• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    141 year ago

    Glass jars with twist off lids can be reused for leftovers and/or fermentation products.

    Shop at the local farmer’s market.

    Do you have a yard big enough to garden? Garden!

    Solar panels on the roof.

    Catch rainwater to use in the garden. If you have money to spend, that rainwater and house gray water can also be used to flush toilets etc.

    Really insulate your home.

    Do your shopping by bike whenever possible.

    Buy used.

    • @czardestructo
      link
      English
      31 year ago

      This is a great start so i will add to it.

      Seriously start a garden and grow easy stuff so you don’t get frustrated; kale, beans, lettuce etc

      Get a killawatt meter to start monitoring what is using power to lower your bills and usage

      If you live in a cold climate seal all leaky doors and windows, air exchange is a lot worst than poor insulation

      Consider heating with a wood stove

      In the summer cool your house at night by opening all the windows and using a powerful whole house fan then close it up in the morning to keep it cool

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        31 year ago

        Wood stoves burn very inefficiently and release a lot of carbon into the air. An efficient heat pump will do a better job and be better for the environment (even if the electricity is unfortunately generated by gas or such).

        • @czardestructo
          link
          English
          0
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          Going to respectfully disagree. Modern catalytic stoves can be over 90% efficient, uses a natural source of energy that captures carbon (though burning it releases it) and is a heck of a lot cheaper to install than heat pumps. And all the power where I live is generated by natural gas which is far from clean. If someone has the money for solar panels and heat pumps then heck yea that’s the way to go but most first time home buyers don’t have that cash.

          edit: I was mistaken, they make stoves over 80% efficient, not 90% efficient. I still think in the total scope of carbon emissions its better than a heat pump powered by fossil fuel electricity but it really depends on where you live, how much woods you have and where you get your power from.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            31 year ago

            Yeah maybe in a rural area that can make sense. It’s just that in an urban/suburban area a heat pump will easily get the equivalent of 300%+ efficiency (over 500% with well designed underground systems). Natural gas isn’t clean yes but at the equivalent of 300% efficiency, it’s probably better than wood, especially as the electrical grid is slowly shifted over to renewables in most places. Also should consider that while a heat pump is costly to install, they are usually warrantied for at least 10 years and probably last well beyond that with maintenance. It’s definitely expensive for now though. (swear I’m not a heat pump salesperson)

            • @czardestructo
              link
              English
              1
              edit-2
              1 year ago

              Oye we could go back and forth at this for awhile. 300% efficient at ideal temperatures, not low temperatures, and that efficiency is just at converting the electricity into heat. It doesn’t account for the energy it takes to get the fossil fuels out of the ground, processed and brought to a power plant. Or the conversion of the fuel into electricity then losses in the grid getting to your house. Then there is also the fact that fossil fuels are not renewable and the wood you burn can replenish itself and re-capture the carbon you expended making it essentially net zero if you sustainably forest and don’t use tons of power tools to harvest the wood. Anyway, I guess what I’m saying is its complicated but for a lot of folks I’m still convinced wood is better for most, for now. Soon as renewables take over I agree, heat pumps FTW but the USA is horrifically behind on renewables.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              01 year ago

              Wait, how can something be greater than a 1:1 energy transfer?

              Pretty sure electric translates to heat at a 100% efficiency rating, but that’s not considering the 30% or w/e origin of that energy. But I digress, how do you get over 100% returns on your energy?

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                English
                11 year ago

                Well it’s because it’s not generating all that heat, it’s simply moving it from outside to the inside, while using up less energy than it moves. That’s why it’s not ‘efficiency’ technically (they call it the coefficient of performance), but it still effectively heats up your house or whatnot with more energy than it consumed in the process.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  11 year ago

                  Ah, that makes sense.

                  But that aside, 300% of what? 300% of electric without the heat pump? It’s also my understand that heat pumps aren’t that great for heating if they are basic above ground units. Have to be the extra expensive dug in ones.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            01 year ago

            I believe they go over 80% just not in the traditional style. Rocket stoves, come to mind.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      21 year ago

      I only have two humans and a dog in my household but we typically only generate one kitchen bag of trash a week by diverting a lot of our cardboard and food scraps into a small compost pile.

  • Cris
    link
    English
    31 year ago

    Honestly I find the easiest way to start is just to stay engaged in places where you’ll see ideas, like this community, or on YouTube, and then try those ideas as you see ones that appeal to you. As you engage more, and try more options, you’ll find what works for you, start coming up with your own ideas, and slowly produce less and less waste.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    29 months ago

    How is it going in your new home since 7 months ?

    Here are some ideas for everyday life, if you still need it :

    • in the bathroom :

    use a bidet and cloth wipes

    use solid soap/shampoo (can be the same), solid toothpaste (or learn to do it with baking soda and hydrogen peroxide)

    electric toothbrush (more efficient according to my dentist and you throw away only the head, that can be re-used for cleaning works

    reusable accessories like cloth wipes for face, ear scraper, tongue scraper

    • in the kitchen

    cook from raw materials as much as possible, learn how to use legumes in as much receipts as you can (main dishes but also appetizers and desserts)

    create your own cookbook with receipt you like

    learn how to do fermentation products and yogurts

    buy in bulk stores and farmers markets to avoid packagings

    compost

    re use bottles and tin cans as flower plants

    build a solar oven, a Norwegian Cooking Pot and a Desert Fridge (construction plans can be found on low-tech lab)

    and enjoy your life