Results for recycle anything

DIY Tech - Replace Your iPod or MP3 Player's Battery

Technically Green
WILL VILLOTA / Wednesday, July 23, 2008 12:42 AM

Rayovac iPod Replacement BatteryIn April I wrote about iResQ, a website that can help you resurrect your ailing iPod.  But if all you need is to replace your iPod battery I recently discovered an even easier option – Batteries Plus. More...

TAGS: LIVE, e-waste, recycle anything

Sex and Sustainability, Part 2 of 2: The 3 R's of Sex Toy Disposal

The Sustainable Mystique
JENNY SEIFERT / Tuesday, March 18, 2008 01:33 AM

Love doesn’t always last forever, and neither do sex toys. Whether your relationship with your sex toy has just gotten old, the toy has lost its steam, or you’ve found someone else, at some point you and your sex toy will have to part ways. So where do sex toys go when they die? More...

TAGS: PLAY, recycle anything, sex

Hip Drip, Recycled Crafts, Trellis Earth, Oh My!

Talkin' Trash
MEREDITH SORENSEN / Sunday, March 9, 2008 07:19 PM

This Sunday I checked out the Around the Sun Blog (a blog about saving money around Portland). Taking a cue from its event listings (all free!), I checked out Hip Drip Café’s 2nd Sustainability Fair. Read the Around the Sun Blog here.

My friend and I biked over to Hip Drip Café, which is housed in EcoMotion’s car dealership on 16th and NE Sandy. We checked out these cool ZapCars which are three-wheeled electric wonders. I really liked the version with the flatbed in the back (pictured); perfect for errands around town. The saleswoman explained that the cars are registered as three-wheeled motorcycles, so their insurance is minimal (like, $200/year). More...

TAGS: HOME, arts & culture, recycle anything

Retail Re-tale: Why We Buy, by Juliet Schur

Talkin' Trash
MEREDITH SORENSEN / Friday, February 29, 2008 09:13 PM

I went to the Illahee Lecture titled “Why We Buy” with Juliet Schur. Dr. Schur opened by humorously explaining her profession (once-economist, now sociologist): “We take the obvious and make it really really complicated.” The crowd chuckled, and she rolled into her presentation.

I won’t try to capture everything that she said in that cozy hour, but will present some of the highlights with some of my thoughts.

HIGHLIGHT: money and happiness.

There is a very weak link between money and happiness. They (social scientists, I assume) have measured happiness and have found that above an annual income of $20,000, people don’t get much happier. She stated a few reasons for this: higher levels of income are typically associated with lots of work and stress; consumerism fosters dissatisfaction; income growth erodes social factors. More...

TAGS: HOME, recycle anything

An Illahee Lecture: Why We Buy

Talkin' Trash
MEREDITH SORENSEN / Wednesday, February 20, 2008 08:26 PM

I have gone to a couple of the Illahee Lectures over the years.  Next week (Thursday, February 28, 2008) looks particularly interesting to anyone interested in trash: it is titled "Why We Buy" by Juliet Schor.

The other Illahee lectures I have attended have been pretty good.  They are held at the First Congregational Church (1126 SW Park).  The church has some pretty neat architecture and has a cozy, semi-circle layout.  Peter Schoonmaker, the president of the organization, gets up and gives a nice introduction of the speaker.  Then the speaker takes it away.  Then, there's time for questions and answers.  Pretty standard format; I don't really know why I am sharing this information, but there ya go. More...

TAGS: HOME, recycle anything

Sex and Sustainability, Part 1 of 2: A Sex Toy Story

The Sustainable Mystique
JENNY SEIFERT / Sunday, February 17, 2008 10:43 PM

Let’s talk about sex…”green” sex. More specifically, let’s talk about the birds of an artificial feather and the bees with a battery-operated buzz. That’s right – sex toys, lubes, goos and whatever else we use to enhance our adventures in the bedroom, with or without a playmate. These toys, however, don’t come with the warning labels and regulations that children’s toys normally come with. So, unless you’ve done you research, we women don’t really know what we’re putting in our…well, you know.

 More...

TAGS: PLAY, recycle anything, sex

The Story of Stuff

Talkin' Trash
MEREDITH SORENSEN / Wednesday, February 6, 2008 06:57 PM

When my friend forwarded me a link to the “Story of Stuff" website, I thought, "This is pretty cool." When my mom forwarded me the link, I thought, "Wow. I guess everyone on the planet knows about this movie...and thinks it's cool." My blogging world (if such a world exists) must know about this resource. More...

TAGS: HOME, recycle anything

Doggie Bags – Give Your Soft Plastic Bags to Dog Owners

talkin' trash
MEREDITH SORENSEN / Wednesday, January 23, 2008 11:11 AM

Dogs rule in Portland. I see them all over. Thankfully, I hardly ever see their poo. That’s because their owners dutifully (heh) bend over and pick up their best friend’s steaming little pile of doo doo. I don’t own a dog, but I have a friend that does. Each week I give my buddy the soft plastic bags that have accrued over the week. Despite my overall waste-conscious efforts (I bring my own cloth bags to the grocery store; I buy in bulk; I bring Tupperware when I go out to eat), somehow, someway, I generate plastic bags. (I think they reproduce in the dark corner of my kitchen).

Anyway, at first I gave my friend ALL of my plastic bags. A few months later, I learned that some bags are better than others for picking up poo. The crinkly stiff bags that my cereal comes in? Not so good. The soft, narrow bag that my loaf of NatureBake Spelt bread comes in? Mmmmm, perfect. It is clear, medium-sized, and usually has no holes. In the hierarchy of poo-picker-uppers, these bags are like gold. I give them to my friend and he is very grateful. If you know someone with a dog, consider asking them if they need soft plastic bags – you’ll be their new best friend. (Sort of).

I hear about folks buying compostable bags made from corn, and I just am not sure what to think. There are a lot of times when compostable bags are appropriate… but when you think of the oil used to grow the corn, then the processing, and then the transportation of these special bags… for someone to buy it… to use once… for dog poo? I just don’t know. It’s hard to measure the full life-cycle analysis of these processes.  Sure, ideally everyone would walk around with a little scooper and shovel and bury the dog waste, not using a bag. But for 99.9% of the population, walking around with a scooper is not feasible. So we use bags, and doo (heh) the best that we can. More...

TAGS: PLAY, green pets, recycle anything

How Green is Your Mailbox?

GreenJeans
CECILY CACEU / Friday, January 18, 2008 03:26 PM

And I don’t mean the paint color.

Did you know that 19 BILLION catalogs are mailed out each year in the U.S.! I know some of you love to collect catalogs and put them in a pile to peruse during your “free-time”. But by becoming more selective in the catalogs you receive, you could help to cut down on that 19 billion number I mentioned! More...

TAGS: HOME, recycle anything

Trash. Art. Small Things. Big Pictures.

Talkin' Trash
MEREDITH SORENSEN / Thursday, January 17, 2008 01:28 AM

Last fall, a friend forwarded me an email about Chris Jordan's work in Seattle.  Mr. Jordan put together these large pieces of art.  Some of them have to do with trash.  One piece recreates Seurat's classic painting using aluminum cans (shown).  Another piece, called "Plastic Bottles," depicts "two million plastic beverage bottles, the number used in the US every five minutes." 

I visit this website from time to time to remind myself of how seemingly small things, put together, can be extraordinarily large.  The visuals are eery, somewhat scary, and beautiful all at once.  Here is the site if you are interested in checking it out.  

The next post will be more Portland-based, I promise. More...

TAGS: HOME, arts & culture, recycle anything
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