My son is starting kindergarten in a few weeks, but our PTO (which is arguably managed better than most companies) has already assessed all the incoming kindergarten parents’ skill sets and competencies for various volunteer opportunities. No shocker here, I was drafted for the Green Team. I was enthusiastic because my initial thought was that I could be really helpful given that green living, is well, my day job.
We haven’t even had our first meeting yet (it’s Wednesday), but I’ve already figured out these parents are WAY ahead of the curve. Led by the dynamic duo of Jamie Scarborough Green and Sun Woo Khang and formed last year, the group has managed to achieve immediate results, including:
* switching from disposable to reusable cups for parent coffees, PTO meetings, etc. One thing I loved is that they asked the whole school to donate old coffee mugs to make this happen–what a great idea!
* switching to compostable disposables for large events ranging from the school fun run to graduation
* developed good relationships and support from Angino Farm (a community farm) and Whole Foods. The school has a garden supported by students and parent volunteers and Whole Foods helps with composting.
* shared the results of the school’s energy efficiency audit and will assumedly lobby the city for improvements
* set up a Big Tent online community which has parental advice for things like earth-friendly school supplies. It is also linked with the Greater Boston Green Schools community to share ideas and get inspiration. My personal favorite thing on the site was this video that the kids in the school made to encourage people to reduce, reuse and recycle.
The project plan for this year includes improving the quality of school lunch, tackling pesticides, greening over 15 events, pursuing lots of kid and parent education, and potentially joining in broader events like the Waste Free Wednesdays, Green School Days, and Litter Free lunches–and oh yes, finding a HEPA vacuum to be donated to the custodians.
What I noticed from this amazing, intensive project plan, however, is how many initiatives still need a point person. If your school has a green team, I am confident that Jamie and Sunwoo’s counterparts at your school are looking for foot soldiers who are willing to tackle a projects large and small. Imagine what would happen if 10-15 parents picked just one Green Team thing to help lead for their school–whether it’s a big thorny issue like pesticide use or being an event “Waste Warrior.” That project plan would start having “done” next to lots of items. And fast! I’m looking at the list and can see several actions that fit my time, skills and interests, and I’m looking forward to checking my first item off the list.
If your school doesn’t have a green team, there are lots of online resources to help get you started, on sites like Greenschools or Eco-Schools. If you need one more reason? You can get points on Practically Green for joining your school’s green team!
This post was submitted as part of the Green Moms Carnival.
Well, it’s that time of the year again. Summer went by quickly, didn’t it? And although it’s sad to leave beach days, family barbeques, and all-around summertime relaxing behind, you and your family have another journey to start: the new school year!
This time of the year is always overwhelming. So we here at Practically Green hope to make life a little easier by offering a round- up of all the great green back-to-school ideas we’ve been hearing, our personal picks for eco-friendly school supplies and of course, actions that will earn you points, points, points!
Let’s start with the small stuff. Staples’ Eco Easy brand offers some great eco-friendly mechanical pencils made from 72% recycled content. They also have pens made from 62% recycled plastic. If you’re looking for something fun, we like O’BON’s colorful fruit pencils made from 100% recycled newspaper. Papermate has cool biodegradable pens and mechanical pencils.
Binders and Folders.
Naked Binder has two-pocket folders and binders made of 100% recycled and recyclable materials and 97% post consumer waste. ReBinder sells folders made of recycled fibers and binders without toxic vinyl material. Staples’ Eco Easy brand has eco-friendly view binders. Check out these folders from Sasquatch with some earthy, interesting designs. Seventh Generation also has great suggestions for writing utensils and notebooks!
Notebooks.
How about a notebook that looks like giant
falcon plumage? O’BON has a large selection of eco-friendly notebooks, like the non-toxic Sugarcane Series, which is made from sugarcane paper, soy-based inks. We also liked Ecojot’s spiral notebooks. And if you’re already at Staples, their Eco Easy brand also has recycled notebooks as well!
Paper.
If you’re looking for recycled paper, Staples Eco Easy has some great choices for filler and white printer paper. New Leaf Paper carries lined and copy paper made from post-consumer waste.
Art Supplies.
Feel like drawing? We like O’BON’s Wildlife colored pencils, made of recycled newspaper; and we can’t wait to try Prang Soybean crayons. Our all-time favorite markers are Crayola’s AP Certified Nontoxic, washable markers.
Backpacks.
How about a TerraCycle backpack made from old drink pouches and cookie wrappers! We also like Lands’ End eco-friendly backpack made from 100% recycled fabric. Grist also has great ideas for eco-friendly backpacks and bags.
P.S. Pop some all-natural hand sanitizer in the backpack, and earn 20 points!
We’re fans of the Environmental Working Group for many reasons, and they’ve compiled a handy green back-to-school shopping list. Want to go beyond your children’s back-to-school supplies? Consider joining greenschools, a non-profit organization whose mission is “to create greener and healthier learning environments through education and awareness.” They’ll help you tackle important, basic stuff like indoor air quality, healthy food and habits, and reducing, reusing and recycling at your school.
Transportation.
Remember that you can also earn points by walking, biking or carpooling to school. All three actions help reduce emissions and are great ways to get exercise and meet new friends. Remember to load up on the sunscreen! We have several all-natural brands for you to try.
And now, the last tip we can give you for greening your back-to-school is quite simple: Have a healthy, happy and wonderful school year!
Photo Credit: Flikr, O’BON, Crayola, ReBinder, O’BON, All Terrain, Fast Company
I’ve been on a basement-cleaning frenzy over the last few weeks, after discovering mold growing on a cardboard box. Molds not only grosses me out, it totally freaks me out for its potential ability to create airborne toxins. It is just about the only thing that could convince me to spend several gorgeous summer weekends in the basement.
My basement had a bunch of stuff that was perfectly good, but that we no longer needed or wanted, so we started creating a pile to drop off at Goodwill. It got me thinking what an absolute marvel, and how totally green, organizations like Goodwill are. Did you know that:
Last year, more than 66 million people donated to Goodwill. Goodwill accepts your new or gently used items — like clothing, appliances, electronics and furniture — and sells them in our well-known Goodwill retail stores. There are more than 2,400 Goodwill donation locations in the United States and Canada.
The sales of your donations help fund job training programs, employment placement services and other community-based programs for people who have disabilities, lack education or job experience, or face employment challenges.
In fact, donating clothes to a charity is so green that you can earn 20 points for it at Practically Green. But I never really thought much about how much benefit my basement stuff would provide until I got news from an industry friend, Park Howell, about a massive fire at the logistics and operations center for their local Goodwill. Without those donations, the 36 community programs they run don’t have funds so they are doing a MASSIVE drive (if you are reading us from Arizona, please donate!). I never realized that cleaning my basement isn’t just green, it creates jobs!
Then last night, I had the opportunity to visit another key player in the re-use market, Gazelle.com. Gazelle gives you cash for your unwanted gadgets (or if there isn’t any value, you can still send them in to be responsibly recycled). They offer their services directly, but also power trade-in programs at places like Costco and Sears. I got to see part of their “logistics and operations center” and it’s really a marvel (and a perfect home for my box of random electronic stuff). Here are some photos:

First shipments arrive and are packed into bins and contents are verified.
Then each bag is sorted into bins labelled for every kind of gadget.They have bins for everything from Blackberries to iPhones to Camcorders.
Every item is then inspected and readied for reuse or recycling. The inspection station ensures data is wiped and the product is functioning appropriately. It then goes into a huge inventory room until someone repurchases the item through eBay or other outlets or it is dismantled and recycled appropriately.
Of course it’s great to get cash for electronics. But what Gazelle.com has helped create is a way to extend the life of gadgets. This is really green because it combats the issue of perceived or planned obsolescence in technology AND helps keep e-waste from being disposed of improperly. By using Gazelle or services like theirs, you also can get 10 points for recycling your old computer, 10 points for recycling your cell phone, and 10 points for recycling other electronics on Practically Green. The final “feel good” benefit? These services makes technology available to people who might otherwise not be able to afford it.
So–one eco-friendly basement-cleaning later, and I’ve created jobs, battled planned obsolescence, kept e-waste out of landfill, helped someone access digital technology, and cleaned up our indoor air quality. And oh yes, earned 50 points on Practically Green! Who knew basement cleaning could be so rewarding?
It’s renewable, recyclable, biodegradable and 100% natural. If we had an award here at Practically Green for an all-around environmentally friendly and sustainable material, it would be the winner.
Can you guess what it is? Cork!
Yep, that little stopper in your wine bottle is an across-the-board eco-friendly substance. Which also means that it is prime recycling material. But we rarely think to collect all of those wine bottle stoppers piling up in our kitchen drawers and dispose of them efficiently. In fact, they’re pretty easy to lose track of once you pop open a bottle of your favorite organic wine or bubbly.
The useful life of cork is extended through recycling. Almost 60% of the world’s cork is used in wine production, so that’s a lot of cork that could be diverted from a landfill and used to manufacture a range of products such as floor tiles, place mats, memo boards, coasters, shoes and bags. Organizations dedicated to recycling natural cork, such as Cork ReHarvest and ReCORK by Amorim hope recycling will raise awareness of the usefulness of cork and help to create a greater demand for it.
Recycling also saves resources and reduces the demand placed on cork plantations. According to Cork ReHarvest, cork forests are highly important to the planet’s ecological health because they absorb millions of tons of CO2 each year and are a vast provider of oxygen to the planet. The cork forests of the Mediterranean Basin are among the most sustainable and environmentally harvested forests in the world. Trees are not cut down to harvest cork, rather, the bark is stripped by hand every 9-12 years. (Fun fact: cork oak trees can live up to 300 years!) We can support these responsible practices by recycling and reusing cork products.
Fortunately, there are many practical uses for recycled cork. From flooring to trendy new bags from Cork Chic, the uses for recycled cork almost seem endless.
A unique way to reuse your cork stoppers is to make your own cork board or coasters. There are kits available on Amazon that supply you with the wooden frames, glue and instructions, and then you provide the cork from your favorite bottles of wine (or all the corks saved in a box in your pantry!)
But if you’re not the arts and crafts type (don’t worry, some of us aren’t) you can find cork drop-off locations in your area through ReCORK by Amorim or Cork ReHarvest. These two organizations are not only focused on recycling natural cork, but educating the public on the importance of the Mediterranean cork forests for the world’s ecological balance. Whole Foods has launched cork recycling bins in most of their locations as well.
Susan just dropped off a load of wine corks to Whole Foods and Sarah is planning to do the same. And although I have another 6 months (not that I’m counting) until I can buy a bottle of wine, I plan on recycling the cork stoppers during my Whole Foods runs…although the homemade coasters are tempting. So what do you think? Recycle your cork at one of the many locations, or are you an adventurous arts and crafts type? Either way, you can earn 10 points for this action, so give it a try!
Photo Credit: Amazon.com and Flickr
News Picks:
Five kids who are changing the world: Read about five inspiring kids who are making the world a better place. Whether it’s growing organic crops and donating them to soup kitchens, or knitting home-made hats to fight hunger, these kids make us feel better about the world we live in.
How to turn an old iPod into cash: Every time you turn around, Apple is releasing a new generation of the iPod — making them smaller, more fun colors, touch screen…. (Does anyone remember the iPod with the original scroll wheel and four individual buttons?) It’s enough to give you whiplash! This article uncovers a few ways you can get cash for even the most archaic of gadgets, so you can get rid of that iPod mini collecting dust in your desk drawer. As a bonus, you can get 10 PG points for recycling your electronics.
Can we green our Planes next? Have those monthly business trips or annual family vacations put an annoyingly significant dent in your carbon footprint? Hopefully, soon this will be less of an issue. Many airlines are testing plant-based biofuels in an effort to reduce greenhouse emissions.
Multi-Media Pick:
Farmers market frenzy: Happy national farmers market week! People everywhere are becoming more interested in farmers markets, PG is lucky enough to have one right outside of our office in Boston on Tuesdays and Fridays this summer. You can find one near you here. Get 5 points on Practically Green for buying local produce. Check out this video featuring organic farmer Rebecca Schwen, as she discusses the growing interest in farmers markets.
New and cool pick:

Photo Credit:http://www.thekitchn.com/thekitchn/cookware-tools/product-review-skruba-vegetable-scrubbing-gloves-120867

http://www.fastcompany.com/1614917/traveling-pants-indeed-the-closet-exchange-program-thredup-adds-kids-clothes
ThredUP is a kids’ clothing swap site that lets parents exchange boxes of outgrown clothing for ones that fit, all in the convenience of your own home. Public relations and Marketing director Karen Fein opened up to PG about how the ingenious “Netflix for kids’ clothing” idea got started — and, of course, about what steps she takes to live a greener life!
How did you guys come up with this brilliant idea?
Founders James Reinhart and Oliver Lubin realized there wasn’t an efficient way to exchange clothing online. All of the outlets available to exchange clothing, such as Ebay, consignment shopping, and craigslist were just really time-consuming and inefficient. When a child outgrows one shirt, they outgrow their entire wardrobe, and if you think about putting all of that on Ebay, a parent has to list all of the items, take pictures of them, set the biddings, monitor the auctions, etc. Parents just do not have the time to do this every six months. The goal was to create an easy way for parents to exchange outgrown clothing for clothes that fit.

How did ThredUp get started, and what did people think?
The site originally started as a men’s and women’s shirt-swapping site. There were a lot of people that really loved it, but it was more of a hobby than a necessity. We realized we could use this same concept for kids to help families cut down on waste and consumption and we were shocked at the response we got! We found that because nothing like this had existed before, people were really waiting for it. People were really excited to share ThredUP with their friends and family, because it’s such an easy way to save time, money and help the environment.
Speaking of the environment, on your website you discuss teaching kids the importance of green living by creating a “thredbank”, can you explain this a little?
If you have an interest in helping your children learn about the importance of sustainable living, ThredUP can help with that. By telling your kids to set aside clothes when they outgrow them, they soon realize that these clothes can be exchanged for “new gifts,” or clothes that fit them. It reinforces the fact that you don’t always need to buy new things, you don’t always need to throw out old things, and that used clothing has value. We encourage parents to get their kids involved in the process and have them create their own “thredbank” of outgrown clothes. It can feel like Christmas morning to kids to get a box of new clothing completely for them, and they can feel proud that they took part in that exchange.
Ok, we want to ask, how green are you?
Our company is incredibly green. Personally, I take all of those simple green steps that everyone should take, like using a thermos instead of a water bottle, turning your water off when brushing your teeth, recycling always, or making sure to turn the lights out. From a clothing aspect, I take part in swap parties and shop at consignment stores. I use the options that are out there for adults right now, to promote sharing what we already have in order to cut down on waste and consumption, rather than shopping for something new and throwing clothes away. (Which I would never do.)
Now that you’ve told us some of your preferred green actions, we’re always curious to know what your least favorite green action taken you’ve taken is, or something you’re working on?
I haven’t quite made the transition to washing my clothes in cold water.
What more do you want to know about being green?
I think that for most people the main reasons they don’t take certain green steps is because they’re not necessarily convenient. It’s always good to learn about ways to go green that are not only incredibly easy, but can also save time and money. If you have those extra benefits, why not take the green option, and why not cut down on waste?
We couldn’t agree more! One last question, is there any way that you track the things you do everyday to be eco-friendly?
Not me personally, but ThredUP is about to start tracking how much waste we are saving in terms of kid’s clothing. We’re making an assumption that for every box of kid’s clothes, half of that box would normally have been thrown out and ended up in a landfill. 20 billion pounds of clothing and textiles end up in U.S. landfills every year, and every 3-6 months kids outgrow their clothing, making it a large part of that statistic.
Get PG “stuff” points for using ThredUP! Get five points for getting used clothing with this action, and get another five points for giving away/selling used clothing with this action.
You can find out more information and start swapping on ThredUP here.
Follow ThredUP on Twitter @ thredUP_Kids .
News Picks:
Trash-Free for an Entire Year: Could you live trash-free? We at PG are always trying to find ways to make less trash, and this couple is definitely a prime example. A couple in Oregon found that not only was it possible to live almost trash free for a year, it was “easy.”
Playground Safety Hazard: Please use caution when taking your children to the park for some summer fun. From the 1970s until 2003, some wooden playground equipment was pressure-treated with a substance that (shockingly) contained arsenic.
How Green are Your Favorite Brands: You might want to think before shimmying into a new pair of jeans. A new rating system has been developed for some 100 well-known apparel and footwear brands. Just as appliances have Energy Star ratings, the “Eco Index” will eventually tell consumers the environmental impact of their purchases. The Index hopes to encourage brands to be thoughtful of the environment when designing apparel, and it gives brands that strive to be eco-friendly the credit they deserve.
Multi-Media Pick:
The Environmental Impact of a Pair of 501s: View the life cycle of one of America’s most popular brands of denim. You may be as shocked as we were to find out that to make a single pair of 501s, 3,480.5 liters of water are used. This is the equivalent to running the garden hose for 106 minutes!
New and Cool Pick:
Energy Saving Night-Light: Skip the plug-in night-light to keep those monsters away for the kids and get them a cool, solar powered Sun or Moon Jar! The jar works by being placed in direct sunlight during the day (on a windowsill for example), and automatically illuminates in the dark.
It’s a hazy week for news – kids settle into the July routine, the stock market rolls up and down, the oil spill lingers, generals come and go, and extreme heat seizes the Northeast. Still, we have to eat.
With hot weather in mind, Practically Green served a dozen no-cook recipes and, due to an in-pouring of additional and excellent tasty culinary ideas from all of you, we’ll run a sequel soon.
My favorite takeaway: buy fresh ripe fruits and veggies, wash and chop them when you get home, put them in the fridge, and presto! Your fridge is an inviting treasure chest, and not a stale, forbidding cavern. A-ha!
A couple of weeks ago, Slate’s intrepid Green Lantern reporter Nina Shen Rastogi asked the question,
“what’s the best way to keep a fully stocked, varied fridge and pantry without creating lots of unnecessary waste?”
The answers are in. We’ve gathered highlights, ranging from obvious to uncommon — and all of them practical, green & appetizing, we hope. Bon appétit!
Plan ahead.
My husband and I plan out all of our meals for the week in advance, then we go to the grocer and buy only what we need for that list. We do a smaller shop mid week to top up on fruit, milk, etc but we find we waste very little.
Roasting chicken? Use the whole bird.
My brother claims I get more out of a chicken than anyone he’s seen, so here’s what I/we do: First, roasted with herbs, garlic and olive oil for dinner. That night, carve it all the way – put the “good” chicken in the fridge; pour the juices from the roasting pan in a gallon freezer bag, along with the bones, and freeze. Use the fridge chicken over the next few days for chicken dinner, sandwiches, tacos, chicken salad (w/ tarragon–mmm..), omelettes, etc….
or… Chicken Quesadillas with Avocado Cucumber Salsa. Thanks to the New York Times for this recipe.
Draw pictures of your groceries on a fridge whiteboard.
I also tend to get carried away at the farmers market. Then everything gets put away in the fridge and two weeks later I excavate dessicated garlic scapes (or something) from the back of the crisper drawer. My husband also forgets that I got berries for his cereal and they just sit there. To avoid all this, I have a small magnetic whiteboard on the fridge. I keep a list of the fresh produce on it – sometimes I draw pictures (strawberries are easy, broccoli is hard). It keeps things top-of-mind, so I can think of good uses.
Read MFK Fisher’s book How to Cook a Wolf. While slightly out of date, it shows just how much you can get out of food and avoid waste.
Note on How to Cook a Wolf: a Bible on food appreciation, written by the legendary gastronome Mary Frances Kennedy Fisher, and published in 1942 (at the height of World War 2 food rations), this book deserves its own post. Sample memorable line: “Probably one of the most private things in the world is an egg, until it is broken.”
Visit PracticallyGreen.com to learn new ways to eat fresh and local, compost happily, and green your kitchen this summer!
Drawing the Line
We’ve had a red, white, blue, and green holiday here, drawing the window shades (it’s a heat wave), using our new Skoy cloths, hanging laundry out to dry, and composting every last carrot shaving. I even detoxed my sponge in the microwave for the first time ever (high for 60 seconds).
On the whole, my delightful (and eco-obsessed) husband and I are in agreement on such household matters, but I am learning that there are certain actions that will never take seed in him.
For example, every time I go into our bedroom I see that the shades have been opened, even at noon in a heat wave. Who can blame him? He wants to see the view. I say nothing, simply close the shade again.
For another thing, he rinses every dinner dish so completely that there’s absolutely no need to then place it into the dishwasher. You can put his dishes right back in the cabinet. I have explained to him that his obsessive rinsing is not only unnecessary, it’s wasteful (of water, of the energy to heat the water, of washing the same dish twice, of his time), and he nods, and he keeps doing it his way.
Which brings me to my point: There will be times when your loved ones do not do what you want them to do, no matter what. They may have their reasons (e.g., the view; or maybe he’s solving the world’s problems while he’s rinsing those dishes) — or they may not. Regardless, it’s important to know where you draw the line. I do not wish to be a bossy nag, of course!! And probably you don’t either. But still.
Last week I caught up with our thoughtful friend Lisa Thomson, who writes the marvelous daily blog Mom’s Green Shopping List. Among other things, we talked about this very subject: where to draw the line with one’s spouse. Here’s Lisa’s story, which is about drawing the line and a whole lot more:
What I want to tell people is, you don’t have to change everything overnight. You can do it slowly, one thing at a time. My husband and I have a paper towel war. He wants paper towels. I stopped buying them. I wouldn’t get them. I said: Go buy them yourself! He hates going to the store. So for six or eight months we’ve been without paper towels. I have a basket of rags in the kitchen, another basket at the top of the basement stairs going down to the laundry. It’s fine, he’s used to it. So, I tried to get him to stop using Kleenex to blow his nose, but he won’t do that. Not happening. I stopped bugging him on that.
It took me eight years to get pregnant. Finally I got pregnant — and right away my husband was diagnosed with chronic leukemia. He was given five years to live. Our family doctor recommended a book called Foods That Fight Cancer. This book was amazing to me. I realized for the first time that foods affect your body: whatever you put in your body affects you. I completely changed how I eat, how I cook. Specifically, we eat a lot of blueberries. We use lots of spices – turmeric, cumin, ginger. We eat greens, broccoli, cauliflower. We avoid processed food and sugars. Sugars feed cancer.
I read labels on everything. I can spend a lot of doing this in a store – I get asked three times if I need help but No, I’m just reading the labels. I like to read books, too. Right now I’m reading Building Green, Planting Green Roofs and Living Walls, 101 Ways You Can Help Save the Planet Before You’re 12! (It’s very good.) Global Warming for Dummies, Ecological Gardening.
My daughter Lydia, aged four, is so aware that if I leave a light on for an extra minute, she’s on me. We were walking the other day — Lydia, our dog Brutus, and me. She said, look, Mom, there’s a blue butterfly on Brutus’s nose! I said, Oh, I wonder where that came from. She replied, It flew down from Saturn because Saturn had to cut down all their trees to make toilet paper. She has the biggest imagination.
Visit Lisa’s website MomsShoppingList.com, visit her Facebook page, and follow her on Twitter @MomsGreenList.
Here at Practically Green, we take design pretty seriously–we like things that are stylish, practical, and sustainable. Needless to say, we get excited about new products that include all of those qualities! We just discovered two items worth talking about. The first is a lamp made out of plastic drink bottles, designed by Sarah Turner. Sarah’s ingenious design won her the grand prize for Inhabitat’s Spring Greening Contest. (Did I mention she is British? Could she get any cooler!?)…
How did you start your green journey? Were you raised to be eco-conscious?
I have always been into making things from waste materials. Growing up, nothing in my house was thrown away, cereal packets, tin cans, plastic bags… it was all kept for me to make my creations from! Then, when I was at university I wrote my dissertation on recycling in design and decided to make some products made from waste materials. This is when I first started to make lighting from wasted plastic drinks bottles. It’s something that is thrown away so much here in the UK and I’m sure in other countries too (only 5.5% of plastic bottles are recycled in the UK). So I wanted to make something beautiful from them.
How do you incorporate other green habits into your lifestyle?
I do the general things a lot of people do nowadays. I reuse/recycle my own rubbish. I am a bit of a hoarder so anything I think I can use again gets kept and put to one side. I use public transport or walk everywhere. I have been able to drive for years but haven’t justified the need for a car. I am lucky that the city I live in has a good public transport system…For my lamps, I collect the bottles from local cafes and households. Of course as word has spread amongst friends and family about my design projects I have many volunteers collecting their bottles and donating them to me.
How does she do it? The plastic bottles are cleaned and sandblasted, then cut and formed into beautiful shapes. For the Cola lamp (shown in the top picture), each strip of plastic is then attached to a recycled card base and secured using its own bottle top.
Itching to get your own handmade Sarah Turner lamp? Her lamps aren’t sold in the US yet, but they are available to purchase online at http://www.sarahturner.co.uk/. For international sales inquiries just email sales@sarahturner.co.uk.
The 2nd item we are going gaga over is this paper shredder turned coffee table we found on Design*Sponge. Pigeontail Design is behind this sleek and clever table rightfully called the Papervore.

Do you love these designs? Do you own a piece of sustainable furniture that you want others to know about? Share with us!
Photo Credit: http://www.sarahturner.co.uk/news.html http://www.sarahturner.co.uk/bluebell1.html http://www.designspongeonline.com/2010/06/thanks-for-shredding-my-paper-coffee-table.html
We discovered MaryLea Harris on her blog, PinkandGreenMama, and we wanted her to adopt us immediately. Her house must be such a fun place, with wonderful creations and projects all over! We asked her to share a bit about safe family art activities.
Creating, playing, and exploring are essential components to my parenting philosophy. I am trying to raise my two daughters with hearts full of art. As we create and craft in our home art studio I try to think about the impact the art supplies we are using will have on the planet and my children’s’ bodies. I was a printmaker and (oil) painter in college and was exposed to some nasty chemicals. When I was a graduate art student I was breastfeeding my infant daughter and did not want to expose my body or hers to toxic substances; I made sure that all of my artwork was created using non-toxic art materials. It presented me with a challenge to find new ways to create, but in doing so I also achieved results and a level of work that was very satisfying.
What can you do as a parent who wants to create with your children but who wants to avoid dangerous and toxic art materials? Start with known brands that are green. Ask yourself if you could make your own or recycle and repurpose something for your project.
- In our home studio we use rags instead of paper towels (just as we do in our house)
- We use homemade play dough made with 1 cup of flour, ½ cup salt, 1 packet of powdered Kool-Aid (there is probably a greener alternative!) 1 cup of hot water, 3 tablespoons of oil. It smells great and my kids love it.
- Natural Wool is lovely to use in craft projects and for “felting” yourself with warm water and mild soap.
- Stockmar makes beeswax crayon blocks that are as lovely to hold and color with as they are to smell!
- Soy-based Crayon Rocks are another favorite of ours.
- Strathmore has a new line of artist papers made with 100% wind power
- Several kinds of watercolor paper, drawing paper, and sketch paper are now made with hemp.
- Artemis makes colored pencils with plant extracts for their pigments.
- Green Earth Office Supply makes pencils from recycled denim jeans and post-consumer paper.
- Acquerello Watercolor Paper is chlorine-free (as well as acid-free)
- We use Eco-Fi Felt for our felt projects, it is made from recycled post consumer plastic bottles.
- Eco Finger paints from Ecoartworks.com are great for little artists or you can look on the Internet for recipes to make your own homemade finger paint.
- Whenever my kids bring home foam craft stickers on a project from school or a friend’s birthday party, we recycle the foam stickers by turning them into stamps! I just stick them to scrap pieces of cardboard cut up from old cereal boxes, and then paint with washable paint or ink.
- White Elmer’s School Glue is another favorite in our house. It is pretty safe and approved by the public schools. Our local public school system is not allowed to use toxic art materials in their classrooms.
- Recycled paper – your child’s drawings and doodles will look just as nice on the back of a piece of paper saved from the recycling pile as it would on a blank sheet of paper. Teaching your children to work this way sets a lifelong habit to reduce-reuse-recycle, and that’s the name of the game.
- The recycling bin is a treasure chest of its own: Milk cartons, toilet paper tubes, bottle caps, plastic lids, egg cartons, tissue paper, gift wrap, aluminum foil, old sweaters and worn out clothing.
- Mother Nature. A quick walk in your own backyard will reveal a bounty of natural and non-toxic art and craft materials: leaves, flowers, pine cones, acorns, sticks and fallen branches, sand, seashells, bird feathers, insect wings, etc.
Final thought: whenever you are looking at traditional art materials for your children you should look for an AP or CP seal and avoid products with warning labels. Also ask yourself (as you would with food), “Is this something my grandmother would recognize?” Happy (safe) Crafting!
MaryLea Harris is an artist and blogger. She was an Elementary Art Teacher in the public school system for 5 years before staying home with her two daughters. She married her college sweetheart, a builder and LEED Accredited Professional. As a family they recycle, Freecycle, grow organic veggies with rain barrel water, and compost. Her kids consider their worms in the kitchen vermicomposter to be part of the household pet menagerie.
Favorite Green Action Taken: Switching to cloth napkins and installing tubular skylights with my husband in our kitchen and upstairs hallway ceilings – the natural light is fantastic.
Least Favorite Green Action Taken: Line drying laundry – the towels can be a bit crunchy but I tell myself I’m “exfoliating.” [Over-priced spa treatment for free!]
Still Working On: Giving up all non-toxic art materials and products and figuring out a “green” litter box solution for our two aging indoor cats.
Find MaryLea here: http://www.pinkandgreenmama.blogspot.com
News Picks:
40 Uses for Baking Soda: Baking soda is cheap and free of toxic chemicals, so put it to use in multiple ways! We’ve always used it in the fridge to neutralize odors: why not use it to make homemade mouthwash!
Best Baby Bike Seats: The first day of summer is Monday, June 21st! Get outside and pedal off with your little one close by you in these stylish and convenient seats….
4 Kid-safe Bug Repellents: Everyone hates getting bitten, but we don’t want to spray ourselves (or our kids!) with harmful chemicals. These options are natural & organic.
Multimedia Pick:
Planet Green’s The Fabulous Beekman Boys: Discovery’s Planet Green aired this hilarious show this week. It had us in tears, it is so funny! Who knew city boys and goats could mix?
The Fabulous Beekman Boys from mike goubeaux on Vimeo.
New and Cool Pick:
Eco-Friendly Candles: Melo candles are made of soy and fragranced with essential oils, and they are hand-poured into unique containers. Our favorite is the Field Grass scent in a vintage glass.
Photo Credit: http://www.etsy.com/listing/49065057/large-vintage-soy-candle-field-grass
News Picks:
Best Green Cleaners and Paper Products: ConsumerReports.org gives shoppers some great advice on whether or not it is worth it to buy to green versions of products like shower cleaner and dishwasher detergent. Very useful for Spring cleaning!
16 Ways to Reuse Coffee Grounds: Next time you brew a cup o’ joe, think twice about throwing out those old grounds–you could compost them or exfoliate your skin with them!
Chlorine Alternatives for Healthy and Energy Efficient Pools: Some people have chemical sensitivities to chlorine treatments in pools, so here are a few healthy, green options to clean the pool without the harsh smell, itchy skin, and discolored bathing suits…
Multimedia Link:
Jamie Oliver at TED Talk: We always loved Jamie and his Food Revolution, but after watching this video, we love him even more!
New and Cool Pick:
Reusables for Men: Still don’t know what to get dad next weekend after reading about F. Rock Carryalls for men? The guys from ReusableBags.com have put together a list of their favorite Father’s Day gift ideas. The winner? ACME Workhorse bags, which is a great alternative to plastic shopping bags. They come in a little pouch too, so Dad won’t have to be worried about people thinking he is sporting a murse (man purse!).
Photo Credit: http://www.reusablebags.com/store/acme-bags-workhorse-style-1500-p-1.html
So early last month we celebrated mothers, but now we are getting ready to celebrate dads. Not only is he just our wonderful dad, he was the eat-all-your-food-or-it-will-be-wasted guy during our childhood and the turn-off-the-lights-to-save-money guy in our teenage years; he was one of our main green influences! Father’s Day is Sunday, June 20th and everyone at PG just picked their favorite Father’s Day gift idea…
Introducing, F. Rock Carryalls for men by our favorite new sustainable designer, Nicolé Keane.
F. Rock is a Boston-based brand that designs mens’ accessories, more specifically, mens’ bags. And we don’t mean man-purses (murses?), we mean carryalls–something your hubby, dad, or married brother could carry, put their things in and not be ashamed. It all started with the designer, Nicolé Keane. I actually had the pleasure of meeting her in person (by the way, I thought I was standing in front of Audrey Hepburn!) and got to hear about F. Rock’s journey.
Nicolé originally began designing women’s handbags, but after designing with menswear fabric for a few of the bags, she found she fell in love with the concept of sustainable carryalls for men–so she made the switch. What makes these bags sustainable? Nicolé was very passionate in this area…
First, I define the “sustainability” aspect of my brand not just in terms of materials, but as a 360 degree concept that dovetails product AND production. You can’t consider one without the other. The bags fabrics are either re-claimed or recycled factory scrap fabrics (that which hits the floor while stitching or vintage suiting). The leathers are either scrap from production (think booting, dress shoes or utility belts), remnant (inconsistent weights, color or thickness) or rejects from factory production. Much of the leather I use was made for top brands in the bag business or motorcycle world. My lining is all remnant from a top upholstery company that I buy from a family owned company in Boston. My padding is recycled blanket material. All of the hardware is either purchased in New England from New England companies or made right in Rhode Island. All of the bags are made right here in Massachusetts. I work directly with a small team of stitchers who almost all have family history in the skilled craftsmanship of apparel and leather goods.
Wow. I had no idea such a stylish bag could be so green. But it got better: 2% from each purchase goes directly to eco and arts programs for urban youth. It is bag bliss! Nicolé was proud to say, “The goal from square one was to create a user-friendly, high-end/low-impact carryall that would look conventional in its quality, but have an amazing story behind it.” But I wondered if her bags would be a good match for a dad like mine, a guy who likes quality, good value, AND style…
The F. Rock man appreciates value and a product that is as useful as it is attractive. He’ll hang on to his favorite jeans or cords long after they’ve frayed because nothing else he’s seen comes close. He’ll spend a lot on a pair of shoes because he falls in love with the look and craftsmanship and will re-sole them for years to come.
Yup, that’s my dad all right. How green is Nicolé, though? Well, she puts me to shame, honestly. She grew up in a household in which everything was homemade (including a no-sugar rule!) and because of her eco-minded and natural upbringing it is second-nature to buy organic and locally-grown produce, make her own cleaning products and follow the weekday vegetarian eating regime. A few years ago she threw out the conventional stuff and has been cleaning her house with low-impact vinegar, lemon, water and baking soda ever since! Her beauty routine is all organic or homemade as well because she decided that if she didn’t know what an ingredient was or did, she wouldn’t use it. (I think this is a great rule)! She now swears by mixing olive oil, a douse of honey, and a teaspoon of organic wheat flour to create a daily face wash or body wash…she’s my idol!
So what will I be saving up for to get my dad in the near future? This 15″ Franklin model, perfect to put work papers in or protect a laptop. The bags can be purchased at bonobos.com (F. Rock will have a rolling 6 week offering of limited edition bags), FRockbags.com, bgreenlifestyle.com, capemac.com (where there will also soon be F. Rock iPad covers) and soon through shoebuy.com and greenandmore.com.
Do you like F. Rock as much as I do?! Tell me what other gift ideas you are toying with to get for the dads in your life this Father’s Day, I need some ideas for my stepdad, too…
News Picks:
Top 12 Non-Toxic Sunscreens: The Environmental Working Group recently assessed 500 sunscreens–only 39 were deemed safe and effective! Did yours pass the test? Check yours on Yahoo!Green and look for affordable alternatives.
Save Water with Drought-Resistant Plants: This summer, save some much needed H2O by planting perennials that do not require watering. Gardening without the added effort? While conserving water and money? Sounds like a win-win to us!
Safer Hair Products for Curly Hair: This one is for curly-haired beauties! We understand that you want a product that works for your hair without all the toxins, so do we! Here are some great options…
Multimedia Clip:
Hanes Clothes ‘Future Green Generations’ Commercial: Okay, whether it might be greenwashing or not, this commercial is pretty funny. Today’s kids care about the environment–who doesn’t like that?!
New and Cool Pick:
Greenopia’s Greenest State Guide: A detailed and easy-to-use list to find out how your state ranks on air quality, recycling rates and renewable energy usage among other criteria. The greenest state? Washington. Least green? Louisiana.
Photo Credit: Screenshot of http://www.greenopia.com/NY/state_listing.aspx?ID=1&input=Name-or-product&Listpage=-1
The U. S. Green Building Council may sound like an organization for serious contractors and electricians, but don’t let the name fool you. It’s an amazing resource for homeowners who want to learn more about green building materials and practices. After all, the USGBC is the Mother of the LEED green-building program.
The USGBC has chapters all over the country—from Alabama to Wyoming, from New York City to San Francisco—and most places between. Locate your branch on this map: http://www.usgbc.org/FindaChapter/ChapList.aspx.
Margie McNally, Practically Green’s resident expert on Green Building Materials, wants to help you tap into this incredible network of expertise on sustainable stuff for your house. She encourages everyone to “Get out there and see what’s new in green building materials for your home!” To ask her a question—on lighting, flooring, roofing, insulation; or on any room in the house—please post a comment, or email her: margiemcn@comcast.net.
Margie attended a recent event at the USGBC affiliate in Boston, Green Roundtable/NEXUS (reception area is pictured above), and we asked her for a report.
Last week I attended the semiannual building products showcase at the Nexus Center. Over 40 green-building product manufacturers were represented, and architects, designers, students and other building professionals participated in the lively event. I was impressed by the diversity of product categories including a display by Xerox Corporation highlighting their environmentally sustainable copy machine; ENERGY STAR-labeled, smaller, recyclable solid-ink cartridges; office optimization and scanning solutions; and paper. Since paper is the number-one contributor of office waste, it makes sense to look at greener options in the workplace.
Here are some of the other highlights:
- Kirei board presented their sustainable wood alternative made from reclaimed sorghum straw and no added urea formaldehyde adhesive.
- Plyboo bamboo flooring was laid out in a variety of warm finishes.
- Bostik spoke about their adhesive, coatings, and sealant technologies that minimize environmental impact.
- Marvin’s Integrity series offered a “window” of opportunity to view the latest collection of high-performance glazing options. On display: a cut section of the window’s energy-efficient construction. The site has info on the homeowners’ tax credit, which applies to replacement windows through December, 2010.
- Natural stone products from Pierre Habitat are sourced exclusively in North America and available in an array of smooth textures and earthy colors….
- Good old-fashioned, natural linoleum from Forbo lends itself to multiple applications….simple, sustainable beauty with guaranteed longevity and color choices galore.
- Green Product Technologies: Structural insulated panels (SIPS): quick assembly, energy-efficient and fully recyclable.
- Haworth and KI office furniture and systems: adaptable workspaces with greener options. Haworth furnished the USGBC headquarters in Washington, D.C., pictured here.
- Image 4 ‘s “Rapidly installed and totally reconfigurable” Reform wall system has green attributes such as recycled content, reduced construction waste, and the ability to reconfigure with ease. The primary target is museum and other exhibition projects, but a residential application would be amazing!
In summary, this showcase was a genuine eye feast for the green-building client and professional.
The NEXUS Resource Center is a year-round trade show of green building products—from structural elements to flooring and countertop materials—with resources and information on each product. You will find that green can be beautiful as well as sustainable as you glide your fingers across the silk-like texture of Ice Stone recycled glass countertops for your kitchen or bath! (See “persimmon” below.)
In addition to the display, NEXUS offers a dizzying program of workshops, lectures, and events including LEED training. Chances are there’s a USGBC affiliate near you! Whether you’re building a home or embarking on a small renovation project, check out your local USGBC chapter location to learn about the latest green technologies that will save you energy, water, time, and money.
Whether you loved it or hated it, went with the cutest boy on the football team or the dorkiest boy from 5th period Calculus class, EVERYONE has a vivid memory of their Prom. However, Prom is often an event of excess–excess glitter, hair spray, makeup, spray tan, flowers, jewelry, and–in my sister’s case–braces. (Don’t worry Lily, you will still look like Kate Hudson in How To Lose Guy In Ten Days this Saturday.)
As my little sister’s first Prom approaches, it’s a perfect time to re-evaluate this monumental event of our youth and find ways to make it more green. YOU might not be going to a Prom, but you most likely have a little sister like I do–or a niece, or a daughter or a friend’s daughter–so pass this along!
Let’s start with the dress. How can you green it?
This is Lily. Sixteen years old and a freak of nature–tall, blonde, athletic, curvy AND a size 0. Yes, as her older sister, I weep that I didn’t get those genes. However envious I am of her, I do acknowledge that finding a dress was the hardest part for her. She doesn’t fit into any of my dresses, our step-sisters’ dresses or our friends’ dresses. So unfortunately she had to buy a new one.
If she was a more typical size, she could have borrowed a dress from someone or searched at our local consignment shop. There are seriously good finds in those stores. I found a beautiful dress (with the tags still on!) for $10 at our local consignment shop and wore it to my mom’s wedding a few years ago. If you don’t know where the closest consignment shop is, you can search directories online like ResaleShopping.com and Consignmentshops.com. If you want to get more specific searching for Prom dresses online, check out PreownedPartyDresses.com or Buyselldress.com. If you are handy with a sewing kit, you could design and make your own dress like our CEO, Susan, did in high school. I have heard stories of girls making dresses out of duck tape too… maybe give it a try? That seems like a lot of duct tape, though…
Want a high end option? Try Wear Today, Gone Tomorrow, a company that rents designer dresses by big-name labels (see this dress by Nicole Miller) and uses organic dry-cleaning methods. Or try Rent The Runway, which will actually send you a dress in two different sizes “just to be safe”.
Next, accessories. Lily is using a handbag and shoes from our step-sister and borrowing jewelry from me. I have also been known to rummage through my mother’s accessories for items, so ladies, look in your closets! Look through your mother’s closet! You might be surprised how well that gold-sequined clutch goes with your daughter’s blue-and-gold dress… Don’t be afraid to snip an 80’s foo-foo bow if it ruins the entire purse!
Moving on to makeup. Search for the best-rated cosmetics on Cosmetics Database or see how the products you already have measure up against this safety-rating system. Personally, I focus on the products with a 0-2 Low Hazard rating. Bare Escentuals bareMinerals Makeup, Physicians Formula, and Origins are some of the well-known brands that qualify. If you are worried about spending too much money on makeup, just go with three main products: mascara, concealer, and blush/bronzer. Less is more for a Green Prom, ladies…
Green your transport. Steer away from the Hummer stretch-limo. It is bound to dent an unlucky chaperone’s car in the event parking lot. (That happened at my Junior Prom. Oops!) How about renting a school bus? It would be cheaper, retro, and you can fit more of your friends. For my Sophomore Prom (yes, I went all four years), a group of us rented a small Jitney bus that has room for probably 10-15 friends. You could always make a scene and take public transportation. Or drive a hybrid for the night.
Greener hair? And, no, I don’t mean the awful green Lily’s hair turns whenever she takes a dip in an over-chlorinated pool during summer. I mean, how about less hair spray? Less hair glitter? Check out the Good Guide for a less-toxic hairspray. Don’t worry, Susan had to make the same switch. Not sure if there is a greener way to curl hair though… Any ideas?
Finally, flowers. Every girl loves to get flowers the night of their Prom, so why not suggest purchasing a bouquet or corsage from Organic Bouquet? Or make your own boutonniere using flowers from your garden!
Have you been to a Green Prom? Are you helping someone close to you prepare for Prom in a green way? Any more ideas for Lily?
Photo credit: http://www.weartodaygonetomorrow.com/Nicole-Miller-Gown-Silk-p/nm1000l-pb.htm
Jitney Bus
The front hall at our house is a decompression chamber in disguise. Here’s my concept: no matter how stressed out you are, no matter how crabby, when you walk through the front door, this space is guaranteed to restore you.
When we bought the place ten years ago, I picked out a vivid jungle pattern with lush and detailed foliage, birds, turtles, and insects all climbing the walls. You could almost hear the cicadas in that space. My husband would sometimes come in after an intense day at the office, grumbling a bit, and presto! Mr. Pussy Cat! He was transformed simply by walking through the “jungle”.
Yes: that was beautiful (and effective) wallpaper, but it wasn’t green. It was printed on another continent, with high-impact inks, on non-FSC paper and — like most wallpapers — it had a coating of toxic vinyl.
Two summers ago, we had to replace the jungle paper because of an involuntary major demolition-renovation. I called the decorators who sold me the jungle paper. I explained that I’d like to use a “green” paper this time: made in the USA, with low-impact processes, no toxic ingredients, organic if possible. They came over with swatches that ranged from bland to blah to blech. I complained: “They look like dishwater! Why can’t green wallpaper be interesting, fun, shocking?”
Enter Nancy Mims and Mod Green Pod:
“Twelve years ago a designer friend saw my doodles,” Nancy told us. “She said, why don’t you sell those? It had never occurred to me before! I jumped in and eventually formed Mod Green Pod with my sister-in-law. Both of us have little kids and we wanted to bring ethics to the company — including organic cotton, healthy inks, and no toxic anything, ever.” Click here for more on Mod Green Pod’s green practices and processes.
Nancy’s kids fool around with her fabric:
“I bought this chair for $40 at a thrift store. It’s amazing what you can find, even on the side of the road! I love the idea of turning some trashy item into a one-of-a-kind piece. I love saving a piece of furniture that might otherwise get tossed.”
We love this idea, too, and we’re going to stay in touch with Nancy as she transforms this unfortunate chair into something beautiful. Stay tuned for the result! Here is the fabric she’s going to use:
“I want to help people learn the art of re-upholstery. My grandparents’ generation would buy a piece of upholstered furniture and redo it every couple of decades. We need to get back to that idea, I think. Too much of the time, my generation just tosses their furniture, goes out and gets more.”
Here’s Nancy impersonating framed artwork on a Mod Green Pod wall:
And, here’s our Front Hall a.k.a. Decompression Chamber:
Go see more Mod Green Pod at http://modgreenpod.com/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Mod-Green-Pod
Twitter @modgreenpod
I grew up in a family that was shabby chic before such a term existed. The men wore their dress shirts until the collars frayed, and then they had the collars turned to the other side so they could be worn for another ten years. My mother used gift wrapping paper again and again, year after year: the same sheets, creased and stuck with tape remnants. She was into re-gifting and vintage before any of this was fashionable. She might put a sparkly hair ornament from dear dead Aunt Pauline’s boudoir into a Tiffany box, say, tie it up in chubby hot pink yarn, and that would be my birthday present.
In those days Tiffany was exclusive. You’d be surprised if the lady behind the deli counter wore a Tiffany necklace, and anyway, Tiffany didn’t make necklaces with their name stamped on them. Tiffany stood for understatement, decorum, luxury – and those baby-blue boxes drew gasps at our family birthday parties even if the corners were coming down to the bare cardboard beneath.
Another of my inherited habits, and I do consider it a luxury, is the daily New York Times: the hard copy, newsprint, hold-it-in-your-hands, snip-and-save, recycle-when-it’s-done version. I can take almost any bad news if it’s delivered in those comforting inky paragraphs, arranged in their familiar orderly columns, with the occasional photograph or blaring headline. Page One, Page Two, Op-Ed, Business, Crossword, Obituaries, Quote of the Day: same way every day. Predictability in an unpredictable world. And always, without fail, a Tiffany ad at the upper right corner on Page Three.
Of all the qualities I’d ascribe to Tiffany & Co., Green would not be one of them. But there they were on Earth Day touting their Sustainability sensitivity in the ad. I clicked to the link, http://www.tiffany.com/sustainability to see what they had in mind.
Surprise, surprise: here’s a wealth of information about Tiffany’s Green mission – responsible mining practices, rules on environmental impact, statements on diamond sourcing and manufacturing in Africa, and Tiffany’s promotion of the No Dirty Gold campaign among them.
Additional points:
- Over 95% of Tiffany’s catalogue paper is certified to the standards of the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), and the goal is to make certain that 100% of the paper used in packaging materials and catalogues is FSC-certified by 2010.
- Tiffany & Co. has pledged to reduce U.S. GHG emissions by 10 percent per square foot by 2011.
- Since 2006, Tiffany has been a responding company to the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), which gathers information on the business risks and opportunities presented by climate change as well as greenhouse gas emissions data from the world’s largest companies.
Mere green-washing? You tell me.
I’m going to give Tiffany the benefit of the doubt. Any company whose box is used and re-used as much as this one is (in some households) has got to be at least Fairly Green. Don’t you think?
(Second in an irregular series in which I try to sell my house and move across the state as greenly as practical. Previously: Should I do a green retrofit if I’m moving soon.)
The move is happening — a year sooner than expected. Yikes.
I want to be more green, and this seems to be a good opportunity to apply some of the things I’m learning. I also want to make as much money as possible when I sell the house. I’m happy to be green; but in the end, cash will win out.
First step: Listen to the experts and clear out the house to prepare it for market. I’m lucky that my Realtor is also my father. I can trust what he says. He said “Get rid of half your stuff, then get rid of half of what’s left.” That’s excellent advice, and like all his previous excellent advice (Viz. school, girls and money), maddeningly difficult to follow.
I like my stuff. I collect books; I buy a lot of them and never get rid of any of them.
Since I moved into this house, I have also collected two children, who seem to be buried in their own stuff.
So, how to purge, in a way that’s most practically green?
1. Friends and Neighbors
I started by working the network — blogging, tweeting, pinging, facebooking, buzzing and even chatting in real life to get the word out that my stuff was up for grabs.
And the magic started.
I went to my next-door neighbor, who has two college-age boys. It turns out that one of them is moving to an off-campus apartment in a couple of months. I was able to pull together four plates, four bowls, four cups, silverware, spatulas, a good frying pan, a saucepan, a spaghetti pan and a baking dish. You’d be surprised how eager college kids are to have good stuff. And, we didn’t have to deal with this in the yard sale or on the scrap heap.
My sister’s friend just had her first grandchild. My nephew came over and grabbed the freshly-outgrown climber from the backyard and brought it over to her house.
My brothers-in-law came over to look over the books and take away some of my darlings.
We were making progress. On to Step Two.
2. Donate
Donating clothes is remarkably easy. Here in Holliston, we have an organization called PlanetAid that will take donations of clothes and shoes. My wife and I bagged them up and dropped them off. We also donated some clothes to our church drive.
I was very lucky that right next to the PlanetAid station was one that collected Books, CDs and DVDs. I’m going through each of the bookcases in my house and ruthlessly purging. If I haven’t read it in five years: out. If I am unlikely to ever read it again: out. If it’s depressing beyond words (I’m looking at you, The Road): out. I’m up to 35 boxes of books donated so far, with a couple of rooms still to go.
I also brought all the CDs from the past few years along with me as I was dropping off the books. A sixteen-year-old boy was there with his mother, looking every bit as excited as you’d imagine. I asked him if he liked Punk. I gave him a couple of my Rhino collections and my worn copy of Give Me Convenience or Give Me Death. It feels good to improve the general taste level of the next generation as I’m improving the salability of my house. He liked my DVDs, too; I was able to twist his arm to take seasons one to seven of Buffy, one to five of Angel, and one to five of Alias. It turns out that teenaged boys like Jennifer Garner.
Clothes? Check! Books, CDs, DVDs? Done! Hmm. What about this giant crib sitting disassembled in my basement?
I can’t put it out on the street. It’s far to nice to turn into kindling. What to do?
3. Freecycle
I’m lucky that this very blog talked about Freecycle a couple of months ago. So, I checked them out. And I ripped my hair out at the interface. And I called it names. And I tweeted how annoyed I was.
Then, I finally signed up and got through, and I started seeing all the ways people here in Holliston were helping each other. I lurked for a couple of days, then I put a note out saying that the crib was available to anyone who wanted it. Within a couple of hours, I got a few responses. The first person to respond came out the next morning and made it disappear. She was happy; I was happy; all was well with the world.
Freecyle: The interface is awful, but the people are good. Here’s the activity on my freecycle list in just the past day or so:
4. Town Recycling/Dump
What about the town? First thing was to check what the town would happily take. Holliston will accept televisions and computer monitors at the dump, and practically nothing else. Grr. But, at least I was able to finally get rid of my 1982 Sony Trinitron that’s been haunting me all these years. It’s finally joining its companion Atari 2600 in the sky.
I’ll also need to work with the town to get rid of the paint that I have in my garage. They have a couple of special “hazardous waste” days every year where you can drop stuff off. It’s worth waiting for those days, so that you can ensure that it’s being disposed of correctly.
But, what about everything else? The old porch furniture? The broken fan? The 500-pound metal file cabinet I’ve been lugging around since Nevermind?
5. The Junk Man
I found a service called 1-800-Got-Junk. This is what I was expecting:
It was actually a far more pleasant experience than I dreaded. The guys came and made the stuff disappear. No fuss, no muss. And, they hit the perfect price from a business perspective: just high enough that I had to gulp a little bit, but not so high that I would consider bailing.
That said, I don’t know if this is the greenest way to handle it. They “do their best to recycle as much junk as [they] can” and that was about as good as I was going to get. I probably could have gone item-by-item through all the stuff that was disappearing and found its optimal grave, but I have a life to lead. (Maybe this is a business opportunity for some aspiring green entrepreneur.)
I hope that the cleaning, purging and other stuff we did makes our life better. I’ll be satisfied if it helps our house sell a little faster and for a little more. I’m thrilled that I made a few other people’s lives a little better. That’s what we really want.
So, here’s my checklist:
1. Family, Friends and Neighbors
2. Donate to worthy causes
3. Freecycle
4. Town Dump
5. Junkman
What am I missing? Are there better ways to do what I did? Please let me know in the comments, or on Practically Green’s Facebook page.
PS: One other item that is cluttering our home is wine corks. We know they are renewable and recyclable but we never know what to do with them! However, Whole Foods recently announced that cork recycling drop boxes will be available in all 292 store locations in partnership with Cork ReHarvest. Whew! Now we feel a little better about celebrating Wine Wednesday…



































