Archive for category Household

Simplify Your Time Online

I’ve had no Internet connection or a very spotty one for the last week. I rely on the Internet for my work, not to mention to create this blog, so it’s been frustrating, maddening, and at times, depressing to be disconnected. But it’s also been eye-opening.

During my first hours without the Internet, I thought of dozens of things I “needed” to do, but could not – access my email, download a podcast, read an article, check an account balance, see what I had on hold at the library, etc. I was shocked by how much of my life I’m living virtually – not in the, um, actual world.

After my offline experience, I’m eager to streamline my online time. And I’m going to embrace five strategies toward that end. If you’re also feeling a bit over-connected, here are some things you might try:

1. Consolidate your email

Over the years, I’ve created several email accounts. I have one for my writing business, and one for this blog, and then there’s my personal email and the one I created for newsletters and the like. This multiple-email-address approach has had its advantages, but it’s inefficient. I’m ready to consolidate into one account.

2. Subscribe to your favorite blogs

I read a number of blogs regularly. These are the ones I’ll have delivered directly to my inbox. I don’t want to clutter up my email too much, so I’ll reserve subscriptions for my favorite blogs. (If you want to subscribe to New Urban Habitat, I added a subscription button to the sidebar up there on your right.)

3. Use a feed reader

For the blogs I read on a less regular basis than my favorites, I’ll continue to use my Google feed reader. It makes it easy to read many blogs in one place, but it can also be overwhelming. I find myself only visiting once a week or so. (That’s why I’m going to have my must-reads delivered to my inbox.)

4. Leave the Internet closed while you compose

I love to research, so when I’m writing an article, a blog post, or even an email, I often find myself clicking over to Google to just look up one thing … and then one more thing. I’m amazed by how much more quickly I’ve been writing without Internet access. In the future, when I need to look up something, I’ll make a note of it and do all my research at once.

5. Put Internet-surfing last on your to-do list

When I go online first thing in the morning, quite a few other things on my to-do list tend to go undone. Lately I’ve been doing all my other chores first, which keeps things running more smoothly at home and with my business.

This post is for Steady Mom’s 30 Minute Blog Challenge.

What are your strategies for simplifying online time?

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Do-it-yourselfing

Sometimes, just occasionally, I’ve been known to go a tad over-the-top when it comes to do-it-yourselfing.

My husband’s a good sport, but he’s been a much-needed balance when I come up with a new lofty idea.

For instance, several years ago, he (and every gardening book I read) warned me that I should start with a nice, small, manageable vegetable garden for my first few years. (Of course, I did exactly the opposite and predictably regretted it.)

And occasionally when I’m giddily filling my husband in on a new craft that I’m eager to tackle, which might require the purchase of a loom or something, he is good about gently reminding me of a certain short-lived obsession I had with making mosaics several years ago. It lasted, oh, about a week and a half.

And while my husband has been on board, I’ve noticed a certain look cross his face when I’ve insisted on making the pizza dough, the sauce, and all of the toppings from scratch; or baking all of our bread; or adopting four baby chicks when we were already overwhelmed caring for an infant and 3 cats; or making my own herbal tinctures; or fermenting kombucha on our counter-top.

So yes, over the years, I’ve been known to get a tiny bit carried away with do-it-yourselfing, and fortunately my husband has been here as a voice of reason…

Until he started brewing beer.

Of course, I was thrilled that he was embarking on a do-it-yourself hobby that may also save us some money.

He started by brewing a few pre-prepared kits from the brewery store. Great.

Then he began buying his ingredients separately and mixing up recipes from books. Splendid.

Then he discovered an old folded-up recipe in the back of a book he found at a yard sale, and decided he needed to tackle that one. Okay.

And now he’s talking about tearing up half of the backyard to plant barley, buying a temperature-controlled refrigerator, and learning how to malt barley in the garage. Uh oh.

I’m a tad terrified. But I also can’t help but admire his can-do spirit.

This post is for Steady Mom’s 30 Minute Blog Challenge.

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Coming out of a rut

I love the feeling of coming out of a rut.

The rhythms of life sometimes go stale. You find yourself preparing the same meals every week, going through the same routines, taking the same walk, doing the same chores.

Then one day the whole world feels electric again, your brain buzzes with ideas, and you can’t wait to start something new.

I used to imagine that I could keep myself from falling into a rut in the first place. But I’ve come to accept that ruts are necessary. The constant cycle of coming in and out of them mirrors the seasons. Fall brings fresh starts. Winter lulls us to a slower pace. Spring pulses with promise … then the sluggish heat descends.

Yesterday was a day for coming out of ruts. The sunshine made the air almost glittery.

My son and I weaved up hills, stomped in puddles, took photographs of trees, and pointed out birds to each other. We closed our eyes and turned our faces to the sun.

I’ve never wanted to live in the tropics. I love seasons. Even though winter’s darkness and summer’s heat almost always come to feel unbearable at some point, that makes the coming season feel all the more welcome. And they give life its rhythms.

My life has its own rhythms right now – dough rising, bread baking, stews simmering, fingers fluttering across the keyboard, words appearing on the computer screen, the never-ending washing and drying and folding of laundry, the squeak of the swing set as my son goes back and forth. I love these routines. I feel grateful for this abundant life. But sometimes the sameness of it all, day after day after day, can feel almost as unbearable as a subzero December week or a scorching August afternoon.

And then a spring day comes along to remind us that what seems permanent right now will be gone before we know it.

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Resolve to Get Organized in 2010

I’m still astounded by how much harder it is to keep up a household with the addition of just one extra (very small) family member a year and a half ago. Maybe that’s because my son is a wizard at unfolding laundry, removing the contents from cabinets, and tucking away valuables in top-secret hiding spots? In any case, I’m on a mission to get more organized. Here are the 7 best ways I’ve come across so far.

1.  Make a home for your keys, wallet, and phone

Do you often find yourself racing around searching for one of these 3 things? You’re not alone. Designate a place for them and always put them there. It helps if this place has an outlet, so you can plug in your phone.

2.  Say no to junk mail

According to New American Dream, most of us will spend 8 months opening junk mail during our lives. The solution? Opt out. I did this 5 years ago, and I don’t miss junk mail at all. Find out how to do it here.

2.  Deal with the mail immediately

It’s hard to motivate yourself to go through the mail when it’s turned into a Leaning Tower of Pisa on the junk table. Open it the instant it arrives, put the bills in a designated area, file what you need to keep, and shred what you don’t. (Organizer Perri Kersh explains what you should keep and what you can safely shred here.)

3.  Do one thing at a time

We’ve all heard it – multitasking is inefficient. But until recently, I often found myself doing six things at once. I’d start one task, get distracted, start another, realize the first wasn’t done, go back to it, notice something else that wasn’t done … you get the picture. I somehow got things done. But I always felt overly-busy and harried. Then the solution dawned on me – a simple checklist. I can’t tell you how much this tool has transformed my life.

3.  Wash, dry, fold, and put away a load of laundry a day

I always imagined that the key to my laundry woes was a fancy laundry sorting system, preferably one with lots of cool, handmade wicker baskets. But it turns out that the more practical, less glamorous solution is just doing a load of laundry start-to-finish every day.

4.  Institute a 30-Minute Family Clean-up

After dinner, turn on some music and clean together for 30 minutes. You may be amazed by how much you get done, and it’s a lot more fun to do it together.

5.  Streamline your Internet time

We all know mindless surfing can eat hours from the day. Sadly, I think the answer to this one is just discipline. Pay attention to where you’re going online and cut out the surfing and blog-reading that’s not adding anything meaningful to your life.

6.  Keep a family calendar

Write down everyone’s dates and appointments and what you’re planning to make for meals in one central location. A magnetic dry-erase calendar on the refrigerator works great for this.

7.  Plan your meals

Yes, meal-planning is my answer for everything – even world peace. I wrote about it here.

Are you planning to get more organized in 2010? Do you have any tips?

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Farewell Fall

I’ll be taking the next week off to celebrate the First Day of Winter and the Christmas holiday with my family. I’ll be back next week. Happy Holidays!

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A Wabi Sabi Life

I first learned of the Japanese concept of Wabi Sabi many years ago. It is a tool for contemplation, or a philosophy of life, that finds beauty in things that are impermanent, imperfect, and incomplete. In other words, it’s the notion that patina; wear and tear; chips, cracks, and fissures;  assymetry; flaws; and defects actually make things more interesting.

I immediately loved this concept of Wabi Sabi, and I felt almost relieved to read about it. It was like discovering that there was a word for the way I’d always thought about life.

You see, a Wabi Sabi house is not a sleek loft with a-line furniture and stainless steel appliances. It’s clean, but it’s comfortable, and it might be full of lopsided ceramics, handmade art, knitted blankets, quilts, and weathered antiques, a little bit like my house.

And a Wabi-Sabi person is not perfectly made up with gleaming white teeth, manicured nails, and tailored clothes. She is content with who she is, and she enjoys a simple life stripped of what is unnecessary. And that’s exactly what I’ve always wanted.

It’s useful for me to remember my fondness for the concept of Wabi Sabi on days like today when I finally woke up (for the tenth time in a few hours) for good at six a.m. with my fussy seventeen-month old and that phrase “sleeping through the night” that parenting experts seem to like to bandy about made me want to laugh maniacally.

Or, when I glance around my home office, which I always envisioned would be a tidy, peaceful sanctuary of sorts, and see the fifty or so books that my son dutifully removed from the shelves and spread across the floor alongside his trucks, Legos, and blocks.

Yes, this life, with work and home-life woven together, feels a little cobbled together sometimes, a little taped up at the seams, and I’m quite sure there are some cracks lurking here and there.

But that’s exactly the way I always wanted it to be.

This post is for Steady Mom’s 30 Minute Blog Challenge.

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From the Archives: The Art of Meal Planning

*I’m taking the week off for my birthday. This post was originally published back in March. I’ll be back with new posts next week, including an update to the Hen Diaries. We’ve had some dramatic ups and downs in chicken-keeping lately, which I can’t wait to share.*

yakisoba

Every year I used to buy a pocket calendar – the kind people used to look important jotting appointments and reminders in before the Blackberry. I excitedly wrote everyone’s birthdays in it, marked out vacations and holidays … then ditched it, oh, somewhere around January 4. I just never seemed to have a problem remembering where I was to be or whom I was to meet. Likewise, I avoided bouncing checks or overdrawing my bank account through most of my twenties without writing any purchases down or actually ever balancing my checkbook. (My mother, who reconciles her account to the penny on the same day of each month, is palpitating and sputtering for air about now.) I also somehow excelled in college without writing half of my assignments down. So yeah, I might have became a tad cocky in my disregard for organizational tools.

Then I had a baby.

Without actually recounting the disasters that have resulted from my lack of organization in the last several months, let’s just say, I’m more forgetful these days. It could be sleep deprivation, or just the sheer number of items on my to-do list. As it turns out, a three-person household is ten times harder to keep up than a two-person household, even with both spouses sharing the load nearly equally. Perhaps it’s because the additional person is hellbent on electrocuting himself, drowning, or licking the cat unless he’s under constant supervision; goes through a load of laundry every six minutes; and has more appointments and play dates than I had all through my twenties? In any case, organizational tools are my new allies. If they can’t save my family from the mountain range of laundry in the guest room, the cavernous refrigerator, or the Leaning Tower of bills on the junk table – nothing can.

The Art of Meal Planning

Of all the organizational tools my family’s adopted in the last few months, meal planning has been the most life-changing. It’s second only to a budget in must-dos to get your finances under control. (My mom will be relieved to hear that we’ve adhered to a budget for a few years now.) For most of us, shaving the grocery bill is the best way to cut back on spending – and let’s face it, most of us are pinching our pennies these days.

A good meal-planning system can cut your grocery bill by hundreds of dollars a month. And it can also help you eat healthier, incorporate more whole foods into your diet, enjoy cooking again, stop those last-minute “let’s just get a pizza” nights, and even help you get along better with your spouse. Are you sold yet?

Meal planning is simple

You can make fancy Excel spreadsheets or Word tables, or you can just draw a grid on a piece of paper. Plan your meals as often as you wish. Most people do it once-a-week or once-a-month. Right now, my husband and I are transitioning from weekly to monthly planning, so we can buy more things in bulk from a local natural foods mail-order supplier – something only made possible with our meal-planning system. But whichever you choose, the idea is to decide what you will make for dinner each night then write the ingredients you’ll need for each meal on your grocery list.

You’ll want to have a few things handy:

  • the circulars from your grocery store (probably available online)
  • coupons (if you clip them – we don’t)
  • favorite cookbooks or recipes
  • in the summer, a list of which veggies are ready to pick from the garden, or abundant at the farmer’s market.

One way to make the planning easier is to institute a “soup and bread night” or “a baked potato night”. I divide my grocery list into sections resembling where things are located in the store, but my husband (who actually does the shopping), assures me it’s unnecessary.

Eat healthier and cook with more whole foods

Meal-planning has enabled me to make more whole-grain, whole-foods meals from scratch almost effortlessly. If I know I’ll be making chili or black-bean tostados the next day, I put dried beans out to soak the night before. So I never buy canned beans anymore. If I know I’ll need bread for a meal, I make a loaf in the morning. Sure it’s a bit harder to soak and simmer beans or make a loaf of bread than it is to open a can of pintos or a bag of Oroweat, but we’re eating healthier for cheaper than ever. Plus, that desperate frustration I used to feel around five p.m., staring into the vacuous refrigerator with a fussy baby in my arms, has entirely evaporated – so it’s a good trade off. I never end up rushing to the store to grab convenience foods for dinner, or ordering take-out at the last minute – things that used to happen frequently.

Plan for domestic harmony

You get how a meal plan can help your finances and your health, but your marriage? Well, my husband and I don’t have exactly the same taste in food. He prefers tater-tots to quinoa, sloppy joes to salads, and bratwurst to rice and beans – and I am, well, the opposite. My husband likes the same predictable meals week after week, whereas I like to mix it up, find recipes in new cookbooks, sample a new whole grain or vegetable each week, and experiment with different herbs and spices. I hate cooking meat and am allergic to dairy, so my dishes are almost always vegan. My husband makes a mean pork roast.

So, we each plan and cook three meals a week, and order take-out the seventh night – and we’re both happy. We try to please each other’s palates to some degree. He hates lentils no matter how they’re seasoned, so I keep those off the menu, and in return, he’s nixed the sloppy joes and often makes me salmon or pasta, which I love.

So, what are you waiting for? Get out that paper and pen. Let’s meal-plan our way to world peace.,

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From the Archives: Business is Booming

*I’m taking the week off for my birthday. This post was originally published in March. I’ll be back with new posts next week, including an update to the Hen Diaries. We’ve had some dramatic ups and downs in chicken-keeping lately, which I can’t wait to share.*

Bike rack in Stockholm, Sweden

These are just a few of the headlines that blared off Google’s News feed last week:

  • “World economy to shrink by 1-2 percent in 2009”
  • “Unemployment rises in 99.7 percent of metro areas”
  • “Rescuing the Economy Just Got Harder”.

Pass the St. John’s wort, please.

It’s hard not to despair about the state of the world these days – and not just when you turn on the news. We all know someone – if not many – affected by the “worst recession since the Great Depression.” Depleted retirement accounts, foreclosed homes, lost jobs – personal calamities and real human anguish. And the downturn isn’t just touching those corrupt day-traders, bankers, and mortgage brokers, or hitting the realtors, developers, and fresh faces on Flip This House, who were getting drunk off the housing bubble a couple years ago. It’s taking out teachers, bureaucrats, factory workers, and seemingly half the state of California too. So, we can probably all use some good news about now.

For those of us who weren’t quite so inebriated on the manic consumerism of the last few decades, it’s not hard to find silver linings. So, here goes – five reasons you might want to celebrate a little.

1. Seed companies can hardly keep up with their orders.

Philadelphia-based Burpee Seed Company estimates that $10 in seeds can produce vegetables that would cost $650 in a grocery store. When the economy started its collapse, they marketed the “money garden” – six easy-to-grow seed packs for ten dollars. Not surprisingly, Burpee’s business is up twenty percent from last year.

Burpee’s not alone. Washington-based Irish Eyes Garden Seeds is getting a hundred calls a day – a 20 to 30 percent increase over last year. At Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds, a small company in the Ozarks, sales are up two and a half times. They’re having trouble keeping their catalogs stocked, and their most popular seed varieties are sold out for the season. Oregon’s Territorial Seeds is experiencing the same phenomenon. It’s official – the backyard garden is the hottest thing growing this spring. Even the Obamas are doing it.

2. Americans are rediscovering their kitchens.

Epicurious.com predicted that one of the hallmarks of 2009 would be “a return to families cooking together and eating at home more than they have in decades,” and they seem to be right so far. Sales of cookbooks, cookware, and cooking magazines are up. Websites devoted to helping newbies navigate the kitchen are thriving. And people aren’t just tossing jars of pasta on noodles or popping boxes in the microwave; they’re cooking from scratch. Staples like white flour, dried beans and legumes, and eggs are flying off grocery store shelves. And according to market researcher Nielsen Co., canning and freezing supplies were the supermarket sales category with the highest annual growth rate (as of last November) – a trend they haven’t seen since the 1930s.

3. Libraries have become hip.

Libraries across the nation are reporting more visits and higher circulation. Lawrence Public Library director Bruce Flanders says his numbers are in a “rapidly ascending trajectory.” Library card requests rose 27% in San Francisco in the last months of 2008. And CBS Evening News reported that nationwide more people applied for library cards last year than anytime since libraries started keeping records in 1990.

Public libraries are awesome, not just for all the money individuals save by borrowing books, DVDs, and computers rather than buying their own, or the resources we keep out of the landfills when we share. Libraries are also refuges for the lonely-types of the world – punk teens, new parents, retired grandfathers, and information seekers of all kind. And librarians are downright edgy. They read banned books, thumb their noses at the Patriot Act, and they’ll answer just about any question in the stratosphere, no matter how bizarre. Plus, as Dale Carnegie knew, there’s no better place to retool your resume than a public library. (Now if only library budgets were also in that rapidly ascending trajectory.)

4. Craftiness is chic

According to Entrepeneur.com, “tough times tend to spur creativity”. And sure enough, crafting is cool right now. Craft and Hobby Association reported that in 2007, craft sales reached nearly $32 billion, and almost 57 percent of U.S. households engaged in crafting. Crafts – especially sewing, scrapbooking, and knitting – are just getting more popular as the economy sours. Etsy.com, a site where small crafters sell the wares, reported a more than three-fold increase in sales in 2008. And despite the general gloomy reports coming out of the publishing industry, craft books are making big profits. It’s not just craftiness – the recession is inspiring people to hunker down and enjoy other old-fashioned activities, like board games and playing music together.

5. Bike service shops are booming

Car lots might be vacant these days, but some bike shops are teeming with customers. Bike industry news is mixed. Sales for higher-end models and mountain bikes are down. But shops offering utility city cycles - entry-level, commuting, hybrid, and cargo models – are faring much better. And service-oriented shops in bike-friendly locales are rolling right along. The $4 a gallon gas last spring inspired quite a few people to dust the cobwebs off their old bikes and teeter them in for tune-ups. And recession-era frugality has kept that trend alive. People may feel uneasy laying down the cash for a new bike right now, but even with plunging gas prices, folks are discovering it’s cheaper to tune up that old cruiser than to keep the station wagon on the road.

So, let’s raise our glasses (of homebrew) to the resurgence of bikes, crafts, cooking, gardens, and libraries. They’re nourishing to people’s bodies, minds, and souls, not to mention their pocket books. The more people who love them, the better.

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Are you still using shampoo?

soda

I haven’t bought any shampoo or conditioner since the end of May. Don’t worry, I’m still washing my hair. but now I use baking soda and apple cider vinegar. Maybe you’ve heard of this “no-poo” thing already? It seems like everyone’s talking about it these days.

Perhaps you’re still a tad skeptical? Trust me, so was I.

I used to love shampoo and conditioner. I usually had four or five different brands lined up on the edge of my bathtub. I knew that many cosmetics contain ingredients that are supposedly not so great. So I shopped for mine at the health food store and scrutinized the labels for parabens and pthalates, sodium laurel sulfate and sulfer. The few products that did not contain those suspect ingredients made my hair look, well, sort of flat and tired. And they cost a lot – $7.00 or more for a 12 ounce bottle. If I went more than a day or so without shampooing, my hair got greasy. So I ended up buying and using a lot. For so many years, I thought all of this was just normal.

Well, here’s my new normal. I use this method every other day or every third day. It is remarkably easy, inexpensive, and effective.

1. Mix a tablespoon or two of baking soda with just enough water to make it into a paste.
2. Wet hair.
3. Massage paste into scalp for a few minutes. (It feels great!)
4. Rinse hair well.
5. Pour a couple of tablespoons of apple cider vinegar into a quart jar and fill up the rest with warm water.
6. Pour the vinegar water mixture on ends of hair and let it sit on hair for a few minutes.
7. Rinse well.

It took my hair about three weeks to adjust to the new method. During the transition time, it was at times amazingly soft and manageable and at other times very greasy. I almost quit on several occasions. I’m so glad I stuck with it. Now my hair looks great every time. It doesn’t get greasy even after three days between washings. And it does not smell like vinegar. Plus, I’m saving money and cutting down on the plastic containers I purchase. Amazing!

Want to read more? Go here , here, here, or here.

(This post is for Steady Mom’s 30 Minute Blog Challenge.  Post time, start to finish: 28 minutes.)

Have you tried ditching your shampoo and conditioner yet? I’d love to hear the results.


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Ditch the Gym and Get Fit: 7 ways to stay active as the weather gets colder

playground

I used to run a few miles every morning. On the rare days I didn’t run, I swam laps, played tennis, hiked in the woods, or went on a bike ride. And I owned a library of yoga and pilates DVDs.

These days I hardly even think about exercise, and the tennis rackets and workout DVDs are in the closet gathering dust. But the weird thing is – I think I might be fitter now.

I spend most of my days carrying or chasing my active 16-month old baby, and my house, yard, and gardens require nearly constant labor. My family walks or rides bikes most everywhere we go – to the grocery store, library, park, and to friends’ houses. And I rarely stop moving during the day, except when I’m writing. Sure, sometimes I miss those long solo runs and challenging yoga workouts, but I just don’t have much energy to spare at the end of my days.

Mayo Clinic physician Dr. James Levine’s research makes me think it might not just be my imagination. I may actually be in better shape now than back when my idea of relaxation was a Rodney Yee or Seane Corn power yoga session. The results of Levine’s study on obesity (Science, January 28, 2005) indicate that if you want to achieve a healthy body weight, it’s more effective to put more of what Levine calls NEAT — “Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis” — into your life  than to seek out organized exercise. NEAT includes the activities of daily life that are not planned physical activity, like standing, walking, talking, cleaning, fidgeting, or diving to rescue a sixteen-month old before he pulls the Oxford English Dictionary onto his head.

Moreover another large study suggests that the frequent moderate activity of daily life helps prevent cancer better than more infrequent, but intense recreational activity. In the nine-country European breast cancer study of more than 200,000 women, of all the household and recreational exercise women did, household activity – including housework, home repair, gardening, and stair climbing – was the only activity that significantly reduced breast cancer risk.  (Physical Activity and Breast Cancer Risk: The European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition, Cancer Epedemiology Biomarkers & Prevention, 2006)

Increasing your daily activity, or NEAT, is easy, and the best part is, you not only get a healthy body, you get to mark things off your to-do list. Plus, increasing your NEAT usually means turning off power tools and ramping up human-power. And that means burning less coal and gasoline, contributing to a cleaner, healthier planet for all of us.

Here are 7 great ways to increase your NEAT as the weather gets colder.

1. Hang laundry.

line dry

Depending on where you live, take advantage of the sunny autumn days to hang laundry on the line. Drying diapers or whites in the sun helps bleach and disinfect them. Line-drying also saves money, conserves energy, and helps clothes last longer. During the winter, you can dry clothes on a rack inside in most climates, which also helps to humidify dry indoor air.

2. Split and stack fire wood.

september 045

Burning wood is arguably not the greenest way to heat a house, but it can be remarkably economical (and cozy). Plus, preparing winter wood stores is an excellent workout for a crisp autumn day.

3. Prepare the gardens for winter.

pumpkin

In most climates, it’s time to plant bulbs, harvest and dry or freeze herbs, save seeds, clear away dead foliage, and plant cover crops.

4. Rake leaves

leaves

Several years ago, I lived next to a  dental office with the most manicured lawn I’ve ever seen. Teams of landscapers descended on it every day with gas-powered leaf blowers, lawn mowers, and shrub trimmers. The noise was deafening. Since then, I’ve become a huge fan of the humble (and quiet) rake.

5. Hand wash dishes

dishes

The jury’s still out on whether it’s greener to hand wash or machine wash dishes. It depends on how you’re hand-washing and rinsing and on how energy-efficient your dishwasher is. (See an analysis of the carbon footprint of each method here.) In our household, hand washing conserves both money and energy. On the downside, it hogs a lot of precious counter space. However, I tend to actually prefer hand washing. It’s a pleasant, meditative task, and it’s just the sort of frequent, moderate exercise those studies suggest is so good for us.

6. Leave the car at home.

walking

How can you increase your physical activity, be healthier, feel better, make the world a cleaner, more beautiful place  while you get where you need to go? Stop driving, or at least significantly reduce your car-use. Whether you bike, walk, or take public transportation, you’re certain to add more activity to your day when you ditch the automobile. And as a perk, alternative transportation is usually more fun than sitting in traffic, searching for parking spots, and being on the road with enraged drivers.

7. Play

play

If you have little ones in your life, you already know how much energy you can burn jumping into piles of leaves, building  forts, playing Red Rover, or just carrying or chasing after the little speed-racers. If you don’t have kids, I’m sure a neighbor, friend, or family member would be happy to share the fun for a few hours (so he or she can take a nap).

What are your favorite ways to stay active as winter approaches?

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