I’m Mobilized by Myxer
Monday, August 4th, 2008
Of course you can find Matthew Ebel Ringtones over at myxer.com/matthewebel, as well as make your own ringtones. But Myxer has also jumped on board to sponsor a project I call The Myxercycle.
Of course you can find Matthew Ebel Ringtones over at myxer.com/matthewebel, as well as make your own ringtones. But Myxer has also jumped on board to sponsor a project I call The Myxercycle.
The beginning of this whole experiment starts with the parts. Here’s what it takes to create a gas-free ride. Or, at least, here are all the bits and pieces I’ll need to put together on the island.
The Myxercycle was made possible by the folks over at Myxer. Go with it!
If you want to try one of these bike kits, check ‘em out over at electricrider.com
If you’ve caught some of my previous posts on Environmental Issues, you’re probably aware that I’m keenly interested in protecting the environment. I’m also keenly interested in not being a pain in the ass about it- I’m not going to tell you to move into a house made of cow dung and become a vegan because it’s the only way to live correctly.
I’m a geek, for heron’s sake, I prefer the high-tech methods of saving the world. And I don’t want my house to smell like poo.
So on the less-extreme side of environmentalism, I recently partnered with an awesome company named Myxer
to bring you a whole series of videos and posts about some alternative transportation. It’s graceful, it’s technological, and it’s a lot cheaper than a Prius (a hell of a lot cheaper than a Tesla).
Keep your eyes here for more of what I’m calling The Myxercycle. I’ll be posting some videos soon!
Yes yes, I know, recycling. It’s been around since the 1970’s as a movement. I have 5 garbage cans in my kitchen because of recycling, isn’t that enough?
Well, there’s a lot more to recycling than just paper, plastic, glass, and cans. A friend recently pointed me to an article called 21 Things You Didn’t Know You Can Recycle Some of the items, like batteries or motor oil, I already knew about, but some were a bit of a surprise:
1. Appliances: Goodwill accepts working appliances, www.goodwill.org, or you can contact the Steel Recycling Institute to recycle them. 800/YES-1-CAN, www.recycle-steel.org.
6. Compact fluorescent bulbs: Take them to your local IKEA store for recycling: www.ikea.com. [Ikea? I had no idea. This is great, considering fluorecents contain mercury, which really shouldn't ever be thrown out.]
20. Tyvek envelopes: Quantities less than 25: Send to Shirley Cimburke, Tyvek Recycling Specialist, 5401 Jefferson Davis Hwy., Spot 197, Room 231, Richmond, VA 23234. Quantities larger than 25, call 866/33-TYVEK.
21 Things You Didn’t Know You Can Recycle
www.enn.com/ecosystems/article/28729
That’s just a few from the list, obviously there’s more. So if you’re lucky enough to live in a town with curbside recycling*, you’ve got most of your work taken care of. I plan to at least save my CFL’s and old computer parts from the trash, now that I know where to send them!
* Right now I live in an upscale Boston suburb… that doesn’t even have regular trash collection, let alone curbside recycling. So if you have it, consider yourself very lucky, and make good use of it!
No, this is not a Martha Stewart moment.
Given that it’s the time of year to make mazzo balls, egg nog, or large quantities of ham and poultry, it’s time to take Conservation into the kitchen and teach it to cook. I’ve already written about saving water, so I’m already shutting off the faucet while I lather up my hands. There’s more to do at dinner time, though!
Tea and Sympathy. Despite what certain recent albums might suggest, I drink a lot of tea. Rather than throw away teabag after teabag, I have a few tea toys like steel steeping balls, a French press, and I’m in the market for a good teapot. By buying loose tea like Twinings, I’m throwing away less paper and getting a great little storage tin out of the bargain too.As an update from recent posts, I have indeed installed a shutoff valve on my shower head. It feels a little weird at first, turning the water off to lather up and scrub. It’s kind of like summer camp or when we did the Habitat thing down in Tijuana. After a week, though, I began to wonder why I’d been wasting so much water my whole life. It’s astounding how little you actually need to stay warm and clean, and how a simple $6 piece of hardware can save a load of money on the water bill.
One of the most important things we can do to keep this planet in one piece is simply to stop wasting stuff. Check out this cartoon about printer ink by the talented Jim Borgman. They package these things to make them harder to shoplift (and at $20 for a single black ink cartridge, Epson really ought to worry about shoplifting). Do you really need all that cardboard? The brochures inside trying to sell photo paper (who the heck prints photos anymore anyway)? The plastic bag, the mile-long receipt…
As a consumer, whenever I can find a low-packaging alternative, I jump on it.
And this Christmas I don’t want become part of the packaging problem. ‘Tis the season to consume, spend, and bolster that good old economy, right? I plan to make the process an efficient one from start to end.
And one last tip: If you want a real Christmas tree this year, go to a “cut your own tree” farm. The trees that aren’t chosen this season will continue producing oxygen and reducing greenhouse gases until next year, unlike all those that were already cut for the parking lot tree vendor.
Hat tip to Daniel Johnson Jr. for emailing me that Borgman cartoon, excellent find!