Simple Guidelines to Clean and Get Green
Whether you trim your hedges twice a week to achieve the perfect height and shape, water your gardens incessantly (from your rain bin, of course!), or clean the apartment every Sunday to de-clutter your life, all stems from a common pride we take in our homes and neighbourhoods to try to keep them looking their best.Below, you will find that with a small effort we can make our surroundings "cleaner and greener." By doing so, we will not only help the environment,
but improve our health and make our lives more enjoyable. All it just takes
a little more thought and care in our homes and backyards.
In the home
- Plastic shopping bags can be used as bin or wastebasket liners. Make a windbreak for your door by stuffing several bags stuffed into an old stocking or long cloth bag.
- Repair items where possible rather than discarding them and buying new.
- Be creative. Jars, bags, envelopes, scrap paper, old clothes etc. can be all reused in some capacity.
- You may no longer need your old clothes, furniture, appliances, toys etc., but don't discard them because your trash might be someone else's treasure. Pass them onto a charity or hold a garage sale.
- Only throw away things as the absolute last resort.
In your backyard
- Take extra care when washing your car. You should attempt to prevent runoff like soapy water, mud, oil, and grease from being washed into the gutter, as it will end up in our storm water drains.
- If you wash your car on the lawn or nature strip, avoid strong detergents as these can damage the grass.
- Your hose is not a broom! Hosing down concrete paths and driveways - rather than sweeping them - sends the dirt, chemicals, and debris straight in the storm water system, polluting our waterways.
- The extra effort you take will keep your water bills down!
- Don't sweep leaves, grass cuttings, or other garden waste into the street or gutters. When it rains, that rubbish will be washed into the storm water system, and some of it will be washed into the waterways. The rest of the debris clogs up local storm water drains, which causes flooding during periods of heavy rain. Just think: the rubbish you thought you swept away could ruin your carpets!
- Try to recycle garden waste. Leaves and lawn clippings can be used as mulch, which helps prevent weeds from growing. Also, a well-mulched garden doesn't need as much water, saving you money.
- Compost bins and worm farms enable you to recycle garden waste and food scraps. Compost produced this way will give you rich organic material that will improve your garden soil - and it's cheaper than commercial products.
- Check whether your local council collects green waste, and use their services.
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