Category: Environment

  • Average Jane’s Home Energy Audit

    We completed our $100 home energy audit as the first step in the Efficiency Kansas program. It'll be a couple of weeks before we get our report, but we're hoping to take advantage of the associated loan program so we can make a few improvements before winter sets in.

    The audit was conducted by my friend Mary English from Small Step Energy Solutions. She also does a killer presentation of An Inconvenient Truth, if you're ever looking for a speaker on that topic.

    The process was quite comprehensive and I'd be lying if I said I knew what she was doing at each juncture, but the coolest part (literally and figuratively) was when she installed a blower door over our front door and used an infrared camera to see where the house was particularly drafty.

    IMGP2257

    IMGP2258

    There is a LOT that needs to be done to make our house more airtight. The attic has about 2" of insulation where it should have 18". That's probably what we'll address first. Unfortunately, Mary said we have a lot of junk up there: old construction debris, a chair, etc., that should really be cleaned out first. I guess we'll see what can be done.

    The basement is another supremely problematic area. Of the six basement windows, two are covered up with insulation and plywood and the rest copiously leak cold air. Two of them are behind a wall, but no one bothered to seal them up first, so the whole wall reads cold on the infrared monitor. I'd like to have them all replaced with glass block windows, but that may have to happen later on.

    There are some things I can deal with myself. There's a drafty crack where the kitchen wall and ceiling meet that I can caulk. We could use some caulk around most of our window frames, too. I also need to do some taping and mudding of the raw sheetrock in the studio's utility closet. Otherwise, air comes in freely through the open sheetrock joints.

    One thing I thought I'd already taken care of is our fireplace flue. Last year I stuffed some insulation in there, which cut back the amount of air we'd been getting down the chimney. It turns out there's still a huge amount of air coming down the chimney, so I'm going to look into plugging it more securely.

    It turns out that our storm windows, as old and ugly as most of them are, do a pretty good job. If the home builders had only insulated around the window frames better, we'd be doing pretty well.

    I wasn't surprised that our house is poorly sealed and insulated. It was built around 1939 and it's had two or three additions since then. Now that I know exactly what I'm dealing with, I'm ready to knock out the problems one by one.

    If you see me at Lowe's with a cart full of cans of expanding foam and tubes of caulk, you'll know why.

  • Average Jane’s Awesome Sister

    Raccoon 
    My sister posted this story to her Facebook wall, but I thought more people needed to hear it:

    Scene: Lake marina. Me, pulling up car to trailer boat. I see an animal in the road and notice it is shining. I hop out of the car to take a look and see it's a baby raccoon with a clear plastic cup stuck firmly to its head.

    As I approach it backs up, hissing, and makes its way into a drainage ditch. After a flash I realize its head (read: teeth) are cased in plastic, so I dive onto my stomach, grab the dude by his back fur, stand up and in one motion grab cup and fling cup and raccoon in two directions. The End.

    The moral? People…PLEASE don't litter!

    I'm so proud! {Sniff.} All those years of Ranger Rick Magazine and watching The Crocodile Hunter really paid off. 


    Photo is not of the actual raccoon in question, just a random baby raccoon. Photo credit: clstal

  • Average Jane’s Green Update


    GreenDimes
    was one of my more successful green initiatives from last year. My husband and I agree that our junk mail has been reduced substantially. I’m looking forward to a day when the only items that appear in our mailbox are legitimate correspondence and online orders. (I’m also working on getting more of my bills electronically.)

    Even though I don’t do resolutions, per se, I had a few green goals for 2008. First on the list was to start bringing my own shopping bags to the grocery store. I purchased a 3-pack of bags at Costco that are really great, but enormous. I can probably get the equivalent of four or five bags of groceries into one, but that’s okay because they have two sets of handles in different lengths to balance the load.

    My second goal was to start recycling glass. Our curbside recycling pickup started excluding glass a year or two ago and it just feels wrong to throw it away. The problem is that I can’t seem to find out where to take the glass I collect. Our recycling company’s website seems to be in permanent crash mode and none of the city or county sites have anything useful to say. I did find a glass recycling center in a nearby city; maybe I can pretend I live there and get them to take my little collection of condiment jars and wine bottles.

    My final goal – and this is the expensive one – is to substantially increase the amount of insulation in our attic and have all of our old windows replaced with energy efficient ones. Our utility bills really aren’t that bad, but I’m sure our drafty windows and thin insulation make them worse than necessary.

    While I’m working on making my house as green as I can, I’ve been drafted for a "green team" at work to come up with ideas for making the office more environmentally friendly. My ideas so far include purchasing environmentally neutral cleaning supplies and recycled paper goods, recycling more kinds of materials, encouraging more people to recycle rather than discard, and facilitating carpooling among employees who live near each other.

    Have any other good green suggestions for me for home or office? I’ll take ’em!

  • Green Average Jane

    Bloggers Unite - Blog Action Day

    Contrary to what Kermit the Frog might have you believe, it’s really not that hard being green. I’m living proof of that because even though I’m really quite lazy, I still manage to do a number of things on behalf of the environment.

    • I recycle. I’m fortunate to have curbside recycling in my area, so I make a special point of recycling all the acceptable plastics, cardboard, paper and metal that we use each week. They no longer take glass, so my next goal is to find out where I can drop off my recyclable glass.
    • I use compact fluorescent light bulbs. When I mention this, people frequently mutter something about the light quality. Seriously, the modern CFLs give off perfectly acceptable light for reading or anything else you’d need to do after dark. Beginning more than a year ago, as my standard bulbs burned out I started replacing them with CFLs. Not one of the CFLs has burned out yet, even though some of them are on all the time. It’s well worth it.
    • I’ve stopped buying bottled water. Have you seen photos of the amount of waste produced by discarded water bottles? Even though I always recycled mine, it still seemed ridiculous to buy water when I have sources of filtered water at home and at work. Now I use my new Nalgene bottle from The Onion.
    • I drive a hybrid car. Yes, a hybrid costs a little bit more than a non-hybrid. However, there’s a $2,500 Federal income tax credit, so that pretty much takes care of the difference. My Honda Insight gets about 55mpg on average and I spend approximately $50 a month on gas.

    There are a few other green initiatives in the back of my mind that I haven’t started yet. Here’s my green to-do list:

    • Start composting. I garden enough that it would be nice to be able to take my kitchen waste and use it to create compost. That would serve to reduce our household trash still further.
    • Make my own yogurt. My husband and I eat a lot of yogurt and even the large containers stack up quickly and are not among the items allowed by our curbside recycling program. To take care of that problem, I’ve purchased a yogurt maker; now I just need to try it out.
    • Further weatherproof our house. The next time I can afford it, I’m planning to get replacement windows throughout our 1950s-era house. Most of our windows are an unhappy combination of drafty and painted shut. With new windows, we’ll be able to take advantage of the attic fan more often when the weather is nice, and we’ll have less leakage of hot and cold in the summer and winter. While we’re at it, we also need more attic insulation.

    That’s my list and I’d say there’s nothing there that takes up an inordinate amount of time. Are you doing any of the same things? Do you have any other ideas that I can incorporate into my routine?