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10 ways to go green and save money

Posted Sep 27 2007, 10:20 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from partner blog Wise Bread.

Want to help the environment, but not too keen on all of the expensive suggestions floating around out there? Here are 10 frugal ways to incorporate green living into your life without throwing your well-laid budget plans to the wind.

1. Safety razors. Giving up disposable razors for the old-fashioned safety razor is a great way to save money and the environment. The multi-packs of flat razor blades are not only inexpensive, they come without all of the extra plastic housing that ultimately ends up in landfills. We've been doing this in our house for a few years and have noticed a tremendous savings. Added bonus: We don't have to carve out extra storage in the cabinets when we stock up. Flat packs of blades store very efficiently in a minimum amount of space.

2. Mineral salt deodorant sticks. You can find these at nearly any health food or natural living store. They last an incredibly long time, don't contain harmful ingredients and don't come with a ton of obnoxious plastic packaging to toss in the landfill once the product has been used up.

3. Reusable coffee filters. Just imagine never having to buy or run out of these little babies again.

4. Give up paper towels. OK, I'll be honest. This is not easy in the beginning. The trick? Having a simple, workable system for keeping clean rags on hand. I ended up using several of those fabric sleeves with elastic on both ends -- the kind people use to store empty plastic grocery bags for quick access. I hung one in each place we routinely used paper towels. Then I raided the pile of old T-shirts we had set aside to go to Goodwill, cut them into cleaning rags and filled each of the sleeves. When we need to do a quick cleanup, we reach for a washable cleaning rag instead of a paper towel.

5. Recycle old athletic socks. Not possible, you say. I beg to differ. Cut off each sock slightly above the ankle and below the ribbed leg section. I use the foot portion instead of those expensive disposable dusting mittens. These things are great for dusting stair banister railings and table legs. Cut open the leftover ribbed section and use it as a moisture-holding dishrag. The ridges give you extra scrubbing power.

6. Shop for secondhand goods. Anything you are comfortable buying secondhand doesn’t end up in a garbage dump. This applies to furniture, clothing, toys, kitchenware and, to a certain extent, automobiles. This personal finance practice goes a long way to help out the planet and your pocketbook at the same time.

7. Think before you print. Save money on ink and paper by checking to see if you really need a paper copy of the document before hitting the print button. Still think you need it? Check out the economy mode for printing, which uses less ink and saves you money in the long run on those refilled cartridges.

8. Celebrate the power of tie-dye. This is a great, affordable way to give lightly stained, lighter-colored linens and clothing items a second shelf life. Some ideas? Old sheets, curtains, pillowcases, socks and T-shirts, just to name a few.

9. Find a second use for plastic grocery bags. Use them to line small trash cans (one less item to buy), pick up after your dog in the park, and provide extra cushioning in holiday postal packages.

10. Consider a personal filter for your kitchen faucet. This will enable you to skip the packaging and expense of large cases of bottled water. We've been using one for at least five or six years and really like not having to find extra room for the bottles.

There you have it: Ten ways that won't break the bank or the planet. If you want more, check out this article for 10 more green ways to save. Have another idea? Leave me a comment. I'd love to hear about it.

Comments

 

Good list of 10.  My wife and I full time in a RV and would have a problem with number 10.  We get into many situations we do not feel the water would be safe no matter how we filter it.  We try to use gallon water jugs rather than the smaller bottles.

A variation of the re-use of plastic shopping bags: my wife and I use the plastic liner bag that holds cold cereal for a small trash bag.  They come in handy for chicken bones, trimmed fat, or other food items that would wind up smelling bad if thrown directly into the kitchen trash.

How about using a clothes line instead of the dryer?? It uses solar energy and is great for bleaching stains out of clothes. And all the bending over helps keep my abs flat.

Fill your kitchen sink half-way with hot water and dish soap, wash your dishes, then rinse in the other side of the sink and let them air-dry on the coutertop. Uses a small fraction of the water your dishwasher uses!

i've in my 50 some years have used most of the 10 green since i was a teen .

Guess i learned to be frugal from my mother,where she not only put plastic shopping bags to all of the above suggestions but she would also crochet pace mats,costers and other articals.

You can save water on every flush of the toilet by filling a plastic bottle with water and tossing it in the back of the toilet. The high efficiency toilets already use a small amount of water and doing this might not make everything flush. Only do this for older water hog toilets.

I re-use my printer paper by turning it over after I am done with it and print on the other side. Here is my poem about going green.

                                           Go Green

                                    Go green they say

                                    Is most efficient

                                    To save and reuse

                                    You must be proficient

                                             Because

                                     The money you save

                                     Must be sufficient

                                     To pay for the gas

                                     Making your wallet

                                             deficient!

your toilet will likely get clogged up if you don;t use the water it is designed for.then you can call me to come unstop it for you and it will cost you at least 80.00.

Instead of throwing kitchen scraps, such as fruit and vegetable waste and egg shells in the trash or garbage disposal.  Have a composter outside and throw your waste in there.  You can use the dirt for your garden.  You can't throw meat bones or any leftover meat in there though.  

In the 1950"s I spent my summers at a Girl Scout camp, since we all had limited clothing items with us for our "vacations" there our counselor said wear your sweatshirts inside out every day and on Sunday turn it right side out and it will be as clean as if you just washed it It works even today.. how's that for Girl Scout greeni

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