- Ask your cleaner about her/his cleaning methods, safety and maintenance practices, and how s/he handles her/his solvent waste streams.
- If you smell solvent when you enter a cleaning shop, you might want to consider going somewhere else as solvent odors can indicate improper processing or solvent use.
Exploring the possibility of living an environmentally responsible life—
starting with no money, no time, and a really big lawn.
Monday, July 26, 2010
Week 4 - "Green" dry cleaning
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Week 3 (& 1/2) - Unplugging
- 2 cell phone chargers plugged in but not in use (.5 watts)
- 1 desktop computer and one monitor in sleep mode (21.1+1.4 watts)
- computer speakers left on (4.1 watts)
- 1 printer on (4.9 watts)
- 1 wireless router turned on (5.4 watts)
- 1 TV plugged in (3.1 watts)
- 1 DVD player plugged in (1.6 watts)
- 1 microwave plugged in (3.1 watts)
- 1 clock radio (not needed since I'm using my cell phone for an alarm clock) (2 watts)
- 2 phones (3.2 watts)
- 1 answering machine (2.3 watts)
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Week 2 - Riding public transportation to the airport
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Week 1 - Clothesline
I realize everybody took down their clotheslines and bought dryers about 300 years ago, but we did a little math and determined that not paying to dry your clothes is cheaper than paying to dry your clothes, and that solar-dried clothes were better for the environment than electric-dried ones. So, first the cost breakdown and some basic instructions, then the energy and money savings and finally some preliminary findings.
Cost
2 8-foot, 4x4 wooden posts (I bought treated wood) $18
2 8-foot, 2x4 wooden posts $8
2 bags of cement mix $5
2 1/4-inch nails $1
clothesline (I bought plastic) $4
eyelet screws $3
Total: $39
How to make a clothesline
1. Find a good sunlit location for the clothesline. A north-to-south clotheline will get more sun. Stay away from fences, trees, and other places where birds hang out.
2. Cut one 2x4 in half and nail to the 4x4 posts to form the crossbars, about 6 inches from the top.
3. Cut the other 2x4 into four 2-foot sections, with 45-degree angle cuts to form supports for the crossbars. Nail these to the post and crossbar as shown.
4. Dig a two-foot deep hole for each post. Mix your cement, place your posts and level them, and fill in with cement. Leave a little space at the top to fill in with dirt if you don’t want the concrete exposed.
5. Install the eyelet screws and run the line between them.
Our dryer runs at 5400 watts, so if each load is 45 minutes, that’s 5400/1000*.75=4.05 kilowatt hours per load. In a normal summer month, we use about 800 kwH (according to my power bill), so if we hang dry 30 loads of laundry during the summer months (about 8 per week), that will cut our electricity consumption by 15 percent. If we use the clothesline 6 months out of the year, that’s cutting our annual electricity usage by 7.5 percent. Not a bad start.
Cost savings
Rocky Mountain Power charges me about 10.5 cents per kwH (at the higher rate tier), so 4.05 kwH, each load of laundry costs about 43 cents. If we hang-dry 8 loads a week instead of using the dryer, that’s saving $3.44 a week. Optimistically, let’s say we use the clothesline 26 weeks out of the year. That’s saving $89.44 the first year. And it pays for itself after 90 loads.
Findings
Michelle says that the first week, she’s actually really enjoying being outside, letting the kids run around, and “playing ‘Little House on the Prairie.’” I think that will wear off, but there will still be satisfaction in knowing we’re saving money and using less electricity.
Turns out, however, that there’s a reason everyone switched to dryers a few years back: they’re more convenient and reliable, and they leave clothes wrinkle-free and soft. After the first line-drying, the towels were a bit crunchy, but using them once took care of that. We’re going to keep using the dryer for underwear and my work shirts, but we don’t have any complaints at this point—although it was such a wet spring, I feel like I live in Seattle, not Utah.
Monday, March 22, 2010
What this blog is for
I consider myself something like an environmentalist, but not a very good one. I’ve never marched on Washington or chained myself to a tree. I’m not very eloquent or convincing in arguments about environmental policy and its relation to economics or individual rights. What I have done is tried to do right by the environment—I ride public transportation, plant a garden, and avoid stepping of cryptobionic soil in national parks. Not exactly universe-altering, revolution-inspiring kind of stuff.
But to be honest, I think that’s where the real change is going to come—in the accumulation of small changes on a large scale.
My version of environmental responsibility echoes Adlai Stevenson’s definition of patriotism: he said what we need is “not short, frenzied outbursts of emotion, but the tranquil and steady dedication of a lifetime.” I’m not naive enough to believe that if everyone starts using fluorescent light bulbs and flushing only for number two then we’re going to undo the global environmental chaos we’ve caused. But I’m also not naive enough to believe that some scientific advancement like electric cars or bioagriculture or nuclear fission or fusion alone is going to solve our problems. I have no doubt scientific miracles are coming that will help reverse the destructive trajectory we’re on. But that’s not going to be enough—we’re going to have to change the way we live. I can’t do much to advance solar-cell technology, but I can learn how to use less, and use more wisely, and share what I learn.
And maybe it’ll start catching on. In my neighborhood, people are crazy about Ragnar, a grueling 24-hour relay where teams of 12 people run legs of 3 to 10 miles each. I submit that this is slightly crazy - much more than living an environmentally just life is crazy. It’s difficult and time consuming and inconvenient, and there’s nobody at the finish line with a big wad of cash. But one or two people start, and they find it meaningful and fulfilling. So they talk it up to their friends and pretty soon there's a grassroots movement that eventually leads dozens of people from the neighborhood to push themselves to the limit so they can feel a sense of contribution and camaraderie. I think living a sustainable life can bring the same rewards.
I want to take the next year poking into the way my family lives and see where we can make meaningful (and sane) changes. So each week I’ll take on a project and report on whether it really makes a difference, compared with how much money and time it costs. Sometimes it will be hands-on, like building a clothesline, and sometimes it will be more like a research project, such as figuring out if it really makes a difference to ride the commuter train instead of driving to work. Each post will include the following rating system, on a scale of one to five:
= How much of an environmental difference does this make? And of course it’s all relative. My family is not going to save as much water in a year as a small farm uses in one day, nor are we ever going to save any more than a hundred-thousandth of the energy consumed just by our hometown. But this rating will be on a scale of how much good our personal consumptive choices could do.
= How much does it cost/save? Red means money lost, green means money saved.
= What’s the time investment? Again, red means time lost, green means time saved.
In all this, my wife is good enough to come along for the ride. And as you’ll see from the next post, she’s going to be shouldering a lot of the impact of these projects. Thanks for being adventurous with me, Mich.


