x24,Top3,TopLeft,x25,x12
Precycle
a discovery company

10 Green Tips to Recover from Holiday Clutter

Megan Cohen

By Megan Cohen
San Francisco, CA, USA | Wed Dec 31 15:00:00 GMT 2008

The holidays are over. Now, 'tis the season to deal with all the stuff that's snuck into your home during the festivities. Check out these 10 green solutions for everything from what to do with your Christmas tree to how to banish unwanted gifts without clogging the landfill. You can streamline your lifestyle for the New Year, and get a start on all your green resolutions, by wrapping up the holiday season with eco-friendly de-cluttering.

Meaghan O'Neill, editor of PlanetGreen.com and Treehugger.com, has the facts on why this is one of the most important times of year to think about garbage. O'Neill says "In the United States, our waste stream increases by about 25 percent between Thanksgiving and New Year's, bringing the total amount of stuff we toss out to more than 25 million tons." In the post-holiday weeks, you'll want to get rid of all kinds of stuff, including (but not limited to) inappropriate presents, and the stacks of greeting cards you've been sent by your friends, your neighbors, your Aunt Mabel, your auto mechanic, and everyone in between. Doing it the green way has a big impact on your ecological footprint, so check out these tips to keep your life free of clutter without packing more trash into greenhouse-gas producing landfills:

  • Be paper-savvy. Recycling all your wrapping paper and cards isn't just a matter of throwing the whole pile into the bin. If it's super-shiny or glittery, it probably has to go in the trash. Simpler, plainer papers can be tossed in your curbside recycling bin, and the same goes for greeting cards. In addition to sending appropriate recyclables on their merry way, you can save and store a lot of what you've got to get a jump on next year's wrapping, especially when it comes to bags and bows, and you can make this year's holiday cards into tags for next year's presents.

  • Mulch your tree. If you're using a cut evergreen this year, find out where you can get it picked up, or where to deliver it, so that it can be mulched for use in landscaping instead of ending up in a landfill. You can get details for your area at Earth 911.

For 8 more eco-smart ideas, read the rest of the article here: 10 Tips: How to Recover from Holiday Clutter at The Takeaway.

Related Posts at Planet Green:
The Anti-Gift List: 15 Gifts Everyone Gets and No One Needs
Choose Eco-Friendly Thank You Notes
77 Best Green Tips of the Year
How to Go Green: Holidays

 
  • email
  • digg
  • share
  • print
helpful article? vote for it
{ }
close window

CLOSE X

 

comments on this article

view all post a comment

 
 
 
 
 
facebook twitter rss
 
Planet Green on Facebook
 
Reel Impact
 
Green Materials Guide
 
eco-nomics
 
Take a Quiz. Enter Our Sweepstakes!
 

tv schedule

view all

On Now

On Tonight

 
 

today on planet green

view all

Votes

recent
discussed

10 Unfairly Oft-Maligned Big Apple Inhabitants
POSTED  15 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Is Your Zen Lifestyle Green? 12 Ways to Live Low Stress and Low Impact
POSTED  17 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Online Course Takes Guesswork out of Green Wedding Planning
POSTED  19 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Meet Robyn Nietert of the Women's Microfinance Initiative: Building Businesses, and Lives, One Loan At a Time
POSTED  20 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Organic A-Z: Lemon
POSTED  7 Nov 2009.  COMMENTS

{ }

Ask Emeril Your Green Cooking Questions
POSTED  7 Apr 2009. 47 COMMENTS.

{477}

How To Go Green: Lighting
POSTED  23 Jul 2008. 7 COMMENTS.

{214}

Should You Get a Flu Shot?
POSTED  1 Oct 2009. 3 COMMENTS.

{19}

Renovation Nation FAQ
POSTED  7 May 2009. 13 COMMENTS.

{142}

More Fun with Urban Foraging: Crabapples!
POSTED  10 Oct 2009. 2 COMMENTS.

{19}

 

Ads by Google