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Tag: reduce waste
How to be a more eco friendly traveller this holiday season.
We are now into the Australian summer and speeding towards peak holiday season at an alarming rate. I thought it good timing to provide some tips about how to keep your traveling as eco friendly as possible with as little waste as possible. Whether you’re flying to the farthest corners of the earth or roaming the outback in a caravan, there are small things you can do to make sure you tread lightly on this great earth of ours.
Flying High
If you are flying:
- purchase carbon offsets
- make your trip for as long as possible and fly as little as possible to reduce the carbon footprint.
- Do your research and make sure areas you are visiting have fresh water available. If not, take a drink bottle with a built-in filter.
- If you have to buy water, buy in the largest size possible and use that to refil your day to day drink bottle.
- If you are staying in accommodation, look for venues that are eco friendly and employ sustainable practices.
Going Bush
If you are camping:
- Take food and water with you and pre-prepare travel meals and snacks to reduce the need to purchase take away.
- If you have to eat out, eat in the restaurant to reduce packaging waste.
- Take reusable containers to reduce your need for single use wrappers. I have a set of tupperware just for the caravan so we can pack sandwiches and snacks for any day trips we take during our holidays.
- Take a portable loo and empty it at proper dump points in the nearest town. Don’t leave your ablutions and TP all over the bush, buried or not.
- Make sure your waste water is let out far enough away from the nearest body of water. Check local regulations to see how far that needs to be.
- Use Tri Nature products so your waste water won’t cause harm to the environment or wildlife
- Don’t wash (clothes or yourself) in waterways, dams, rivers, oceans, etc. Using soap and personal care products in waterways causes pollution and harm to aquatic life, not to mention sending your bodily fluids to everyone downstream. Get in and get wet, then get out and take a bucket of water the appropriate distance away to soap up and rinse off.
- Take all your rubbish with you and dispose of properly. Have everyone do an emu parade at the end of packing up to make sure you don’t leave anything behind. You each get allocated a certain area of your camp site and you walk that area and pick up any pieces of rubbish within. Don’t forget tent pegs, ropes and bits of fishing gear!
No matter where you are:
- If you are taking your washing home with you, take a travel size enhance pre-wash spray so you can get onto stains asap. Enhance won’t wreck your clothes and it will make sure the stains don’t set before you have time to wash.
- Pack some cloth bags. I have about 5 that roll up into almost nothing and they live in my handbag. They are so handy for so many things, like when you go to the shop for one thing and end up buying about 10.
- Snack on fresh fruit wherever possible so there’s no packaging waste.
- If you need to do your own washing while you’re travelling, take a small container of laundry powder, so you know you can be more eco-friendly than a hotel laundry or in a laundromat.
- Take a travel size Sphagnum Moss Disinfectant with you for emergencies like cleaning a public loo seat before using it, or spraying stinky teenage boy feet and shoes when they take their shoes off in the car on long road trips.
- Take your refillable drink bottle with you. There are some excellent squishy ones around that fold/roll up nicely when empty so they don’t take up too much space in your luggage. Most airlines don’t count drink bottles or coffee mugs in the weight of your carry on, if you are holding them.
- Take your coffee travel mugs with you or order in and sit down for your coffee. Research ahead and find cafes that let you bring your own mug (although most do these days).
- Take a travel cutlery set everywhere, including metal straws, so you don’t need to use any single use sets.
- Make a list of any ideas you have for next time. Remember, you don’t have to get it right and be perfect with zero waste. This is just about making better choices and getting better each time. And if you have ideas I haven’t listed, please get in touch and let me know so I can add them to this post for all to share.
- Have fun!!
Killing it in the Kitchen
5 eco-friendly tips to save hours of time, stress and mummy-guilt each week.
Time for me to let you in on some secrets about how I kill it in the kitchen. In our house, meals are my responsibillity. This is, at least in part, by my design. If it were up to my partner, we would be eating store-bought meatloaf with a side of two-minute noodles every night. I was raised on a lot of veggies and salads and I wanted my kids to have the same, so I took over meals.
I work 3 days a week in my job, a least another 2 days a week on my business, volunteer for canteen duty and school excursions where I can plus try and keep on top of the rest of the housework for a partner, 2 kids and up-to 4 part timers. In other words, I’m as busy as every other mum out there.
My kids have been in childcare since they were 7 months old, when I had to go back to work full time after each of them. My job back then demanded long hours and we were often not home until after 6pm for the dinner/bath/bed routine. We were getting up at 5.30am to start the next day so they really needed to be in bed by 7pm. Frozen, ready-to-eat meals were a staple.
While things have improved sightly over the years there was still a large amount of pre-preared foods involved. I have still been wracked with mummy-guilt that I don’t give my kids enough of the right foods, that I don’t prepare their food from scratch so that I know exactly what’s in it, that I am contributing waaaaay too much packaging to landfill, etc. etc.
I made some big commitments to myself for this year that I would cook from scratch, eliminate as much pre-prepared food and packaging as possible, feed my kids more veggies and the right kinds of foods. I have had to make some big changes to achieve those goals. I’m pretty happy with how things have turned out so far.
1. Meal Plan
I know, I know. Super nerdy and one of those tasks that sounds like just one more thing on the never ending to-do list. BUT I spend less than half an hour on this once a week and it saves me at least that much time on a daily basis. I know what we are having for dinner each night for the next 7 days. No more getting home from work and spending ages staring into the fridge or pantry trying to figure out what I’m going to make for dinner. The decision is already made so I can just get on with it.
I have thousands of recipes. For someone who never really cooked much before kids, I seem to have accumulated quite the collection of cook books. Each week I pick 3 books and I flick through and choose our week’s meals. I generally go for some meat based meals, some with eggs, beans or lentils, one from another country (my youngest “visits” a different country in her class room each week so we talk about the food and which country it came from) and, especially in winter, a soup. Friday night usually involves something easy and not necessarily healthy like home made pizza or sausages.
2. Shop to a list
I make my shopping list while I am doing my meal plan. “Hello Fresh” love telling everyone how much their food packages save wasted food. Well, so does meal planning and shopping to a list and you don’t have to pay extra for it. I reckon I have knocked between $50 to $100 per week off the cost of our weekly shop just by meal planning and shopping to a list.
I used to go to the shop and wander the aisles while I tried to remember what we needed plus work out what we might eat for the week and what I needed for that. I would always end up forgetting something, spending too much time in the store and getting frustrated and just grabbing whatever was easiest because I didn’t want to think anymore.
With my list, I buy only what I need to make the meals for the week. I don’t end up grabbing stuff off the shelves “just in case”. It saves wasted food, it saves wasted money and it saves me so much time in the store because I know what I need to get. Having a list also stops me impulse buying a bunch of stuff that we will never use, just because I was hungry while I was in the shop.
There are a couple of exceptions worth noting here. I will sometimes buy bulk or a whole item instead of just what I need, to save getting additional packaging. For example, if I need 500g of pumpkin for a recipe, I will buy a whole pumpkin so I don’t have to deal with the plastic wrap and the styrofoam tray (not to mention the additional cost per kg). I find that the produce I buy whole seems to keep much longer than any pre-prepared produce from the stores. There are also some great reusable produce bags you can get that make your fruit and veggies last even longer in the fridge. Then I’ll make sure next week’s recipes include those ingredients so nothing is wasted.
3. Tools
4 years ago, my uncle and auntie bought me a 5in1 multicooker. It does slow cooking, pressure cooking, rice cooking, steaming and soup. I don’t think I really appreciated the value of this little gem until this year. It is bloody fantastic.
The 3 days I work, we generally have slow cooker meals. I can’t tell you how good it is to come home after a day of work and an evening of rushing kids between dancing and karate to a cooked meal ready to be served. The amount of stress this has taken out of my life is huge!
I have a bumper womens weekly slow cooker cook book ($20 from the book man at before school care, thanks very much) and another slow cooker 365 cook book. Between the 2 of them, I haven’t run out of new meals to try yet. There are so many amazing things you can do.
On my non-job days, the pressure cooker function still lets me whip up a risotto in less than half an hour including prep. I also have a Thermomix which has been a terrific complement to my kitchen and helps me cook some amazing meals from scratch in under half and hour.
If you can’t afford to splash out on the 5in1 or a Thermomix, a plain old slow cooker is a must have. I would also highly recommend a good food processor. You can save a lot of time, money and waste by preparing your own veggies. For example:
- chopping up your own tomatoes instead of using tinned ones
- growing your own herbs, drying them and blitzing them and keeping them in old vegemite jars for whenever you need them
Blitzing onions in the food processor has also saved me many tears and cut fingers. If you want to get even more eco friendly, Tupperware have the Smooth Chopper, which is a people-powered food processor, no electricity required and you can work out while you’re cooking!
4. Re-purpose the left overs
I have 2 kids of my own plus between 0 and 4 part-timers. Especially in the 4 years after my first daughter was born, my partner would turn up with up at dinnertime with any or all of them without notice. I got really good at the fishes and loaves trick, making a meal for 4 into a meal for 8. Perhaps as a hangover from then, I still tend to over-cater for dinner most nights. This actually works out really well because we re-purpose our left overs.
Generally, my partner and I will take some for work at lunch for at least one day. Where there is a lot left over (like when I make soup), I divide it up into portions in containers and freeze it. That way, we have ready meals for days when there are no leftovers for lunch and for times we may be away for the weekend and come home to no food. This also gives me a backup options for the nights I can’t be bothered fighting my kids to eat on the meal I have cooked. If the freezer ever starts to get too full, I just plan a few less meals for a week and use it up.
5. Use your Dishwasher
I know I say this often but honestly, if you have a dishwasher, you’d be mad not to use it. In our house, everything goes in the dishwasher. If it doesn’t survive the dishwasher, it has no place in our kitchen. The dishwasher saves time and is more environmentally friendly. Dishwashers use less water than hand washing dishes, as long as you don’t rinse the dishes frst. Scrape food off into the bin and load the dishes up. Use an eco friendly powder like Tri Nature Citrus Dishwasher Powder (then you don’t need to worry about toxic residue on your plates or killing the fishies). I also use Tri Nature Rinse Aid. I have solar power so the dishwasher goes on one the eco cycle right before I walk out the door each day. By the time I get home, the dishes are clean and dry and ready to use again or be put away.
So there you have it! My top 5 on how I get through the days and weeks without totally losing my mind over meals. I would love to hear if any of this helps you or if you have any other tips you would like to share. Please feel free to comment or get in touch and let me know!
How to cut down plastic use around the home and office
There has been much in the news about the issues surrounding single use plastic. Â Lately, some air time has been given to the problems we are having with being able to process recyclable plastics at the rate we are recycling them. Â Most recently, it has emerged that in Victoria and NSW, there are even major issues with the volumes of glass being recycled. Â The processing plants are unable to find a market for most of the glass and it is just sitting in storage, which isn’t really helping anyone.
While smarter folk than I figure out what to do about those issues, I focus my attention on what I can do to prevent it happpening in the first place, at least in my own space. Â There are several small changes I have made, that I have mentioned previously, to avoid single use plastic as much as I can. Â These include using Onya Mesh bags for loose grocery items, not buying any fresh produce that is pre-bagged or wrapped, always remembering my green shopping bags, using beeswax cloth wraps instead of glad wrap and carrying metal straws in my handbag for the kids.
It occurred to me the other day that there is something else I do which I don’t think I have mentioned. Â Whenever I can, I buy BULK. Â This can apply to nearly everything we consume and the definition of bulk can be different for every household, depending on the number being catered for.
By way of example, I currently have an enormous whole watermelon on my kitchen bench. Â I know it will get eaten within a week and I can chop it up into edible size pieces and keep it in containers in the fridge. Â I buy baking flour in 10kg bulk because I know we will use it and I have a big pantry so we have the storage space. Â Half my family have a dairy fetish so I buy milk in 3L bottles. Â I would buy bigger if it were available.
I also get my (Tri Nature, obviously) cleaning, laundry and kitchen products in bulk. This saves me quite a bit of money as well as reducing the amount of plastic and packaging we recycle. Â Below, I have broken down a couple of examples of the bulk size I use of Laundry Liquid and how it benefits the environment and me.
I tend to use the Laundry liquid more than the powder. Â This is largely because I am efficient with my time (read: lazy) and it’s easier to pump liquid into the machine than fiddle around with the bucket and scoop. Â I have a 5L laundry liquid on my laundry bench. Â By buying the 5L ($74.95) I save over 17% when compared with buying the 2L bottles ($34.95 * 2.5 = $87.38). It takes me 8-12 months to use the full 5L but there’s a 2 year shelf life so I am still well within that. Â This not only saves money but it saves 1.5 extra empty bottles of packaging.
For argument’s sake, let’s say I used 5L in less than 6 months. Â I could buy the 20L ($222.90). Â All Tri Nature 20L quantities actually come as 4 * 5L (this is for OH&S purposes so no one is lifting a 20kg or more bottle). Â While this doesn’t save on packaging compared with the 5L on it’s own, it does save multiple shippings so it’s still a greener option. Â Plus, most 20L prices are heavily discounted so now I am only paying $55.75 for a 5L bottle, which is 36% lower than the 2L price. Â Of course I buy the 20L because I sell what i don’t use myself, but there’s no reason why 20L can’t be shared between 4 households, businesses or departments.
Most of the Tri Nature products come in bulk sizes such as 5L, 20L and 10kg. Â The biggest sellers include:
- 5L and 20L of Multipurpose Cleaner
- 5L and 20L of Disinfectant (especially popular in businesses such as cafes, child care centres and commercial kitchens)
- 5L and 20L of Floor Cleaner
- 5L and 20L of Dishwashing Liquid
- 5L and 20L of Moisturising Handwash (used in mining and other industries as a body wash)
- 10kg Laundry Powder
- 10kg Dishwasher Powder
Next time you are ready to reorder, have a think about whether bulk could benefit you and the earth.
If you are not sure what size Tri Nature product you may need, write the date on the next bottle you open and see how long it lasts you. Â If the bulk size will be used up in under 2 years, then it will be a worthwhile investment.
If you’re not sure if the product you need comes in bulk, get in touch with me and I can help. Â Don’t be shy, it’s what I am here for.