Showing posts with label Cleaning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cleaning. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Green Reads


I thought I'd share some of my favorite books on green living and homemaking. I'll still be giving you all the key tips here, but if you want to get a little more in-depth on a specific topic, try these out. Enjoy!

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REMODELING
Green Remodeling: Changing the World One Room at a Time
David Johnston and Kim Master

Did you know that Americans spend more money annually on home renovation than on new-home construction? With buildings being responsible for 40 percent of worldwide energy flow and material use, home renovation represents a huge opportunity to decrease your environmental footprint. And if done correctly, green remodeling can, over time, allow you to recoup much of the money invested in the work. Upgrading to a more energy-efficient furnace, for example, can help lower your fuel bill, while installing low-flow toilets can save on water bills. So it pays to think ahead when remodeling, which is why this book is so useful.

Green Remodeling discusses simple green renovation solutions for homeowners, focusing on key aspects of the building including foundations, framing, plumbing, windows, heating and finishes. Room by room, it outlines the intricate connections that make a house work as a system. For example, it explains how new windows may affect the building's mechanical systems, the health of the occupants, and the future of old-growth forests. Then, in an easy-to-read format complete with checklists, personal stories, expert insights and an extensive resource list, it covers ways to save energy, conserve natural resources, and protect your health. This book is a useful resource for homeowners, architects, and remodeling contractors.

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HEALTHY HOUSEHOLD

Creating A Healthy Household: The Ultimate Guide for Healthier, Safer, Less-Toxic Living
Lynn Marie Bower

Lynn Marie Bower is an expert on healthy interior decorating, furnishings, hobbies, and cleaning practices. Her book, Creating A Healthy Household: The Ultimate Guide for Healthier, Safer, Less-Toxic Living, is packed with useful information. A multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS) sufferer, Bower writes with deep personal knowledge of the issues. The book includes a comprehensive resource list with full contact information for each reputable company or organization mentioned. With chapters devoted to cleaning products, personal-care, clothing, linens, interior decorating, life-styles, housekeeping, air and water quality, and reducing electromagnetic radiation, no other book matches its thoroughness.

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BIOPHILIC DESIGN

Building for Life: Designing and Understanding the Human-Nature Connection
Stephen R. Kellert

Ecological Design
Sim Van der Ryn and Stuart Cowan

The theory of biophilia states that there is an innate bond between humans and nature. The term has recently been the subject of much attention in environmental and design circles. Yale social-ecology professor Stephen Kellert has published a book titled Building for Life: Designing and Understanding the Human-Nature Connection. In this book, Kellert states that a connection with nature is "instrumental in human physical, material, emotional, intellectual, and moral well-being." Kellert also attests that our fractured relationship with nature can be ameliorated through what he calls "restorative environmental design." The benefits of biophilic design are being acknowledged by a growing number of architects, designers, and public health officials, and can be applied to many facets of your home.

For a somewhat more practical read on biophilic design, pick up Sim Van der Ryn and Stuart Cowan's book Ecological Design. This book is a thoughtful discussion of the theory and practice of ecological design, covering the following five principles: "solutions grow from place," "ecological accounting informs design," "design with nature," "everyone is a designer," and "make nature visible."

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ENERGY USE

The Home Energy Diet: How to Save Money by Making Your House Energy-Smart
Paul Scheckel

The Home Energy Diet was designed to help readers take control of their personal energy use and costs so they can save money, live more comfortably, and help reduce environmental impacts. The book also explores the possibility of using renewable energy for meeting home energy needs.

The crux of the book is a series of lessons on how common household systems (hot water heaters, heating/air conditioning systems, refrigerators and freezers, and other household appliances) use energy, but more importantly, how they lose energy through inefficiency, and what you can do to minimize such losses. The book then spells out a "diet" for each system. For instance, the electrical diet lists 16 tips, including:




  • Call your power company and ask if they provide an energy audit service. Older homes can often reduce energy bills by 50% or more by implementing energy audit recommendations.

  • Use only compact florescent light bulbs (CFLs). For every 1,000 kilowatt hours (kWh) used by a conventional, incandescent light bulb, a CFL bulb will use only 333 kWh, reducing your lighting costs by one-third.

  • Know what is on, when and why.

  • Eliminate your phantom loads (phantom loads are energy leaks from appliances, like those with a digital clock display, that draw small amounts of power even when not in use) by using power strips with on/off switches. The U.S. Department of Energy estimates that phantom loads add up to nearly 10 percent of U.S. household electricity use, or approximately $4 billion per year.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Earth-Friendly Pet Products


Approximately 63 percent of American households have pets. That means there's a huge market for pet-care products, and this industry, like so many others, is going green. It's now possible to find everything from litter produced from sustainable materials to eco-friendly pet shampoos to biodegradable doggie toys.

Hartz's Clean Earth line includes biodegradable grooming products (dog shampoos and sprays), training pads, and cleaning supplies (dander, odor, and stain removers).

SimplyFido's line of organic pet toys are made with PVC-free plastic (PVC, or polyvinyl chloride, is a toxic chemical), organically grown cotton (unbleached, untreated, and unprocessed), and organic dyes (natural extracts from plants and minerals, such as gardenia seed, clove and chestnut bur).

GPC Pet sells eco-friendly cat litters made out of materials such as corn, wheat, recycled newspapers, and wood chips, which are more environmentally friendly than clay litters. Next Gen Pet has a litter made with green tea leaves!

Only Natural Pet Store offers a variety of organic pet foods, grooming products, and other products, including these bumper beds, which are filled with recycled materials. Rawganique carries a wide line of hemp products, including hemp pet beds filled with organic millet hull. Worldwise's pet beds, which include PoochPlanet and SmartyKat, are made mainly with recycled materials, including EcoRest, a special fiberfill blend spun from post-consumer plastic bottles. Many of the beds are filled with the equivalent of more than 50 recycled bottles.

And for those whose pets are more - well - feathered, Nature's Choice Essentials offers organic bird food.

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Green Clean

The New York Times reports that an increasing number of households, schools, offices, and even hospitals are switching to environmentally friendly cleaning products in which chemical ingredients such as ammonia and chlorine have been replaced with plant-based products. The article details one line of green cleaning products:
The label on Seventh Generation bathroom cleaner explains its ingredients: Hydrogen peroxide (the active stain removal agent), biodegradable surfactants (for soil removal), citrus oil (for grease removal) food-grade, nontoxic oxygen stabilizers (to help the hydrogen peroxide last longer), and water. It also lists what is not included: “Free of chlorine, petroleum based solvents, glycol ethers, phosphates, acids, caustics, dyes and perfumes.”
Other manufacturers of green products include Simple Green, Method, Snappy Solutions, IMUS Greening the Cleaning, and BabyGanics. Green Seal, a non-profit organization that promotes environmentally friendly products and services, also has an extensive list of cleaning products.

While there is no government regulatory agency that defines or regulates green cleaning products, consumers are switching to these products in increasing numbers, citing better odor, less skin irritation, and less worry about exposing their children to potentially harmful chemicals.