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Help your
kids turn your house into a green zone
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(ARA) - As a
parent, you'd like your home, community, and children's schools
to be greener. Unfortunately, daily life can get in the way of that.
You have limited time and budget in which to make the world around
you a more sustainable place.
But fortunately, going green doesn't have to be difficult, time-consuming
or expensive. In fact, a smart and savvy parent can go green and
save green at the same time. Here are a few easy ways you can change
the world for the better, and even have fun while you're at it:
* Click it - Most children (and a lot of adults) have no idea where
the power comes from. So leaving lots of lights on in the house
is no big deal. Teaching kids the value (monetary and environmental)
of turning out the lights they're not using is a direct way to connect
being greener with something your kids do every day. You could even
have competitions with your kids to see who can turn out the lights
the fastest.
* Slay vampires - Just because something's off doesn't mean it's
not still using electricity. While some newer appliances and gadgets
are getting much better at using minimal electricity while on standby
(or "off"), many continue to be "energy vampires." Cell phone chargers
are infamous for using nearly the same, if not equal to, the electricity
that's used when charging a phone. Here again you can make a game
out of "slaying the vampires" with your kids. They have fun and
you save money.
* Strip - Does the thought of unplugging and replugging cords for
so many things make you think you'll never stick to it? Easy --
get a power strip for each cluster of things you have in the house
(i.e., family room, kitchen, kids' play room) and plug everything
into those, rather than each in its own plug. Then, you can easily
turn several things off (and back on) at once. Even the most affordable
power strips have the ability to have some dedicated plugs for those
"need to be plugged in" things like the refrigerator.
* Get trashy - As a parent you probably go through lots of food
for your kids that comes in difficult- or impossible-to-recycle
packaging, as far as you know. There's a company called TerraCycle
that makes products like umbrellas to backpacks, gardening products
to recycling bins from recycled
trash. TerraCycle works directly with the public, enlisting
their help in the form of "brigades," - self-organized groups of
people, typically schools - that collect
packaging. The newest collected product is Malt-O-Meal,
the cereal company that long ago decided to "Bag the Box," skipping
the paper box that is typical of cereals; that alone already reducing
the packaging by 75 percent.
Kristen Burke, a third grade teacher at Signal Hill Elementary School
in Manassas, Va., leads one of these brigades. "The more my class
and I began collecting, we truly began to look at trash in a different
light," she says. "It was no longer trash to us, instead, it was
things that could be turned into new products, as well as money
to help our school. While raising money for our school was a wonderful
incentive, it has become even more so during the times of budget
cuts within our school. We have found a way to help our school and
save the environment."
But in the end, the smartest resource you may have for going greener
may be right under your nose - your kids. Children are increasingly
green savvy, and they probably have a lot of great, creative ideas
that you'd never think of. They get to be helpful, you learn some
new things to do, and everybody - including the planet - wins.
If you want to get started immediately in greening your home, try
upcycling some of your own trash to make a wallet.
Food Wrapper Wallet
Materials:
1 clean, empty food package (at least 7 inches by 5 1/2 inches in
size)
1 ruler
1 pen
1 pair of scissors
tape
1 self-adhesive Velcro fastener
Directions:
1. Cut a rectangle that is 7 inches by 5 1/2 inches in the package.
Centered inside the rectangle, draw a smaller rectangle that is
4 inches by 2 1/2 inches. This smaller rectangle will be 1 1/2 inches
from each edge.
2. From the top edge of the smaller rectangle, draw a semicircle
that intersects with the top of the large rectangle and the corners
of the small rectangle. Repeat for the other three sides. Cut around
these lines.
3. Fold in all four semicircles so your cut piece folds up to the
size of the small rectangle. Tape the bottom flap and two side flaps
in place.
4. Attach one side of the Velcro fastener on the inside of the top
flap. Fold down the flap so the other side of the Velcro attaches
to the outside of the bottom flap.
If you'd like to join or start your own TerraCycle Brigade, go to
www.terracycle.net.
Courtesy of ARAcontent and DawgByte
Productions
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