How to Live and Work Green

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By Patty Inglish, MS


Let's Be More Green


How To Live Green -- A Couple of Ways

It is true that we may have too much waste in America and perhaps other parts of the world as well. I first heard about waste in elementary school when we were studying history. My teacher had, years ago, witnessed the waste of coffee and fresh milk that was all dumped into the Gulf of Mexico in order to drive up the prices of coffee and milk to increase the income of farms and distributors all the way to the grocery stores and restaurants. We learned that this was one reason that a cup of coffee went up from 5 cents a cup to 15 cents a cup at the time! That was a lot of money in those days. The ruse worked and we learned that after that, restaurants began in late 1950s and early 1960s to charge money for some things that were previously free, like a slice of onion or a slice of tomato on a hamburger (10 cents each). Apparently, some folks became pretty angry and stopped going to restaurants. That can save money and energy!

Another resource that is sometimes wastes is electricity and the natural resources that produce it. On November 9, 1965 a huge blackout took root in the state of New York. Within just a few minutes, it spread all over the US East Coast and northward to some parts of Canada. It adversely affected 30,000,000 people across a total of 80,000 square kilometers.

For several hours, everything was dark and nothing worked and people panicked. This revealed to us the extent to which we are too dependent on electricity.

Even if your local blackouts do not become quite as bad as the Blackout of 1965, you can take effective steps to keep your life going.

One of these is adding solar panels to the roof of your house. One of my uncles back in the 1950s and 1960s began building his family home with conservation and environmentally friendly ideas. Some people thought he was crazy, but his natural gas bill went down to $3.56 and less per month and his electric bill was very low! At the same time, a family at the other end of the county built an underground home in the side of a short hill and placed additional soil on top and landscaped it. The entrance and foyer were above ground and skylights were used there and in other areas, coming up/down through the hill. Solar panels were also used. Their natural gas bill was lower than my uncle's and their ventilation system was so good that the air was always fresh!

Today's solar panels are small, powerful, and inexpensive compared to the 1950s and 1960s. The new solar cells are thin and barely visible today. Some are even flexible and bend to fit any style of roof, and you can even solar shingles! It is truly amazing. You can get solar energy systems in many sizes to provide direct assistance during the day and then store electricity in batteries for overnight.

The sun is our friend, even at night.

We can also work green so that more of out lives are green:



Recycling, water conservation, and alterantive cars are some of my favorite ways of conserving energy. A few ideas are listed here.

Wood is very similar to the material used in these Adirondack chairs, but it is not wood

These Adirondack chairs look just like wood but are made of plastic and made available by Green Culture online. They look like classic wooden deck chairs, but are "Poly-Wood" -- recycled plastics processed. Other companies make park benches from this plastic. The super- sturdy plastic-based material can survive even in the woods and stand up to all weather conditions, including UV radiation -- almost indestructible.


We do not always need to purchase expensive plant fertilizer for our house plants. Instead of commercial fertilizer, use your next empty milk carton. When you finish the milk, fill the carton with water and use that for watering houseplants. They will flourish and you wills save money and resources. Bacteria that grow in milk that is no longer very fresh are excellent for houseplants and cactus, also garden herbs, potatoes and tomatoes. The milk carton and water method can also reduce the number of plant pests.


A Car that Runs on Air

This Air Car has an engine that runs on air! Pistons compress ambient air to refill air storage tanks and make expansions that reheat the air to push the pistons. It has an injection function similar to gas engines, but is more efficient. The air engine is powered by compressed air from a carbon-fiber tank with 90 cubic meters of air at 4500 psi. The fiberglass body Air Car was invented in France and will be manufactured in India.


100 MPG from this Car!

A great handyman form Maine, Mr. Jory Squibb, invented this three-wheeled eco-friendly microcar by combining two Honda Elite motor scooters. The Moonbeam is small, but two people can fit and it gets over 100 miles per gallon on the highway and 85 miles per gallon in town. Moonbeam's cruising speed is 35 - 40, but can reach 52mph. out. The microcar has a 150cc Honda 4-stroke scooter motor for power and water-cooling from the motor to heat the riding compartment in winter. Total project time was 1000 hours and $2000.

How to Live and Work Green in the News

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Earth Angel profile image

Earth Angel  says:
2 years ago

http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory?id=3753 Another GREAT Hub Patty!! Last week in D.C. a German Team won the Solar Home Design World Championship!! The goal was to provide an elegant home, with full emenities that was 100% self-sustainable!! What caught my eye was the solar panels cleverly designed into the plantation shutters!! Blessings, Earth Angel!!

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

O thanks for that wonderful link!!! I love these championships and such.

Marye Audet profile image

Marye Audet  says:
2 years ago

awesone...but you KNEW I would like it, right?

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

What fun, Marye! Do you like the little cars?

Marye Audet profile image

Marye Audet  says:
2 years ago

LOL! With 8 kids? I dream of a little car that onlys seats two!

Nope I drive a van. And my husband is 6 ft 6 in...with a 38 inch inseam. But I like the IDEA of them.

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

Hmmmmmmmmm. we need a tall and wide vehicle than runs on air. We should request that. :)

Marye Audet profile image

Marye Audet  says:
2 years ago

Can we request that it have a leather interior and be,...hmm...a nice shade of holographic green/orange/purple?

Because as long as we are requesting, you know...request big.

reonel_gray profile image

reonel_gray  says:
2 years ago

Ohhh. i was even worried about living a brown life.. or black or gray... XD i'd rather have blue or green. because if it was the three former,then life on earth would mean wearing face masks, right?

giveawaysecrets profile image

giveawaysecrets  says:
2 years ago

Fantastic Hub, I'm totally going to have to bookmark this page.

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

Marye, your car will surely be on the news when we get it manufactured!!

Reonel_Gray, this reminds me that I become confused about grey, brown and black water! :)

Giveawaysecrets, thanks for the comment!

Kenny Wordsmith profile image

Kenny Wordsmith  says:
2 years ago

I just love this green hub! And look forward to driving my aircar in a less noisy, less smoky, greener tomorrow!

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

And I really want one of those air powered cars! :) SO quiet, so much fun.

arturofonseca profile image

arturofonseca  says:
2 years ago

Awesome content, let's all work together for a "greener" world!

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

Yes I agree, arturofonseca. I just hate waste so much!

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

Thanks for the link. We'll take a look.

Bueller's Way profile image

Bueller's Way  says:
2 years ago

Good stuff. Trying to get a green job myself. Tired of doing work without having the end result accomplish something worth while. Hope someday we can run cars free and clean!

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