Monday, December 24, 2018

Plastics Purge Part I: BYOB (Bring Your Own Bag)

Plastics are one of the most widely used materials in the world, with near ubiquitous application in our lives today. Used as far back as 1600 B.C. by ancient Mesoamericans to create figurines and bands, plastic has undergone a series of innovations and alterations over time, culminating in a seemingly infinite array of uses and applications. Consequently, the global production of plastics has increased steadily throughout history, reaching a staggering 280 million tons in 2016.

Plastics are light, cheap, and durable, making them widely used in a diversity of products. However, the cheap costs of plastics also allow them to be used only once before being disposed of, resulting in the generation of mass amounts of litter. This plastic litter ranges in size from macrodebris (such as plastic chairs and shoes) to microdebris (plastic fragments less than 5 mm in diameter) which accumulates in landfills, rivers, and oceans all over the world.

Although they are cheap, useful, and ubiquitous, because plastics are derived largely from non-renewable fossil fuels including natural gas and petroleum, they are inherently unsustainable and are sources of waste in our everyday lives that we should strive to avoid on our path toward greener living.

This week, I kick of a multi-part series I’m calling the “Plastics Purge” in which I highlight sources of plastic waste in our everyday lives and offer sustainable alternatives and strategies to avoid creating such waste in the first place.

This week’s focus is on eliminating the use of disposable plastic shopping bags.

These plastic bags may be convenient, but such convenience comes at a cost.
According to the Center for Biological Diversity:
- Americans use 100 billion plastic bags a year, which require 12 million barrels of oil to manufacture.
-The average American family takes home almost 1,500 plastic shopping bags a year.
-According to Waste Management, only 1 percent of plastic bags are returned for recycling. That means that the average family only recycles 15 bags a year; the rest end up in landfills as litter.
-Up to 80 percent of ocean plastic pollution enters the ocean from land.
-100,000 marine animals are killed by plastic bags annually.
-Plastic bags are used for an average of 12 minutes.
-It takes 500 (or more) years for a plastic bag to degrade in a landfill! Unfortunately the bags don't break down completely but instead photo-degrade, becoming microplastics that absorb toxins and continue to pollute the environment.

An arguably superfluous product with such extreme negative environmental impacts should be avoided at all costs. Luckily for all of us, reusable bags work just the same, if not better, than plastic bags and can eliminate a lot of unnecessary waste in the process. These bags can be purchased (directly at grocery stores or elsewhere) or crafted on your own.   

Alternatives include:
-Purchasing reusable cloth or canvas bags and keeping these in your car so they’ll always be on-hand when you find yourself at the store
-Crafting your own reusable bags from old textiles (reusing and reducing!!) 
Here’s a great tutorial for easy, no-sew t-shirt bags, but there are tons of other designs available online as well, so feel free to do some research and craft/upcycle to your heart’s content 
-When in a pinch without your reusable bags, go without a bag
-Bring reusable mesh produce bags to avoid using the plastic produce bags offered in grocery stores, or let your fruits and veggies roam free (like I often do when I’m without a reusable alternative in the store)
-if you do end up with plastic bags at home, be sure to reuse them (as small trash bags, for picking up animal waste, etc.) and look to recycle any bags you may have by returning them to participating grocery stores. If you’d like to learn more about this option, not only for grocery bags but for other  “bag-like” products that are not accepted in the general recycling stream, check out Recycle Coach’s useful outline of what you can and cannot drop off in plastic bag recycling bins
-Use your reusable bags when shopping for anything and everything! Groceries, clothes, books—you name it! Reusable bags are durable, versatile, and more sustainable than their disposable plastic alternatives.

Some countries, states, and cities have banned or heavily taxed the use of plastic bags, which is one avenue by which to solve this issue. However, an easier and more immediate solution to the plastic bag issue is for consumers to change their behavior and voluntarily choose to use alternatives to single-use, disposable plastic bags. To learn more about your state or city's plastic bag legislation, or lack thereof, visit NCSL's plastic bag legislation website and consider taking action to ban the bag in your town using the Plastic Pollution Coalition's tips for getting involved.   

As someone who has long since used reusable grocery bags, I can assure you they offer larger, sturdier, and less environmentally-destructive transportation of your groceries (or whatever you may be purchasing). Most stores will even offer you a discount (usually 5-10 cents off) for each reusable bag. With a little planning and forethought (i.e. remembering to bring your reusable bags when you go shopping), we can play a major part in reducing the harmful impacts of single-use plastics. 

If you’re not convinced that our pervasive use of plastics poses a problem, I encourage you to think again and check out this recent 60 minutes report detailing the issue—this eye-opening piece is definitely worth a watch!

In the meantime, craft or get yourself some reusable bags and take this important first step in purging plastics from your life. Stay tuned next week for my look into plastic straws! (Spoiler alert: they totally suck!)

Until then,
  Happy holidays and best wishes on your journey toward greener living.
~Sam 


Thursday, December 13, 2018

How to Sustain Ourselves and the Planet: A look into the realities of a plant-based diet

“You can’t be an environmentalist and eat animal products.” Controversial? Most definitely. True? Perhaps.

This week, I endeavored to explore the realm of plant-based diets and the environmental benefits of abstaining from eating meat and other animal products.

My earliest memory of vegetarianism consists of my older sister announcing her intention to be a vegetarian at the dinner table, and my dad responding resolutely, “You can eat what I make or you can go hungry,” as he brought a plate of medium rare steak to the table as if to emphasize his point. A proprietor of a restaurant with a specialty in BBQ, my dad would ultimately come to loosen his staunchly pro-meat views, at one point accommodating two vegetarians and one vegan among his four daughters. 

I first became a vegetarian in the Spring of 2015 as a result of partaking in an immersive semester program focused on sustainability and sustainable food systems. My vegetarianism lasted for 1 ½ years before I was “back on the product,” as my dad liked to say. The why behind my decision to once again eat meat was a pretty weak one—it was easier and I wanted to. 

It was only recently, roughly two weeks ago, that I decided to reinstate my vegetarianism, inspired in large part by this blog. How could I, a self-proclaimed environmentalist, actively and willingly choose to participate in the single most environmentally destructive daily practice an individual can do? It may seem dramatic, but as someone seeking to explore and eradicate sources of waste in our daily lives, diet is a key factor that needs to be taken into consideration.
     
The leading cause of environmental destruction is animal agriculture. Animal agriculture, the process of raising animals for human consumption, is an environmental nightmare. The process is water-intensive, contributes significantly to global warming, promotes and necessitates deforestation, and produces huge quantities of animal waste that contaminate our waterways and oceans, contributing to ocean dead-zones incapable of supporting life. As food researcher, writer, and activist Michael Pollan describes it, it’s a “brutal system at every level” for the planet, the animals, and the humans involved in the animal agriculture industry.

This week, I further investigated the topic of replacing animal-based diets with exclusively plant-based diets by watching two documentaries on the topic—both available on Netflix.

The first, Cowspiracy, follows the journey of Kip Andersen, an endearing, man-bun clad environmentalist inspired by Al Gore’s 2006 An Inconvenient Truth, who is hell-bent on getting answers as to why the environmentally destructive impacts of animal agriculture were being overlooked and under-emphasized by environmental advocacy groups. 

The film ultimately showcases the dangerous corruption which runs rampant in our country’s oligarchical pseudo-democracy in which the rich and powerful (in this case, those profiting from Agribusiness and cattle industries) are able to influence government regulations and policies to operate in their favor at the expense of the health and wellbeing of individuals and our planet as a whole.

Promoting an anti-meat / anti-animal product platform while challenging individuals in their everyday habits and lifestyle choices is an unpopular, and even dangerous, thing to do. However, this film does just that, while using an impressive array of statistics to back up their claims.

I’ll highlight some of the most compelling, here:

1. Animal Agriculture is responsible for 51% of human-caused climate change from loss of carbon sinks via deforestation, animal respiration, and methane production:
-animal livestock produces 65% of nitrous oxide emissions worldwide—a gas with a global warming potential 296 times greater than CO2
-agriculture emissions are projected to increase 80% by 2050 (due to global increase in meat and dairy consumption)
-raising livestock produces more greenhouse gas emissions than all of transportation combined

2. The animal agriculture industry accounts for a massive amount of water consumption:
-Raising livestock, in the U.S. alone, consumes 34 trillion gallons of water each year
-A 4oz hamburger requires 660 gallons of water to produce
-1 pound of beef requires 2,500 gallons of water to produce
-55% of total water usage is attributed to raising livestock as compared to 5% for domestic water used in the home (e.g. taking showers, washing dishes)
-An average dairy cow consumes 30-40 gallons of water every day
-1 gallon of milk takes upwards of 1,000 gallons of water to produce
-raising animals for food is responsible for 30% of the world’s water consumption

3. Animal agriculture is resource-intensive and socially irresponsible:
-Animal agriculture occupies 45% of earth’s land
-on average, dairy cows eat 140-150 pounds of feed per day
-world cattle populations drink 45 billion gallons of water and consume 135 billion pounds of food every day
-50% of grains and legumes grown worldwide are fed to animals
-82% of the world’s starving children live in areas where food is fed to livestock that are then consumed by more affluent individuals in developed countries
-The world’s cattle eat enough grain to feed 8.7 billion people (grain used to fatten cattle could feed malnourished populations all over the world)

4. The livestock industry is the leading cause of deforestation worldwide and accounts for massive amounts of pollution:
-1 acre of rainforest is cleared every second to graze animals and grow their feedcrops, with a staggering 136 million acres of global rainforests lost to date due to livestock grazing and feed production
-As global rainforests are deforested, many plant and animal species are lost along with it 
-116,000 pounds of farm animal excrement is produced every second in the US
-Pollution from animal agriculture is the leading cause of ocean dead zones and is responsible for the creation of more than 500 nitrogen-flooded dead zones completely devoid of life in our oceans

The bottom line: animal agriculture is a resource-intensive, polluting,  environmentally destructive enterprise that is not sustainable. 

The alternative? A plant-based diet.

On any given area of land, you can produce 15 times more protein from plant-based sources than from meat. Meat has an energy conversion of 38:1 (on average, one calorie derived from animal sources requires 38 calories of energy to produce) as compared to a 2:1 ratio with plant-based alternatives, making a plant-based diet the clear winner in terms of being a more efficient, less energy-intensive system of food production.

You can still be healthy and thrive without consuming any animal products, and veganic farming (food production requiring no animal inputs) has the benefits of being the more efficient and the more compassionate option.

-To feed a person on a vegan diet for a full year requires ⅙ of an acre of land.
-A vegetarian diet, including eggs and dairy, requires 3 times as much land
-A high-consumption diet of meat, dairy, and eggs requires 18 times as much land
-You can produce 37,000 pounds of veggies on 1.5 acres of land, but only 375 pounds of meat on that same plot of land

You can also cut a substantial amount of CO2 emissions in altering your diet:
1.4 tons annually by eating no beef
1.6 tons vegetarian
1.8 tons vegan

A vegan diet produces ½ as much CO2 as that of an American omnivore, uses 1/11th the amount of fossil fuels, 1/13th the amount of water, and 1/18th the amount of land.

Per day, a vegan diet can save:
1,100 gallons of water
45 pounds of grain
30 square feet of forest
10 pounds of CO2
1 animal’s life

These savings are every day for every individual choosing to eat a plant-based diet in lieu of animal products.

If you’re not convinced on environmental ramifications alone, there are also significant personal health benefits to consuming a plant-based diet, as showcased in the documentary, Forks Over Knives.

This documentary explores the obvious, but often overlooked and neglected, link between food and health. With diet-related health expenses costing our country over $120 billion each year in procedures and medications associated with heart disease, obesity, and diabetes, the film explores a whole-foods (non-processed), plant-based diet as a solution to the multitude of health problems resulting from the highly-processed, animal-based diet that pervades much of our country.

The film ultimately highlights the “revolutionary” conclusion of the two nutritional researchers featured in the film that “Many of our most crippling conditions could be greatly reduced, if not completely eradicated, simply by eating a whole-foods, plant-based diet” (fruits, vegetables, grains, legumes) and avoiding processed food (refined sugars, bleached flour, oils, and animal products including meat, dairy, and eggs).

It may sound far fetched, but the film highlights interesting findings, research, and testimonials to back up this claim.

For example, research featured in the film found that cancer cells in mice grew more rapidly when fueled by animal proteins than by plant proteins.

Similarly, mortality from Cardiovascular Disease in Norway underwent a dramatic decline in 1939 when German occupiers confiscated all livestock for their consumption, and Norwegians had to eat a primarily plant-based diet. The mortality rate subsequently increased in 1945 following cessation of the occupation.

The American diet has changed dramatically over the years, marked specifically by a rise in the consumption of meat, dairy products, and processed sugars. Near the beginning of the 20th century, Americans each ate about 120 pounds of meat annually, but that figure has since risen to 222 pounds.

Such a diet provides the protein that many folks use to justify their meat consumption, but it also brings with it an increase in dietary cholesterol levels that can build up in arteries and cause restricted blood flow to the heart, contributing to a variety of life-threatening cardiovascular diseases.

In reality, all the protein you need can be obtained from whole-food, plant-based sources such as rice, potatoes, grains, seeds, nuts, legumes, and vegetables.
Consider checking out this list of the 17 best sources of protein for vegans and vegetarians to learn more about non-animal alternative protein sources. 

Individuals interviewed and chronicled in the film who made the switch to a whole-foods, plant-based diet reported losing weight, gaining more energy, and having better health (lower cholesterol and blood sugar levels) as a result of changing their diet.

With the two-fold environmental and personal health benefits offered by an alternative whole-foods, plant-based diet, making the switch should be a no brainer!

However, as humans, we rarely do what is best for ourselves or for our environment. I’m an ice cream-loving vegetarian who is slowly but surely committing myself to a vegan lifestyle. I’m not suggesting everyone needs to cut out all animal products from their diet immediately, but I am suggesting that you at least give it a try. Start out by cutting out red meat. Or try instituting “meatless Mondays” (if you end up watching Cowspiracy, you’ll find one commentator who is vehemently opposed to the idea of meatless Mondays, but I’m a huge proponent of it as a useful stepping stone on the pathway to plant-based diets). Challenge yourself to eat vegan for one day. One week. One month. You can even sign up for the free 30-day vegan challenge and access lots of resources on Cowspiracy’s website.

Plant-based diets are a viable solution to climate change that can have immediate positive impacts on the planet. Moreover, it’s a diet that is kinder to our bodies, our planet, and our fellow living creatures. Changing our diets is unmistakably the most profound thing we can do, as individuals, to help the environment. 

If you’re planning on trying to change your diet to be more sustainable, let us know how it goes in the comments section below. Likewise, if you refuse to even entertain the idea of trying, I’d be interested in hearing the reasoning behind your refusal. Are you already a full-blown, committed vegan? Feel free to impart some wisdom, insight, tips, and recipes!

If you haven’t already done so, be sure to follow Greener Living by clicking the blue “follow” button at the top right of the page. And please share with any of your family or friends you’d like to challenge to follow a path toward greener living.

Until next week,
~Sam 

Sunday, December 2, 2018

Staying Clean While Being Green: A how-to guide for greening your hygiene routine

We’ve discussed how to clean our clothes more sustainably and how to clean our homes more sustainably, but what about cleaning ourselves more sustainably?
From reducing your water usage, to buying responsibly, to avoiding harmful PCCPs (personal care and cosmetic products), there are so many things you can do to greenify your basic hygiene practices.

We’ll start with an easy one: toilet paper. According to an article in Scientific American, Americans use 36.5 billion rolls of toilet paper every year, which requires the pulping of 15 million trees, over 473 billion gallons of water to produce the paper, and 253,000 tons of chlorine to bleach it, as well as significant amounts of energy and materials to package and transport the product to retail outlets.
In my endeavor toward greener living this week, I switched my household to using toilet paper made from recycled paper. I purchased a 12-pack of Seventh Generation 100% Recycled Bath Tissue for $9.99. Raised in a house with strong Scott toilet paper brand loyalty, the recycled bath tissue has proven to be stronger and softer than what we were using before. And, it was the less expensive option at the store. Not to mention its significant implications for sustainability.

If every household in the U.S. replaced one 12-pack of 240 sheet virgin fiber bathroom tissue with recycled bath tissue, we could save over 2,400,000 trees. This simple act of choosing to wipe our butts with recycled rather than virgin paper can have massively beneficial environmental impacts! And it requires next to no effort to implement such a change. Simply purchase bathroom tissue made from recycled paper the next time you buy. It works just the same as the non-recycled stuff, but is a lot gentler on our planet. Also look for toilet paper rolls without a cardboard roll (which I couldn’t find at my local store) or be sure to recycle the cardboard rolls rather than tossing them into your trash. 

Of course, toilet paper use can also be eliminated altogether with the use of a bidet—a plumbing fixture or accessory that uses a stream of water to clean you after using the restroom as opposed to toilet paper. Bidets are utilized widely all over the world, except in North America where they remain unpopular and underutilized.

In addition to their environmental benefits in reducing water consumption and waste generated in the production and use of toilet paper, bidets are also a more hygienic alternative to toilet paper. A top-of-the-line bidet featuring heated water and air drying mechanisms costs $549. However, less advanced
models can be installed yourself and cost less than $100. On average, a family of four will purchase twenty 12-packs of toilet paper throughout the year (based on average consumer use of 57 sheets of toilet paper per day). As I took a closer look at the toilet paper offerings this week in my local grocery store, 12-packs ranged from $8-$12 in price. This means that an average family of four spends approximately $160-$240 dollars on toilet paper annually, which is significantly costlier than the one-time expense of purchasing a bidet.

If you end up incorporating a bidet into your bathroom routine in the future (which I highly encourage folks to do!) or you are simply interested in learning more about bidets, consider reviewing these tips on how to use a bidet.

Toilet paper is but one small part of our daily hygiene routine. From brushing our teeth, to flushing the toilet, to washing our face, to showering, the task of keeping our bodies clean and healthy requires an extraordinary amount of water. According to the USGS, each person in the United States, on average, uses 80-100 gallons of water each day. Here are some quick facts and tips on how to reduce your personal water consumption in the quest for a greener daily hygiene routine:
     1. If it’s yellow, let it mellow.
          -I know from personal experience that this can be a controversial and unpopular method of water conservation. However, the average toilet flush uses 3 gallons of water! That’s an insane amount of water to be wasting every time you pee. If it grosses you out, invest in deodorizer or keep the lid down. I’m a huge proponent of the yellow mellow strategy of water conservation, but I do understand it may not be everyone’s “cup of tea.” Other ways to reduce water use with your toilet include:
          -Installing a low-flow toilet, which uses only 1.6 gallons of water per flush, on average
          -If you can’t replace your higher-volume toilet, then put a plastic bottle filled with water in your toilet tank to reduce the amount of water used per flush
          -Check for toilet leaks (and repair them) by putting food dye into the tank. If the color appears in the bowl without flushing, then there’s a leak that should be repaired
     2. Turn off the faucet when brushing your teeth or washing your hands or face.
          -Newer faucets use 1 gallon of water per minute, whereas older ones use over 2 gallons. The simple act of not letting the water run unnecessarily while you brush your teeth, wash your face, or wash your hands can save a lot of water
     3. Take a shorter shower and use a low-flow showerhead
          -Older showerheads use up to 5 gallons of water per minute. Water-saving showerheads cut that down to 2 gallons per minute. Regardless, cutting your shower time by only one minute can have significant water saving impacts!
          -Time your showers so you are aware of how long you’re spending in there. Challenge yourself to cut your shower time down. If you usually spend 10 minutes in the shower, using an average of 3.5 gallons of water per minute, you’ll use 35 gallons of water per shower. Cutting your shower time by only two minutes bumps that down to 28 gallons and saves 7 gallons of water each shower or 2,555 gallons of water annually
          -Additionally, shut off the water while shaving, sudsing up, lathering your shampoo, etc.
          -As for my favorite water-saving tip when it comes to showering: DON’T DO IT! The best way to reduce water use from showering is to not take showers in the first place. Of course, I’m not suggesting you never shower. However, I am recommending that you consider doing so less frequently. For example, if you shower every day, consider trying to cut that down to six times per week.Skipping just two showers per week has the potential to conserve a whopping 3,640 gallons of water annually.  It’s a tough habit to break, but once you do, you may find yourself being quite content with showering as little as twice per week.

In addition to all that water we are using, we should also be conscious of all the products we are washing down our drains along with that water. In general, you should strive to use products that won’t wash harmful dyes, fragrances, chemicals, and microbeads into our water supply (or put those things into contact with our bodies!) The use of personal care and cosmetic products (PCCPs) of course has overarching environmental implications, but they also have potentially serious impacts on our individual health and wellbeing.

In order to make your beauty routine the healthiest it can be both for you and the planet, consider these tips when deciding which products to buy/use:
     -skip the microbeads / microplastics commonly found in PCCPs. An estimated 8 trillion microbeads enter streams and oceans every day in the U.S. and upwards of 360,000 microscopic plastic particles can be found in a single bottle of face or body wash. These microplastics cannot be filtered out of our wastewater systems (they’re too small) and subsequently enter, pollute, and degrade our waterways. You can know if a product contains microplastics by looking for polyethylene, polypropylene, polyethylene terephthalate, polymethyl methacrylate, or nylon in the ingredients list. Instead, look to use products with natural exfoliants such as apricot, sugar, or salt scrubs
     -avoid antibacterial cleansers containing triclosan (commonly found in hand gels and hand soaps) as this can create bacterial resistance to antibiotics
     -avoid soaps/shampoos/cosmetic products with added colorants and chemical additives including fragrance, sodium lauryl sulfate / sodium laureth sulfate, polysorbates, polyethylene glycol, potassium sorbate, and many other ingredients that can be harmful to you and the environment

The stark reality of the situation is that there are thousands of chemicals in our products which are being absorbed into our bodies. For a more in-depth list and explanation of chemicals frequently found in PCCPs that you should be avoiding, consider checking out this HuffPost article or conducting further research of your own

The best way to know what is in your facewash, shampoo, and soap is to make it yourself. This is what I did this week, and it was honestly so much fun! I made my own face wash using this recipe  consisting of castile soap, chamomile tea, water, and essential oils. It was quick to make, smells great, and has been leaving my skin feeling refreshed, moisturized, and glowing.

I also made DIY foaming hand soaps using castile soap, water, and coconut oil.

In what was truly a green hygiene renaissance for me this week, I also started brushing my teeth with natural toothpaste and began using a Dr. Bronner’s “All-in-one” bar of castile soap to wash my body, hair, and face. The bar was a reasonable $4.49—a fraction of what it would cost to buy separate shampoo, soap, and face wash. I have also utilized baking soda shampoo and an apple cider vinegar rinse as DIY shampoo in the past and highly recommend giving that a try as well.

Just know that it does take some time (usually about 2 weeks) for your hair to adjust to a change in cleaning regimen, but in the long run, you, your hair, and our planet will better off because of it. Feel free to research DIY shampoos on your own, or peruse this thorough Dr. Bronner’s guide for additional insight and ideas.

Last but not least, hygiene products like toothbrushes and razors can have a big impact on how your routine is affecting our planet.

Those who know me well know that I have a tenuous relationship with my local dentist, but all animosity aside, I still believe in the importance of oral hygiene. However, I don’t believe we need to destroy our planet in the process.

The standard toothbrush is made of a hard plastic handle and nylon bristles. Most come in plastic packaging. These petroleum products do not biodegrade, they release toxic chemicals when incinerated, and they utilize non-renewable fossil fuels as explained on Recycle Nation’s website. An estimated 850 million to one billion plastic toothbrushes are thrown away in the U.S. every year, generating 50 million pounds of waste. And that doesn’t even account for the additional waste created by packaging, toothpaste tubes, dental floss, and other oral hygiene products.

I would never recommend ceasing to brush your teeth. However, I do recommend seeking more sustainable alternatives to the conventional plastic toothbrush.

These sustainable alternatives include:
-bamboo toothbrushes (whose handles will decompose and biodegrade)
I ordered a four pack (which will last me the year). I like the brush a lot, and it came in a recyclable box made from 100% recycled material. When I’m done with the brush I can pop out the nylon bristles and compost the handle simply by jamming it into the ground. How exciting!
Believe it or not, it’s actually quite a nuanced topic, trying to find the right “sustainable” toothbrush. I found The Zero Waste Backpacker’s insight into the topic to be quite enlightening and informative.
-toothbrushes with replaceable heads (such as Ecodent or Radius)
- toothbrushes made from recycled plastic
The company Preserve makes an array of products—including toothbrushes and razors—from 100% recycled plastics, thereby diverting plastic from the wastestream and repurposing it.

When it comes time to dispose of your plastic toothbrush, look into recycling your toothbrush—along with other hard-to-recycle products like toothpaste tubes, dental floss containers, and toothbrush packaging—through programs like TerraCycle. If you’re feeling particularly ambitious, you may even advocate for your local dentist to join Terracycle’s toothbrush recycling program. You can also keep your old toothbrush to use as a useful scrubber for household cleaning tasks! 

Also, be sure to recycle the cardboard boxes these sustainable alternative toothbrushes and toothpaste brands come in.

The potential for greener living is vast and ubiquitous. Our daily hygiene routines are no exception to that. I know I inundated you with information in this blog, but there was a lot to cover. And I wanted to cover a lot in the hopes that readers will find methods, tips, and tricks for greening their routines that work for them. Not everyone is going to want to give up their shampoo brand. Not everyone is going to want to take shorter showers. Not everyone is going to want to adopt a yellow mellow flushing policy. However, everyone should be able to commit to one change. Whether it’s turning the faucet off while brushing, buying toilet paper made from recycled paper, making your own soaps and shampoos, installing a bidet, adding a water bottle to your toilet tank, or buying a more sustainable toothbrush, let us know how it goes in the comments section below.

I won’t be able to blog next week, so hopefully the extent of this one can help you make your greener living fix last. Two weeks from now I’ll be back with another topic. Stay tuned to see what it is!

-Sam