS an Eco Hero.

Below is an  educational video starring Beth–watch it!  She does more than point out how much plastic we use, she advises on how to use less.  Then go to her web site, Fake Plastic Fish, and subscribe.  The Eco Women take their hats off and salute Beth Terry, Eco Hero.

Quick Link: Save money on eco products

Looking to save money on your favorite eco products?  Click here for an article that tells you how.

Fast Fact: Lost land

Every year in the United States, we pave over roughly 1.3 million acres of formerly unpaved land.

For more about what you can do to save undeveloped spaces, visit the Nature Conservancy or the Sierra Club.


Fast Fact courtesy of the Daily Green.

Winter Skin Care for Eco Warriors

Ever since winter arrived, Recycla has been doing battle with her old nemesis — Cold Dry Air. As soon as the temperature dips into the 40s and lower, Recycla’s skin starts to dry out and even flake off.

Recycla’s dry skin issues go back 30 years to when she was in elementary school and her fingertips would crack and bleed.  Unfortunately, it was a great many years before she learned not only the importance of applying lotion proactively, but also using the right lotion for the job.  For a long time, she bought a basic body lotion from the drug store and then used it for all parts of her body.  It has only been in the past few years that she’s learned that she needs different lotions, balms, and serums for her hands, feet, body, and face.  Recycla has also learned to stash lotion and lip balm in a variety of places — her purse, her car, her desk at work, her kitchen, her  bathroom, etc. — so that she always has what she needs close at hand.

Recycla has made a determined effort to find products that don’t contain parabens and other yucky stuff.  Through trial and error, she has finally found lotions to suit all of her needs.

Here are Recycla’s  favorite products from head to toe, as well as the recommendations of the other Eco Women:

HEAD

For the face, Avalon Organics and Alba Botanica both make really nice moisturizers.  In particular, Alba’s Jasmine and Vitamin E Cream smells divine and does an amazing job.  A little goes a long way, so Recycla only has to buy moisturizer once or twice a year.

Around the eyes, however, Recycla needs a little extra help combating dry, irritated skin, so she pulls out the big guns with Burt’s Bees Naturally Ageless Intensive Repairing Serum.  One drop of this around her eyes every night has made an amazing difference this winter.  No more red, flaky skin!

On her mouth, Recycla’s favorite lip balm is by Honeybee Gardens.  It’s not at all greasy, yet gets the job done.  As for the rest of the Eco Women, the Green Mommy uses Say Yes to Carrots Lip Balm, Eco Lassie loves Aveda lip balm, and Captain Compost is a fan of Burt’s Bees.  For more on lip balms, check out the Eco Women’s reviews here and here.

HANDS

For dry hands, Recycla is a big fan of Badger Balm’s Organic Healing Balm.  This is seriously greasy stuff, but it gets the job done and Recycla’s fingers no longer crack and bleed each winter.

Eco Lassie swears by Aveda Hand Relief and also Duluth Trading Company No-Crack Hand Cream, which she says is great for serious chapping.

Enviro Girl uses Kiss My Face hand creme (grapefruit + bergamot) She says, “It smells like Froot Loops and a little goes a long way.  I LOVE it because it lasts and lasts and doesn’t soak in and disappear, but really seals and heals my skin.”

BODY

Recycla has tried a lot of body lotions, including some made by Burt’s Bees, Avalon Organics, and Indigo Wild.  Honestly, none has worked as well for her as Aveeno Skin Relief Moisturizing Lotion.  If anyone has any recommendations, she’d love to hear them.

FEET

Recycla uses two different foot products:  Badger Balm’s Organic Foot Balm and also Natralia Heel Balm.  Both work quite well.

Eco Lassie says that she’s a slave to Aveda Foot Relief.  She slathers it on, then puts on thick socks to help the lotion absorb into her skin.

~ ~ ~

So those are just some of the Eco Women’s favorite products to combat winter’s drying effects on their skin.

There is also another possibility.  If you want to really understand what goes into your skin care products, then perhaps you might want to try making your own.  That’s not such a far-fetched idea and the Green Mommy is going to cover this very topic on Friday.

Tell the Eco Women:  What are your favorite eco products to combat dry skin?