20 Ways to Go Green in 2013
If your New Year's resolution is to live a greener lifestyle, check out these 20 tips to help you stick to your plan.
If you want to be kinder to the planet and save some money at the same time, here are 20 ways to go green in 2013.
- Buy fresh, local food this summer at the various farms in town, including Smolak Farms, Roche Farmstand and Barker's Farmstand.
- Have your kids make their friends birthday cards and bring gifts in decorated paper bags or a cool reusable bag. Kids love getting a handmade card—as do adults.
- Bring your own bags when you shop for groceries.
- Shop at consignment stores such as Kids Karousel and Jane on a Budget and thrift stores such as North andover Thrift Shop.
- Rip up some lawn and create new garden beds this spring, and then grow your own food this summer. Need help getting started? Contact any of North Andover's many landscapers including Adam Landscaping, Tompkins Landscaping, Desmond Landscaping and more. Your kids will eat more veggies if they grow them themselves.
- Dispose of your hazardous waste properly. Chec out the town Web site on how to dispose of hazardous waste.
- Buy a share in a community-supported agriculture (CSA) farm to support local, sustainable farming and enjoy fresh veggies weekly. Smolak Farms has one.
- Ditch those dreaded plastic sandwich bags and get some washable containers or bags. I like ReUsies, created by two Seattle moms.
- Cut down on car trips and run your errands on your bike or on foot. Rusty on two wheels? Take a a bike-riding workshop.
- Pack cloth napkins instead of paper towels in school lunches.
- Look for an environmental service project you can do with your children, such as removing trash and non-native plants and planting trees in their place. Check with the Friends of North Andover Trails.
- Got an older house? Install double-pane windows and you’ll see immediate savings on your heating bill.
- Plant a tree. A certified arborist can help you select and plant trees that will provide privacy and shade and even years of fresh fruit. Find a certified arborist in your area.
- Dump your bottled water costs. You could save hundreds of dollars by buying snazzy metal water bottles for everyone in the family and a personal filter for your kitchen faucet.
- Organize a Halloween costume swap in September. This can be a great service project for a Girl Scout troop. Reserve a room at the Stevens Memorial Library and publicize to local parenting groups and preschools such as Century Preschool, Family Cooperative Preschool and Community Cooperative Preschool.
- Replace your old light bulbs with LED bulbs. They last 15 times longer and use 75 percent less energy. You can find bulbs at Stop & Shop.
- Expand your hand-me-down circle. Organize a clothing swap for your kids’ preschool or a group of friends. Everyone brings gently used and clean kids’ clothes to your garage and parents can take as many items as they donated. The rest goes to charity. You can also swap toys and books.
- Replace your showerheads with low-flow models. Low-flow showerheads can save you up to 15 percent on water heating costs and reduce your water usage by as much as 20,000 gallons a year.
- Save up to 30 percent on your monthly heating bills by having a home energy audit done by a professional. Contact National Grid to get more information on energy audits.
- Give service and experience gifts this year instead of stuff. Make homemade gift certificates for services and experiences that could include tech support, dinner and a movie, yard work, pet walking or babysitting, or a day of organizing support for the clutter challenged.
TELL US: Do you think you could stick to a green New Year's resolution? Share your thoughts and suggestions in the comments sections below.
Mark Bohrer
8:16 am on Saturday, January 5, 2013
Thanks Kathleen! These are things that not only help save energy and money, but many actually make life more rewarding through better connections with friends and neighbors (like organizing Halloween costume or hand-me-down clothing swaps).
Here's the link to National Grid home energy audits:
https://www1.nationalgridus.com/HomeMA-MA-RES
An easy but significant change to make is to sign up for a renewable energy provider on your National Grid account. The new power regulations allow for choice in electricity providers. For just an additional 2.4 cents/killowatt, your electricity comes from wind, solar or hydro sources. It's called "Green Up", and it's the easiest way to support renewable energy instead of supporting coal power - with all the damage that causes to our water, landscape, air and climate. Here's the link:
http://www.nationalgridus.com/masselectric/home/energychoice/3_renewable.asp
Bryan McGonigle2
2:22 pm on Saturday, January 5, 2013
FYI - the current National Grid charge for electricity is about 7 cents per kilowatt hour (for the energy - not the transmission, distribution, and the countless other things that go into an electric bill). Therefore, the added 2.4 cent per kilowatt hour for "Green" energy represents IMHO a 34% increase in "supply" costs.
I think you'd be more green if you tried to conserve your energy use rather the pay for overpriced power.
kathy Stevens
11:19 am on Saturday, January 5, 2013
Library Book Sale (May 3-4-5, 2013) recycles books to new owners and raises funds for library programs. Donations accepted anytime library is open. Unsold books are given away to kid's groups and other nonprofit book sales. It's fun, neighborly, and offers great bargains to families. Library staff review all donations in light of their acquisition needs. Volunteers always needed.
Mark Bohrer
5:32 pm on Sunday, January 6, 2013
Mike A - I agree strongly with the importance of conserving and energy efficiency.
I think that we need to do both. We should conserve and choose clean energy.
I want it to be clear that if people choose a Green Up electricity provider, it doesn't add 34% to your electricity bill. The distribution charges are about another 5.9 cents per killowatt-hour, and there are other fixed costs. On my December 2012 National Grid bill, the 2.4 cents/kwh for the Green Up option added $12.70 to my $75.83 electric bill, bringing the total to $88.53. Because of the other fixed costs, this meant the additional cost for clean energy for my family was just under 17%.
I don't want my electricity choice to contribute to mountain top removal in Kentucky and Pennsylvania, to higher rates of asthma and cancer, or to the increased likelihood of the next superstorm or the next super-drought. If coal and oil included those costs, they'd be a whole lot more expensive.
Bryan McGonigle2
9:48 am on Monday, January 7, 2013
Mark,
I want to be clear that Green Up electricity is about 34% more expensive than "normal" electricity. I agree that only the electricity supply portion of your electric bill will go up about 34%.
By my calculations, your (Mark's that is) electric bill which includes all kinds of charges and taxes in addition to the energy supply portion went up 16.7%..
I've read a recent report stating that the 2009 "Cash for Clunkers" program was a net negative for the environment. It would not surprise me if wind and solar energy aren't as Green as advertised. With all the tax breaks Big Green is receiving, wind and solar energy is certainly more expensive than advertised. I would consider many other measures before I'd agree to pay 34% more for electricity (or for my electric bill to increase by 16.7%).
Michael Quinlan
1:31 pm on Tuesday, February 5, 2013
After twenty years or so of 'green' fluorescent bulbs being used heavily residentially (due to government fiat), there will be a 'concern' over the large amount of mercury leaching out of landfills. If business rather than government were responsible, the left would riot. Since it's an unintended consequence of another leftist policy, the dissemination of the environmental impact information will be squashed and licenses (or deposits) will be required to purchase light bulbs.
Maria Rigazio-Rea
8:10 am on Tuesday, February 5, 2013
I think it is time to teach our children about littering and recycling. How about organizing neighborhood clean ups. This is a beautiful town but the roadsides and woodlands are littered with fast food wrappers and beer cans. We need to bring back the Keep America Beautiful campaign.
Michael Quinlan
1:36 pm on Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Let's organize them into environmental youth brigades that can report their parents for not recycling adequately. Maybe a sporty bandana or beret can be issued. A little 'community work' never hurt anyone, 'Arbeit macht frei'.
Bryan McGonigle2
2:22 pm on Tuesday, February 5, 2013
I think this would be a great time for the US Postal Service to stop Saturday mail delivery.