Answers
http://www.carbonfootprint.com/calculato r.aspx
This is not meant to be bragging on myself. The aforementioned question is simply one that has been asked more and more lately.
-Maintenance: I use ponies as a lawnmower. They are even more precise than a weed-eater around edges. I use their manure in my compost. Plus, there is no labor involved for mowing, and they make interesting pets.
-Energy: I have a wood-stove for heat, which is quite efficient and keeps my electricity bill below $60 in the winter, even with more electronics than I should probably have running and having Christmas lights for a month. I use the equivalent of one to two trees for heat each winter.
I now have energy saving light bulbs in almost every room (the most used rooms). I use only what lights are necessary at the moment.
-Transportation: My car can get over 30 mpg, while still performing adequately. I’ve added extra upgrades (air filter, muffler, cold air intake, etc,) that are supposed to make it more efficient. I do notice a difference in fuel consumption since the upgrades have been added (along with some slight performance bonuses).
I use tires which have the highest treadwear rating (they last a long time, even with having good traction).
-Consumables: The house has it’s own well, with it’s own pressure filter. I have a Brita filter pitcher, and use water from the well for drinking water. I use reusable bottles when it is required to have water afar (hiking and stuff).
I am starting my first garden this year. I am using my own compost from kitchen scraps, manure, leaves, etc.
-Garbage: This is my worst environmental aspect. Even though we recycle glass, aluminum, and plastic, we have no trash service so we burn our remaining garbage. I would like to build some kind of incinerator/burning pit that has at least a make-shift filter on it to reduce my air pollution.
-Influence: I have spread influence over my family. My father has bought a hydrogen generator for his truck. He requires a rather large truck for his job. My family utilizes his truck as “the family’s truck” so that it is all that is necessary for the entire family to complete big tasks. My parents also have energy saving light bulbs... not to mention that my father works for a clean energy industry.
-Future Plans: I am very interested in building a mini-windmill. If it produces enough power to nearly power my two-bedroom house, I might build a few more and make profit from them... if I can afford one at all.
Some do better in certain areas many are doing much worse...
Overall I would say you are doing exceptionally well hopefully you do try not to have to much in the burn pile though.
Oh yeah you probably already know about it but if you want some info for your windmill you might check this site
Carbon Dioxide used up into the air by unplugging stuff you aren#39;t using. Instead of water bottles, use Filters like Pur or Brita. Take a ...
WNYC - The Leonard Lopate Show: Please Explain: BPA (February 05 ...
Bisphenol-A, known as BPA, is an important building block of several plastics and plastic additives. Concern about the use of BPA in consumer products has been growing, and questions about its safety and its effect of human health have led some retailers to remove products made of it from their shelves; some states, cities, and even countries have even banned its use altogether. On today’s edition of Please Explain, we’ll look into what the studies of BPA show, why the scientific community continues to be divided over exactly what levels of BPA are harmful to human health, and how the Food and Drug Administration has handled consumer concern over BPA. We’ll speak with
Hi – I order frequently here at work from nearby Chinese place, partly b/c food is good but also because they have great containers: figure it’s safe to reuse them for storage in ‘fridge or cupboards but wondering about using them to heat stuff up – like soups. Bad move?
...jane#39;s daily blah: Epigenetics, BPA, and Can I really live without ...
. The whole concept of epigenetics is really fascinating and quite distressing to think about. We all know that evolution is a process which takes a very long time to change a species, so if you think in grand evolutional terms, nothing you do (smoking, drinking, eating a poor diet, etc) will affect your DNA or that of your children…. right? Well, this whole epigenetics thing says pretty much the opposite. There are apparently genetic markers, or switches, which tell certain genes to turn on and others to turn off. Genetic markers for certain things – good and bad – can be turned on and off in response to things such as smoking, drinking, poor diet, etc. And here’s the kicker. If one of these markers is switched on/off in *your* DNA, you will most likely pass on that “switch” to your offspring, and they in turn will most likely pass it on to theirs. It...
News
Why dont the BNPs opponents join it en masse?Telegraph.co.uk (blog) - Feb 15, 2010
Why don#39;t the BNP#39;s opponents join it en masse?Why does anybody bother with what George Pitcher says then? He believes in stuff just as silly. He can say what he likes as far as I#39;m concerned. and morenbsp;raquo;Telegraph.co.uk (blog) - Jan 29, 2010
Pitcher and Maddie rae typical of the breed of god-botherer that so infects Britain. They assure us they are resolute in their beliefs and nothing will and morenbsp;raquo;Publishers Lunch Deluxe - Jan 25, 2010
WONDROUS STRANGE author Lesley Livingston#39;s ONCE EVERY NEVER, about a modern teen girl who spirals back in time to Rome#39;s bloody conquest of Britain