Tips for a "Green" Holiday Season
While the winter holiday season brings good cheer to many people, it
also brings a lot more solid waste to the landfill, impacts to our environment,
additional consumption of natural resources, and additional debt to the
average American family. Regardless of which holiday you celebrate, here
are some environmentally-smart tips and web site links for a less wasteful
-- and perhaps less stressful -- holiday this year:
For Commonly Asked Questions about Holiday Waste Prevention, click here http://recycling.stanford.edu/recycling/caq_holiday.html
Every
year, there are 2.65 billion holiday cards sold in the U.S. That's
enough to fill a football stadium field 10 stories high!
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Wrapping paper is often used once and thrown away. Try using colorful pages
torn from magazines to wrap small gifts, and old maps or the Sunday comics
for larger boxes. Avoid using paper entirely by using reusable decorative
tins, baskets or boxes. If you do buy wrapping paper, look for ones made
of recycled paper. Reusable cloth ribbons can be used in place of plastic
bows. Finally, unwrap gifts carefully and save wrappings for reuse next
year.
-
Instead of material gifts, consider gifts of your time or expertise. For
example, offer to do chores, babysitting, etc. Or, offer to teach someone your expertise: how to bake, knit, repair things, etc.
-
If you buy gifts, look for durable and re-usable items and resist the latest
"fad" at the shopping mall. Think of how many pet rocks, mood rings, and
cabbage patch dolls ended up in the landfill!
-
Look for gifts with an environmental message: a nature book, a refillable
thermos bottle, a canvas tote bag, a battery recharger or items made from
recycled materials. Choose solar powered instead of battery powered products.
Or better yet, ones that require no power at all.
Americans throw away about 25%
more trash between Thanksgiving and New Year's Eve. That's an additional
5 million tons of garbage!

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Other environmentally-smart gifts include homemade ones: homebaked cookies,
bread or jams, a plant or tree. Ones that don't create any waste at all:
concert or movie tickets, dinner at a restaurant, or an IOU to help shovel
snow or repair a leaky faucet. Ones that get "used up": candles, soap,
or seeds for next year's garden.
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If you go out shopping, bring your own tote bags and avoid coming home
with an armload of plastic bags holding just one item.
-
You are probably receiving piles of mail order catalogs at this time of
year. Call the company's 800 number and ask that you be removed from their
mailing list. Fortunately, magazines and catalogs can be recycled at local
recycling centers.
It takes an average of 6 months for
a credit card user to pay off their holiday debt.
-
If you send holiday cards, look for ones made of recycled paper. Avoid
cards with glossy, shiny or gold foil coatings since these cannot be recycled.
Save the cards that you get in the mail, cut off the front pictures, and
reuse as "postcards" next year. This saves on postage too. Or, send
''electronic cards'' or make a phone call instead!
-
For tree trimmings, try edible or compostable items like popcorn or cranberries
on a string, gingerbread cookies or items made from "found" objects around
your home.

If every American family wrapped just
3 presents in re-used materials, it would save enough paper to cover 45,000
football fields.
some websites to
Learn more... about reducing
waste and the environmental impacts of the holiday season
California Department of Conservation's Green Gift Guide
California Integrated Waste Management Board's Holiday Guide
The
Center for a New American Dream's "Simplify the Holiday" and "Inexpensive, Creative and Eco-friendly Gift Ideas", and "Printable copies of a Gift of Time Cards"
Ad Busters's Buy Nothing Day
Use Less Stuff's "42 Ways to Trim Your Holiday Waste"
PBS's 100 Ways to Escape from Affluenza
Earth Saving Tips from Earth Share
Earth 911.org's Holiday Tips
New links for 2007!!
NRDC: Gift Giving Guide
Nature Gift Ideas
Environmental Defense Green Gift Guide
Organic Consumers Association
Waste Online: Cutting Down on Christmas Waste
New links for 2006!!
Sonoma County's "Turn Trash into Treasures: Low-Cost Ideas For Holiday Gifts"
University of Oregon Eco-Tips Page
Minnesota's No Waste Holiday Ideas
South Carolina's Holiday Tip Sheet
National Christmas Tree Association
Christmas Worms Poem
With careful thought, it is possible to reduce waste, conserve resources and promote environmental protection during this busy season.
~Lastly~
Season to Recycle
'Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house,
Lots of trash lay in heaps ready to be tossed out.
The packages were wrapped with barely a thought,
That recycled gift paper could've been bought.
Comics and newspapers, that went in the trash,
Could have wrapped holiday gifts in a flash.
Cardboard boxes were bound for the landfill this winter,
They could have been recycled at the local recycling center!
Greeting cards had been opened, then stuffed in trash bags
When they'd have made great postcards - or even gift tags!
Plenty of icicles and plastic hung on the tree
When pinecones and berries would look nice - naturally!
It was enough to make even old Santa shed a tear
"Another house that didn't recycle," he signed, " Maybe next year!"
Happy Holidays!!
Thank you to Erica Spiegel at the University of Vermont and Christine von Kolnitz at the Medical University of South Carolina for their help with the contents of this webpage :)
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