Dreaming of a Greener Holiday

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• Buy an organically grown tree. Conventional Christmas tree growers rely on synthetic pesticides and herbicides. Organically grown trees are healthier for the soil, water, tree farm workers and critters who inhabit the trees while they grow. Organic tree farms are becoming more common, but there’s no established certification process or trade organization for them yet. To find an organic tree farm, check www.EcoBusinessLinks.com, or consult a local whole foods grocer, farmer’s market or nursery.

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2. Bright lights, big energy savings
When it comes to energy use, some holiday lights shine brighter than
others. You can save electricity and still enjoy the sparkle by choosing the most eco-friendly type of bulb, by limiting the time you burn your holiday lights, or by putting them on a timer.

• Choose LEDs. The same technology that lights the display on your watch or calculator, the light-emitting diode (LED), now provides twinkle for your tree. In the last few years, strings of decorative LED lights have become available in almost every color, shape and size—and at practically every retailer. LEDs are 90 percent more efficient than conventional incandescent bulbs and last for thousands of hours, according to Energy Star. Plus, they’re cool to the touch and pose less fire risk. They cost a bit more, but the change will save you a bundle in utilities.

• Go off the grid. Although they’re not yet as widely available as LED holiday light strings, solar-powered sets are gaining popularity. They require no electricity but rely on a small solar grid. Solar lights have a higher price tag upfront ($40 and up for a string of 50 bulbs) but cost nothing to run—and they come in a variety of colors.

3. More creativity, less waste
Americans generate 25 percent more waste during the holidays, and much of it is paper: wrapping paper, cards, bags, packages and bows. Although you don’t have to hoard used wrapping paper like Grandma did, she had the right idea. Reusing paper is always environmentally friendly, and there’s no shortage of creative ways to do it.

• Rewrap it. Remember when we reused the comic pages for wrapping paper? It’s not only retro, it’s earth-friendly, frugal and fun. You also could reuse old cloth scraps or rubber-stamp paper bags. Decorate with pine cones, twine or magic marker. Even purchased gift bags can be reused multiple times. The Wrapsacks company codes its reusable cloth gift bags so you can follow their journey online from recipient to recipient. You can make your own “trackable” bag by signing your name, hometown or gift on it with a glitter pen. Then pass it on!

• Do the un-wrap. Skip the wrapping paper and bows altogether and have a treasure hunt for the gifts. Hide them in closets, under beds, in the refrigerator. The kids—both young and old—will love it! (Don’t forget to make a list of locations while you’re hiding them so none are forgotten.)

• Care enough to send the very greenest. Two billion cards are sent each year during the holiday season, according to Hallmark. More and more folks are sending greetings via e-mail—and it doesn’t have to feel impersonal. Add family photos or a personalized letter, or link to your personal webpage. It saves time, postage and paper. Alternatively, choose cards made from recycled paper—or make your own from used greeting cards.

• Recycle and reuse holiday cards. Keep reusable card fronts and other supplies in a box and have the kids
create placemats, new cards, gift tags and ornaments from them. You could also donate cards to a senior center, school or recreation center that can use them as craft supplies. Or, shred the cards and add them to your compost bin.

Bloomin’ Flower Cards has taken it a shovel deeper, making biodegradable cards with embedded seeds—you plant the whole thing. The company also uses soy-based inks, renewable hemp and 100 percent post-consumer waste, and it donates proceeds to worthy causes.  

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Comments

  • Marilyn Welch 12/13/2007 12:00:00 AM

    I cannot believe that hardly anyone, be it mainstream news or
    Natural Home, has not thoroughly addressed the lead presence in
    holiday lights. In California there is a Prop 65 requirement that a
    warning must be shown somewhere on the box. But it's often small,
    and obviously everyone buys the string lights, despite the whole
    Mattel, etc., toy lead scare thing (which is referred to in your
    article about green toys). I did see a blurb about it on CNN
    Headline news, but it was short and short-sighted—this isn't new. I
    can remember shopping 7 years ago and pretty much every light set
    had that warning. But now, places like Target have it on EVERYTHING
    seasonal and electric AND battery-operated. I emailed the lead
    question to a vendor of solar LED lights you featured, Mr. Solar I
    think, and the responses were snide, like a little lead is nothing
    compared to all the trees cut to make the Prop 65 warnings. This
    seems like an almost worse scandal than the toy fiasco; kids are
    gonna touch holiday lights and so are adults (expectant moms
    included) who haven't notices the "wash your hands" alert on the
    box. A lot of those things are gonna end up in the landfills after
    the season is done, ready to be replaced by the Valentine
    lights.

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