The Top Ten Easy Ways Everyone Can Help Protect our Environment

1. Only Read Real Books.

Reading a 400 page e-book using roughly 40 times the energy as reading a printed book and printed books can be reread and shared.

2. Grow a Garden

Even vegans use 60% as much energy as the most carnivorous consumer due to transportation and growing costs. Growing a garden is the best method to combat this huge cost of food production.

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3 Engage in Silence

Many of us now feel we need a podcast, music cranking from an Alexa, or a YouTube video blasting all the time. Intelligence, personality, and peace grow in silence. Also, any streamed media uses a huge amount of energy.

4. Do Whatever it Takes to Minimize Wasting Food

In the US it is estimated that some families waste up to 1/3 of the food they buy. This hurts their wallet as well as the environment. All the food the US wastes could feed Mexico and the energy used to create it could fuel 100% of the energy needs for three Tanzanias. (Also save roughly a 1000$ per person a year.)

5, Have Driving Free Days

If we all the people in the US pledged to not drive at least one day a week we would save 4 billion dollars a month and roughly 50 billion a year.

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(Low ball estimate of 5 dollars a day x 4 = 20$ x 200,000,000 drivers = 4 billion$ or for you about 40$ a month and 500$ a year. No driving = sometimes as much as 3,500 a year. I didn’t drive for 19 of my adult years so 66,500$ or about 4 x what I paid for my last car.)

6. Make a Compost Pit

Any veggies you throw away have their nutrients wasted while it creates more greenhouse gases. Instead, you can make a part of your yard full of bountiful life or, of course, use this nutrient rich soil in your garden.

7. Find a Hobby Which Can Use Recycled Products

We’ve all heard of the three Rs, but what about doing these things ourselves? Preserve veggies with old jars, make art out of items once bound for the landfill, start plants in plastic containers, or my personal favorite, make Dungeons and Dragons scenery out of former trash.

8. Try to Order Things by Delivery as Seldom as Possible

I know this is a hard one for some people, but remember if you really needed something you would already have it. Plan all your future requirements so they are gathered in one trip, preferably on your way to do some other tasks and not some giant truck running 20 trips after the crap has already been shipped across the Pacific.

This goes the same for ordering food delivered. These days it costs almost twice as much as it would have if you picked it up on your way home or about 10 times as much if you made it yourself. It is also wasteful and horrible for the planet. If you shop once a week just think of each Door Dash as doubling your carbon footprint for getting food on the table.

9. Find Hobbies and Pastimes You Can Enjoy Without Wasting Resources

Not everything in life must be streamed. Social media, Netflix, online video games have huge energy costs. Our ancestors didn’t need any of this crap to be happy. Do things for fun which help the planet instead of hurt it or buy things with one and done costs, like printed books, board games, horseshoes, cooking, and bike riding. Watch out or you might even burn a few calories and get some muscle tone back.

10. Don’t Use Artificial Intelligence

AI wastes a huge amount of energy to use. Create yourself, educate yourself, come on you are better than this.

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Dak is asked to hunt down renegade clones. His main problem, he’s dating one.

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WildernessPunk: Consume

You may know I outlined the top six techniques the average person can step up and try to accomplish to help themselves lower their Negative Environmental Impact (NEI). Fourth on our list of environmental doom, is our desire to consume.

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For many of us this can become difficult because it contradicts the generally accepted Cultural World View in this country, and much of the world, which states more is better. Our whole lives we’ve been told; make more money, buy more things, experience more of the world. This is designed to light a fire under us, but really lights a fire in the middle of our environment, because as I outlined recently in WildernessPunk, the Use of Juice, the more money one has, the worse their lifestyle is to the environment and the larger their NEI.

But let’s steer the rhetoric away from the use of utilities (and food which we also covered) and for this article, focus on the concept of how much material goods we consume. Since a huge amount of energy goes into producing the items you consume and transporting them to you, obviously purchasing less and using them longer will not only help your wallet but also the environment.

So here comes the jingle, recycle, reduce, reuse. Consumption is where this comes to play. However, it should probably go reduce first. Reduce what we need to use before we even start. Reuse everything we can whether we buy it, find it, swipe it, or harvest it. Then, after all this, it would get either recycled at the curb or donated to a thrift store.

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So yeah, yeah, blahbahidyblue, you can find these ideas in a lot of places, nothing too radical here. Alright, where does WildernessPunk fit in? Probably in the battle between reuse and hoarding. Hoarding is mostly bad and nasty. Remember the above, having more makes more waste, so we shouldn’t strive to have more, but also we shouldn’t be part of a replacement culture either. Oh it broke, get a new one. This isn’t helping. I’m not saying we should keep the broken VCR in the closet, no, recycle such things.

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Where things get tricky is how far do you go in keeping things around to reuse. We don’t want to live within piles of slowly rotting crud or have back yards which our neighbors wish to condemn, but also having a little extra doesn’t hurt the environment any. Everything we reuse saves a huge amount of energy. We should have the right to be able to reuse our gear, but I also don’t want to be the crazy guy keeping the plastic buckets with no bottoms. So where do we draw the line?

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This has always been a tough question for me. On one hand, I hate throwing things away which can be reused in some manner and having the supplies you need in the middle of a project is a huge boon. Finding a way to reuse some old thing you have saves time, money, and helps lower your NEI. Yet, hoarding sucks. Having too much junk is a pain in the ass. Personally I enjoy the Spartan look for rooms where I live. I might not always achieve it, but I like it.

 

So what is the answer?

 

 

Let’s try to bullet point a positive outline for this conundrum.

 

  • Start by owning less. Less mess and less waste automatically happen.
  • Be obsessive about using everything you can instead of buying something new
  • Stay organized so you know where the gear you could reuse is
  • Donating things to charity is another way of reusing
  • Gift things to friends
  • Go through your older things often and reuse, donate, organize, and purge
  • Actively use stored items for utilitarian purposes and art

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If you keep these concepts in mind, I don’t think things will get too bad, but it does bring up the thought, where again, lessening your NEI is not always a pretty thing. If you’re dumpster diving for lumber, instead of buying it, because you want to make a Tiki Lounge, it may not look terrific piled up against your neighbor’s fence while he waters his manicured lawn. But then again, if you’re living right, your NEI for lawn maintenance might be about a hundredth of his.

 

 

 

The bottom line is usually the less income you have, the less of a NEI you create, but it doesn’t have to be this way. One can use those extra resources wisely and create a place of beauty, which lives in greater harmony with the Earth. Create beauty, promote life, and also remember, if you have to move, less is always more.

Kopapelli

 

You can check out some of my fiction here, where they power everything with nuclear, who knew?

 

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