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Read book online «Living Like Ed by Ed Jr. (i have read the book a hundred times TXT) 📕».   Author   -   Ed Jr.



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think it’s a creative way to take objects that most would consider trash and turn them into something functional and beautiful. Vetrazzo’s material is very visually appealing, and it’s recycled, so it’s good on many counts.

The countertop that Rachelle and I ended up choosing is called Hollywood Sage, and it’s made from broken-up soda bottles. Over a thousand bottles were used just to make the countertop for our small kitchen. So we actually wound up taking a lot of glass out of the waste stream. And I feel good about that.

Precycling

There’s recycling, which is very important. And then there’s precycling, which is every bit as important. When I’m shopping, if there’s one package for razor blades that’s a foot long for a little tiny thing of blades, and there’s another package that’s smaller, I’m always going to buy the smaller one. At certain stores, you can buy five containers of razor blades in one package. Whatever you can do to reduce the amount of packaging you buy—by buying in bulk, by buying things in the smallest amount of packaging possible—is really huge.

And when they say, “Paper or plastic?” at the grocery store checkout line, the answer is always “Neither.” Pull out your canvas bag or string bag. If you don’t have either, reuse your old paper or plastic bags. Most places that I shop at give you a nickel per bag credit for bringing your bags back—canvas, plastic, or paper—giving us a financial incentive to recycle.

So buy things with the least amount of packaging, and don’t take any new paper or plastic bags. I keep canvas bags in the trunk of my car so that I have them whenever I decide to stop at the store.

Naysayers will say it takes energy to make these canvas bags, too, but I’ve got canvas bags from the ’80s. These bags last a long time.

Sometimes you just have to choose paper or plastic. Now that I have a business, Begley’s Best, some people just insist on getting a plastic bag so they can buy a product and then carry the bottle around the city market where I sell it. Most people, however, bring their own plastic bags when they come and buy my stuff. They know me enough to do that. Forget about knowing me—they just do it because they know it’s a good idea. But when people want me to give them a plastic bag to carry one, two, sometimes three plastic bottles at a farmers’ market, I have thousands of them. I have friends save bags for me. The bags have to be clean. They can’t have crushed tomatoes at the bottom of them, obviously. I save those bags and then I reuse them.

Here’s another great way you can precycle. We buy kitty litter in bulk, and then we just keep bringing back the same big pail and refilling it. It’s a huge pail, and it’s got two different UPC codes on it. There’s one that the cashier scans the first time you buy the pail, and then there’s another code to scan for a refill. So I just keep bringing back this same pail—it’s a five-year-old pail at this point, easily—and that way I don’t buy any new packaging for kitty litter. I have two of these pails, so when one is empty, I’ll put it out by the car so I know to bring it into Petco. And I just go to the big bin there with the scooper and fill it up again.

         Here’s another good one. I’ve heard that plastic water bottles are really bad for you. We put them in our cars, and then they heat up and the plastic gets into our water. That can’t be good for us. And then there are just all these little water bottles everywhere, and they don’t break down.

But there’s a new water bottle, available from New Wave Enviro (newwaveenviro.com). It’s made of corn. It’s biodegradable, so it will break down in nature. And it has this filter. It costs $10—it’s a pricey little water bottle. However, you can refill it and it can filter tap water. You just have to wash it, and you have ninety fills. Ninety!

Look how much packaging you save just by buying this one water bottle—and it’s keeping toxic chemicals out of your body at the same time.

Saving paper also fits into this category called precycling. To save paper, I pay bills online. Companies are making it easier for you, too. They don’t want to get a piece of paper in the mail and pay a person to open it. It’s so much easier to have one person point and click than six people with letter openers doing all that work.

They have online bill-pay programs that you can certainly do through your bank nowadays. Moreover, you don’t even have to point and click. It’s just taken out automatically—your mortgage payment every month, your cell phone, gas, you name it. You can approve them—for example, Cingular Wireless or Time Warner Cable—and they post it; others show you, like “Here’s your bill, so you make sure we’re not going to charge you $1,200 by accident. It’s the same as it was last month, some $124 for a premium package. And here’s your cellular bill for your wife’s phone and yours. If you don’t like it, click here. And if you do like it, you do nothing.” They just take it out of your account. There’s more and more of that, and it’s easy to do.

Also, I do as much as I can by e-mail. Most people do that today. I try to generate as little paper as possible.

Another great thing you can do: If you pack a sack lunch, don’t use plastic sandwich bags. Pack things in glass or plastic containers. Then you can reuse your own containers over and over and over again.

Rechargeable Batteries

Another way you can reduce waste is by choosing rechargeable

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