
- The number one tip for waste reduction is REDUCE. Before you create waste that needs to be dealt with, ask yourself if you can reduce your use.
- Check with your municipality to find out when and where you can safely dispose of hazardous household, automotive, lawn and garden chemicals.
- Check to see if your community has a designated drop-off for lawn leftovers, such as leaves and grass clippings.
- Leave it on the lawn - use your mower to mulch grass clippings back onto the lawn as ready-made mulch.
- Look for recycling programs at your favourite stores - many take back specific products related to what they already sell.
- Choose green products when you make purchases.
- Ditch the aerosol air fresheners - choose natural methods such as baking soda (for removing odours) and enjoy fresh flowers and herbs in your home instead.
- Consider greener cleaners - vinegar, baking soda, lemon juice and more make effective cleaning agents. Find out how to mix your own solutions at www.care2.com/greenliving.
- Renovating? Don't throw it out - donate useful materials and fixtures to a "ReStore" in your community. It benefits Habitat for Humanity and reduces waste in our landfills.
- Do an energy audit on your home - find out how at www.wrwcanada.com/02wasteauditI.htm.
- Say it electronically - save trees and paper by sending invitations and greetings as e-cards instead of paper cards.
- Let your green conscience be your (shopping) guide.
- Don't let that oil drop! If you're a do-it-yourself automotive type, make sure you're recycling your used motor oil and related items, like containers.
- Rent it - consider renting items you use infrequently, like garden equipment or home renovation tools.
- Refill it - tote your own beverage in a reusable container or bottle, rather than buying a drink.
- Pass it on - if there are avid readers in your house, consider passing on your materials to a care home, library, or hospital.
- Offices are great for generating paper... but you can save a little by reusing file folders and using the back of scrap paper for memos, notes, and messages.
- Buy recycled: look for recycled content in the products you buy. Better yet, look for items that use post-consumer content, which means the item is made from materials found from community recycling programs - maybe even yours!
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