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 »  Home  »  food  »  Earth friendly holiday season tips
Earth friendly holiday season tips
By Green Living Tips | Published  10/18/2009 | food , family , energy
Xmas and holiday season green tips

First published November 2007, updated October 2009

It's only October, but it's beginning to look a lot like Christmas already given the number of related ads I'm seeing. I thought I'd get in now with my two cents worth before the "silly season" gets into full swing. It's time to arm ourselves against the season of consumption!

Over the Xmas season, the western world generates a lot more rubbish than at other times of the year. Here's a series of tips to help you reduce your upcoming Xmas impact on the environment. 

1. Shop online. Sometimes online retailers will have better pricing than bricks and mortar stores, plus you'll save fuel in travelling from store to store, time and stress! Items purchased online are often shipped straight from the factory to you, so it can also cut down on the overall freight impact.

2. When heading out to do your Christmas shopping, take your own reusable bags rather than using the plastic ones provided by stores.

3. When purchasing gifts, try and think "earth-friendly" every step of the way; from the product itself to the packaging. If you buy green gifts, make a special effort to let the person know of its environmental benefit as you may just set the receiver on the path to a greener life. This doesn't mean buying items the person may not need or want, but consider the person's interests and look for a green angle. For example, for chocolate lovers, perhaps organic, fair trade chocolate.

4. All of us have likely received gifts in the past that we had no use for and we've just stashed them away. It's a waste of money and resources. Instead of taking a risk if you're not sure what a person wants, consider purchasing a gift card - that way they'll get what they really want or need. Some retailers are even offering earth friendly gift cards now made from bioplastic! Also consider re-gifting items you may have received in the past but have never used.

5. Instead of buying physical gifts, consider purchasing a service or tickets to a concert or movie.

6. Make a donation to a charity, developing world or environmental project as a gift for someone else. Does the person you are buying for really need another pair of socks? Instead of giving them a gift they can use, buy them a gift that goes to another needy person or organization - purchase it in their name. Many organizations provide this option now. To my way of thinking, this is the perfect gift because it gives to so many. You could purchase seed that will go to a third world farming family, wheelchairs for the disabled, chickens for a community, trees for damaged land - the possibilities are endless.

7. Battery operated items are a hugely popular as gifts. I shudder to think how many single use batteries are consumed on Christmas day and the following weeks as kids (and adults) put their new toys through their paces. In 2006, 40 billion single-use batteries were sold worldwide! As part of your gift buying, purchase rechargeable batteries and a battery charger - these are quite economical items to buy these days and will save you a ton of money in the long run.

8. Thousands of tons of Christmas cards are purchased each holiday season. The mind boggles to think of how many trees are destroyed in the process. Try to purchase cards made from recycled paper and after the holiday season, if you decide not to keep the cards you receive, recycle them. Another idea worth considering is to offset the paper consumption is to plant a tree every year.

9. If you like putting bows on your gifts, use fabric instead of plastic.

10. Christmas wrapping creates the same sort of issues as cards, but there are some added environmental dangers with metallic and plastic type wrapping. Aside from taking a long time to decompose, these types of wraps give off toxic gases when burned. Look for plainer wraps made from recycled paper, wrap gifts in scarves, place in baskets etc. Make the wrapping a part of the gift if you can; something that can be used for another purpose - for example, check out the Japanese art of Furoshiki.

11. Purchase a live tree to use as a Christmas tree and it doesn't have to be the traditional fir. There are no laws against using another species and I guarantee that your doors won't be busted down by the Santa CIA :). After Xmas is over, plant the tree in your yard.

12. If you're going to purchase Christmas tree lights this year; consider buy LED tree light sets - they'll last far longer and use a great deal less electricity.

13. Use a timer for your external lighting decorations; again, a huge electricity saver.

14. Tree decorations can be made from gingerbread and strings of edible items such as berries or popcorn - much tastier than plastic and far less environmental impact! Also look to nature for decoration ideas - for example; pine cones, leaves and flowers.

15. Artificial snow spray can be made from environmentally damaging components, plus there's added waste of the can. A more earth-friendly imitation snow effect can be achieved by sprinkling baking soda on your tree.

16. If candles are part of your celebrations and decorations, consider using soy or beeswax types. Normal candles are made from paraffin, which is a petroleum based product.

17. Xmas day is a rubbish-fest. Before the gift opening and feasting begins, have boxes or bins set up for different types of rubbish - cans, bottles, paper etc. This will make your job easier at the end of the day and minimize the amount of recyclables heading for landfill.

18. Food wastage can also be a challenge on Xmas day - instead of throwing scraps, leftovers and peelings into your bin, dig them into your garden or better still, buy yourself a worm farm this Christmas and use the vegetable refuse to help you start feeding them.

The retailers of the world have brainwashed us over the years as to what Christmas is all about. I'm involved with marketing as part of my career, but I've become so jaded with this time of the year because of commercialism that I don't even observe it any more. That's a little extreme, but if Xmas day is an important day to you and your family, think outside the box a little and you can have a greener Christmas that may benefit the environment and society rather than contributing to destroying our planet :).

Care to share some more tips for making the holiday season more earth friendly? Please add them below :).

For some further points of view on the Xmas season and consumption, check out my article "Holiday Shopping Thoughts".


 
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Michael Bloch
Green Living Tips.com
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Comments
  • Comment #1 (Posted by Rebekah)

    A good reuse tip for Christmas as well as any other type of a card is that the majority of people only write on one side of the card. If the front side of the card, the part with the picture, is untouched you can cut the card at the fold and use the front as a postcard later. You can also save it and use it as a gift tag the next year, or for art creations for your young children.
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by Michael (Green Living Tips))

    Thanks for the tip Rebekah!
     
  • Comment #3 (Posted by Zach)

    Use outdated maps or old posters for wrapping paper.
     
  • Comment #4 (Posted by Michael - Green Living Tips)

    Great idea Zach!
     
  • Comment #5 (Posted by Kelly)

    To save on wrapping, go to your local wine store and ask if they have any old wooden wine boxes they are throwing away. If not, they usually will sell them for $1 to $5 a piece, and they come in all sizes. It will be an eye-catching present container with an added fabric bow, and the person your giving the gift to can also use the box to store things in when they are done.
     
  • Comment #6 (Posted by Michael - Green Living Tips)

    Nice tip Kelly, thanks!
     
  • Comment #7 (Posted by Ron Gonzales)

    If possible, instead of the traditional Christmas cards, why not try sending Christmas eCards! Some websites offer them for free!
     
  • Comment #8 (Posted by Kathleen)

    These are great tips! I work with a non-profit organization called Oxfam America and I thought it may be relevant to mention their online gift catalog called Oxfam America Unwrapped (www.OxfamAmericaUnwrapped.com). There are dozens of gifts available including green gifts such as plant 50 trees, plant a garden or grow a quinoa crop. This year you can give a meaningful gift that helps fight global poverty.
     
  • Comment #9 (Posted by Rosana)

    Instead of wrapping paper, we use newspaper to wrap gifts.
     
  • Comment #10 (Posted by Michael - Green Living Tips)

    Ron, Kathleen, Rosana; thanks for the tips!
     
  • Comment #11 (Posted by S)

    Instead of wrapping paper, place gift in a reusable shopping bag, like Chico, one from your grocery store or for more extravagant reusable bags, try LL Bean. The "wrap" then encourages the receiver to use a bag for groceries (or whatever). There are so many colors available and the fancy ones can be monogrammed with holiday messages.
     
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