Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Green Living at Home-five simple tips to make your home green even with small children


Babies and small children comes with a lot of packaging and can be a challenge to even think about living green when you're lost in a sea of disposable nappies, wet wipes and laundry. Unless an ecological commitment-MOM and have already adopted cloth diapers, you probably have a sense of guilt that cannot be truly green and energy efficient with a baby at home and a busy lifestyle.

But disposable diapers are the beginning and end of a family lifestyle. Nobody said it has to be all or nothing. Even if they are essential for the proper functioning of your household, there are still plenty of other smaller green life measures you can take to help the environment.In doing so you will also be increasing their children to be aware of the problems the Greens, which is an important part of building a sustainable future; after all, they are the ones who will inherit the Earth, by energy awareness is essential to your education from an early age.

Try some of these simple green living tips to increase the efficiency of their energy use and reduce the impact that your home has on the environment.Remember the Green mantra: reduce, reuse, recycle. reduce the amount of resources you consume, reuse things like paper, plastic and fabric whenever possible and only then recycling what you cannot use this saves money and makes the best use of resources.

1. use the two sides of the paper
Kids love drawing. before you know it can have accumulated a pile of artworks that are equivalent to a small tree.Encourage them to use both sides of the paper.Reuse scrap paper for drawing office before you re-cycle it.

2. switch to table cloth napkins
Disposable napkins table not just use a huge number of trees to produce, if you count how many each household can get through a year, but they also end up in landfills. Get your family a lot of colorful cloth diapers, or do some scraps of fabric scraps or old soft cotton shirts and use them to family meals. they occupy little space in the laundry room and can be used many times before washing; just give each family member a different color, or an individual Napkin ring to identify your napkin.

3. Recycle
If you are not re-cycling discover about the options in your area.There may be a local pick-up arrangements if you separate your garbage or you may have to find a point of delivery. Children will pick up quickly if you have separate positions for re-cycled paper, glass and plastics and is a great start to educate them about the environment.

4. Leave your clothes
Whenever the weather permits, leaving his clothes on the clothing line, instead of using the dryer.Older children can help with the pegging and folding later. your clothes will last longer and you'll save a lot on electricity.

5. Use energy saving light bulbs
Replace your light bulbs with energy-saving light bulbs curly, as the old ones give out. turn off the lights when you leave a room and make sure any lights left on overnight, for children who are scared of the dark, are low power range of energy saving.

These may seem small measures, that won't do much to save the planet, but think of it this way: If every household in the United States were just switch to cloth napkins for one year, million trees would be saved, as well as energy and water consumed in transforming them into paper. Each small measure adds up.

After you have incorporated these tips for green living in your family, lifestyle could introduce gradually greening more, some even your home and your children a small step at a time and save a lot of money.








Heathcock Kit is a writer and mother of three. She plans to bring their children healthily as possible and is striving to green living, but admits the expiry of his ideals when it comes to chocolate, computer games and disposable nappies. read more green living tips, recipes and articles on food and family.