Archive for the ‘Do Something Good’ Category

THIS IS AWESOME: Cell For Cash, RecycleBank

Monday, August 11th, 2008

For a year and a half while I was in college, I lived in a big house with quite a few other college students, most of them guys, most of them on some sports team, all of them going to a different college than I. They had a tendency to drink a lot, both in the house and out of it, and thus accrued a pretty significant number of recyclable bottles and cans every week which none of them ever felt like returning for the nickel bottle deposit each one would return to them. Being pretty tight on cash at all times, I would very often take care of these bottles and cans and bring a big bag with me every time I went grocery shopping. Kinda like having a bunch of coupons, but smellier and requiring a little bit more work, but with an overall very rewarding feeling when you were done. I mean come on, it was FREE MONEY for RECYCLING!

Needless to say, I was extremely excited when I read about these services Cell For Cash and RecycleBank on Treehugger today.

Here’s the brief synopsis on how they work. Check out their websites to find out more detailed info and check out the Treehugger article to find out about a couple of other, similar services that reward you for doing good.

Cell For Cash: Recycle your old cell phones, get money for many of the models. Go to their website and look up your cell phone. They will send you a postage paid envelope to return the phone to them to refurbish and sell in developing countries. For many of the models, they’ll mail you a check for the amount listed on the website, but for some of the older ones they won’t give you anything, except the satisfaction of knowing you did a good thing of course. They make it soooo easy by letting you sort by manufacturer and then providing pictures of all of them in case you can’t find your model number!

RecycleBank: If you’re a homeowner, sign up for this service. They give you a recycle bin with a computer chip in it that tracks the weight of how much you recycle when the garbage man comes to empty your bin. You get to put ALL of your recyclables in there for Single Stream recycling, making it excessively easy. Based on the weight of your recyclables, you get 2.5 points per pound that can be converted to gift certificates good at tons of awesome retailers like UnCommon Goods, Starbucks, Amazon.com, GOOD Magazine, and hundreds more.

43 Things

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

I just signed up for 43 Things. I need as much inspiration as possible to get and stay out of the funk I keep finding myself in. I’m working hard, doing well at my job, have (I believe) a few good friends who are there for me, not a clue where I am or where I’m going in my relationship future, and a million things I want to achieve for my own personal reasons that I never seem to have time to work on. Partly because I don’t have the time right now, but partly because I get caught up in the day-to-day and don’t put in the time and effort. Then I found this site. Maybe this can be my inspiration.

The idea is that people are able to accomplish more things once put into list form. They believe that 43 is the perfect number of goals to try to achieve – no more, no less. I disagree, but you gotta start somewhere. Make a profile, add goals, browse those of others, claim which ones you’ve achieve, encourage others, share your thoughts, inspire, be inspired, achieve. I love this concept.

Fingers crossed this is a step in the right direction.

Jennifer Squires Photography

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

I love Jennifer Squires’ beautiful, simple photos and her devotion to earth-friendly business practices. She has an Etsy store which sells pretty pictures of flowers, food items, and scenic views – most all of them shot using natural light with no fancy computer manipulation necessary to achieve images you’d gladly hang on your wall or place on your desktop. I kind of feel like each photo makes me feel calm and really hope I can achieve such a feeling with my photos in the future. Not only that, but as she states on her website, she makes every stride possible reduce her environmental impact by taking steps such as using using natural lighting as much as possible, using recycled stationary when she must send by snail mail, but making every effort to do her business online instead, using digital image proofs rather than contact sheets and chemicals, etc. Check out her website here to see her advertising portfolio and read about how she strives to save the world with every photograph she takes, and visit her Etsy store, where you can buy photoprints like these:

CO2 Stats

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

Last night I posted a CO2 Stats Counter onto my page. I came across this while looking at Eco-Chick.com – the blog started by Starre Vartan, author of the soon-to-be-published The Eco Chick Guide to Life: How to Be Fabulously Green. We recently got the manuscript in for the book at the Progressive Book Club and David asked me to read and let him know what I think since I’m the one person in the office who really embodies the ideal audience (that and I really wanted to read it!). Just from skimming it alone, I’m already in love with it. It’s well written, practical, easy-to-follow, and accessible for any age. It’s more than just “buy vintage clothing and organic food” kinds of tips. It delves into the reasons to go vegetarian, or if you can’t stand to give up burgers, how to adapt your eating habits a bit at least to reduce your environmental impact, how to talk to friend and family about environmentalism without seeming pushy or evangelical, wide-sweeping, grand, important tips and topics to go green.

Anyway, I’ve somehow never previously stumbled upon Starre’s blog until now and saw the CO2 Stats Counter on her website. Started by two PhD candidates at Harvard and Yale – Alex Wissner-Gross and Tim Sullivan – the carbon counter not only approximates the amount of CO2 your website and its visitors emit through computer usage and server storage, but the two men offset the carbon for free. The CO2 Stats Project buys offsets from Sustainable Travel International for ever pound of carbon your site’s visitors use up.

As quoted in a Reuters article about the program:

“Wissner-Gross and Sullivan aim to make the entire Internet carbon-neutral, a couple of keystrokes at a time; they say the Internet is responsible for more than 100 billion pounds of carbon dioxide emissions annually. By contrast, U.S. power plants emit 2.79 billion tons of carbon dioxide a year. The CO2Stats own Web site has so far offset less than 2 pounds of carbon. Other sites where the tool is installed show comparable results. The widget’s creators pay out of pocket for the offsets but hope for sponsorship in the future.”

Although the basic widget is free, you can purchase a pro subscription for $9.95/month, thereby helping to sponsor the program and offset their individual costs of the project. With the purchase, you can customize your badge, get analytics of exactly what types of fuel and what percentage are used to power your site, auditable monthly offsets with renewable energy certificates, and your site gets listed as one of the “Greenest Sites,” possibly bringing in thousands of extra pageviews a month. I just did it. Notice my badge on the right side of the blog!

Recycled Knitted Coffee Cozy

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

So yesterday I decided to stop at the Alessi flagship store just up the block from NYLON as I left work to head to NYU. It was time for my every few weeks splurge on a soy latte from Joe The Art of Coffee. Once it was in hand though, I met with a familiar problem, one that never comes up until it’s right in front of me and promptly forgotten when the coffee is gone – I’m already being wasteful by not brewing the coffee myself and putting it in a reusable mug, do I really need a cardboard cup AND a cozy? Even at Starbucks, where they proclaim on every cup and cozy just how much of it was made from recycled post-consumer products (only 10%), I feel bad using and disposing of yet another coffee cup. So I always falter and think before I grab a cozy as well “is it REALLY to warm for me to hold all by itself..?”

It usually is.

So today I vowed to find a nice knitted cozy I could buy and carry with me, just in case such a situation should arise. A small knitted cozy won’t take up much room in my already bulging bag and could even be made of organic wool, but best of all, it would mean no more cardboard cozies for me and a tiny bit less waste for the landfill.

Amazingly enough, I’ve already found not only the perfect cozy, but a seller who makes “eco-friendly” products knitted from perfectly good repurposed clothing – ie. sweaters unraveled for their yarn and used to makes hats, mittens, scarves, etc.

Hilo Verde has a small stock of items with adorable and simple designs at reasonable prices.

My perfect cozy:

I love all the easy things you can do to cut down on your waste and consumption, and the fact that no matter what I think of someone has thought of the exact same thing. It’s good to have like-minded company.