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By Scott Nicholson
Elvis Presley sang Blue Christmas, but environmental
officials and advocates are asking everyone to join in a chorus
of Green Christmas.
By reducing waste, recycling, and giving from a sustainable
perspective, people may be able to save money both for themselves
and local government.
The North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources
says holiday preparations, including gift-giving, holiday decorations
and food preparation, increase the nations trash by an
extra one million tons per week during the five weeks between
Thanksgiving and New Years Day.
If every American wrapped three presents in recycled materials,
it would save enough paper to cover 45,000 football fields.
Some environmentally-friendly and cost-saving ideas include:
Give home-baked goodies in reusable containers like baskets,
tins or jars.
Give non-materialistic green gifts that do
not require wrapping, such as gift certificates for massages,
to restaurants, cooking classes, sailing lessons, etc.
Give a gift of time or talent. Take someone to a play,
concert or movie. Make gift certificates for a special dinner,
pet-sitting or house cleaning. Offer your talents at gardening,
photography or financial planning, or teach someone a skill
you possess, such as knitting, woodworking or playing an instrument.
Send holiday e-cards instead of paper greeting cards or
buy cards that have recycled material in the content.
When shipping, reuse foam peanuts or other packaging
materials. Many shipping outlets also take Styrofoam peanuts,
and corrugated cardboard and pasteboard are accepted for recycling
by Watauga County.
If you have several events or parties in a short amount
of time, buy food items in bulk. You will save a trip to the
grocery and use less packaging. Consolidate your shopping trips
to save energy.
Shop at thrift stores for unique gift items or holiday
decorations.
Save all gift-wrapping and decorations to reuse later
or wrap gifts in old maps, newspaper comic pages, posters, sheet
music, fabric or wallpaper scraps.
Tree decorations can be made from natural materials such
as popcorn, cranberries, pine cones, fruit or nuts. Decorations
can be made from used items such as hair bows, neckties and
cut-up holiday cards.
Environmental officials also encourage the giving of environmentally
friendly gifts such as a compost bin, can crusher, water timer,
programmable thermostat, rain barrel, house plant, bird feeder,
light timers or bat house.
Reusable grocery and shopping bags help reduce landfill costs,
and plastic and paper grocery bags can be re-used or recycled.
Disposable plates, cups, napkins and silverware add to the waste
stream.If you buy disposable products, look for ones with recycled
content.
If a natural tree is part of the celebration, trees whose roots
are in a burlap ball can be replanted after the holidays. If
it cant be replanted, it can be composted or chipped.
Watauga County residents can bring their Christmas trees to
the transfer station to be chipped for mulch at no charge.
County residents can also start of the new year with a resolution
to recycle. Free bins are available from the Watauga County
Recycling Office. Call (828) 265-4852 for bins and recycling
information.
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