12 Comments
User's avatar
Lynn S's avatar

I am a good little recycler. However, washing certain items before recycling, like peanut butter jars for example, uses a lot of water. Then I wonder if I am wasting water? Also, there was my emergency trip to urgent care a few weeks ago because I cut my finger very badly washing out a tin can before recycling. The amount of bandaids I used...😂

Timber Fox's avatar

Yeah, that makes me wonder, too.

T Swanson's avatar

I have started using bamboo toilet paper, and I got a compost bin, but it's always too wet to be useful

WanderFinder's avatar

A friend of mine keeps one Tupperware container filled with a small stack of laundered dry towels, and another full of the same stack of towels except soaking in some cleaning solution. That way she’s always ready to go in case of a spill. I keep meaning to copy her.

Timber Fox's avatar

I hope you meant the compost!

T Swanson's avatar

lolyes!

J.M. Austin's avatar

I reduce trash by composting, which is especially helpful when I have weeks where I'm more motivated to buy vegetables than I am to actually eat the ones I buy. And then I use my composted dirt in a vegetable garden that this year became a salad bar for the local groundhog population. But still...compost!

Timber Fox's avatar

I've been threatening to compost, but I don't have a good spot for it, and we don't plant much, either. I have a garbage disposal in the sink, it's a cheapie and our pipes are old and skinny. A friend clogged her disposal so I rarely use it.

Ellen Clair Lamb's avatar

I've started buying from a company called Blueland, which sells soap tablets for laundry, the dishwasher, hand soap dispensers, etc. It's cut way down on my use of disposable plastic, and they're as effective as the big bottles I used to buy.

Timber Fox's avatar

I love Blueland! I've got their dishwasher tablets, dish powder, and laundry tablets. And a couple of glass hand soap dispensers that use their tablets. That helps a lot.