Planning a Green Christmas
The song tells of a white Christmas, but that refers to the
weather and the Christmasy atmosphere that snow can bring.
Planning for a green Christmas is all about being
environmentally active and aware while saving money as well. In
times of economic uncertainty that must surely be a good thing.
And of course, if the weather brings a little bit of white
covering too, then that makes a green Christmas perfect!
Exchanging gifts is a common practice at Christmas, and this
is an excellent place to start our green Christmas habits. The
gift wrapping paper sold in stores is usually not recyclable.
Most of it is immediately thrown away to end up in landfills.
This makes gift wrapping with store-bought paper expensive and
very unfriendly to the planet - not what we want for a green
Christmas.
A much better alternative, and one that close relatives will
appreciate, is to use your children's artwork to wrap gifts.
You could also use your children's comic books, or the comic
sections of newspapers as a bright and colorful alternative,
thereby recycling old paper. You can explain to the recipient
of the gift in a positive way why you are doing this and
perhaps make them feel guilty for not having a green Christmas
as well.
It has been calculated by the Sierra Club, America's oldest
and largest environmental organization, that if every family in
the country gift wrapped just three gifts by recycling existing
paper they already have, the paper saved would be enough to
cover 45,000 football fields. Now, that's a green Christmas and
a whole lot of trees saved too!
If you plan to hang a wreath on your front door. consider
making one yourself. It's easy and very environmentally
friendly - and you'll save money too. Go into the forest, or
even a nearby park, and find evergreen branches and dried
twigs. These can be wrapped in a circular fashion with
cranberries strung together to add a splash of bright color.
You'll surprise yourself at how good you are, it won't cost you
anything but a little time, and the materials are all fully
biodegradable. Your green Christmas can't get much better than
that.
There are many more things you can do to make this a green
Christmas. Consider making your own cards, for example. Use
your children's artwork again - it's perfect for this and
grandparent will love it. You can use LED lights on your tree
(which should be a real one that can be planted out later) and
you will save 90% on your green Christmas electricity bill. If
you start thinking about it I'm sure you will come up with
other great ideas for a green Christmas.
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