In case you couldn’t tell from the stunning photos of the view from my front door, the waterfalls or the beaches, Samothrace is a beautiful natural patchwork of green olive trees, rugged pebbly beaches and tawny, sun-soaked fields. Above all, it is the pristine sea that frames every view, the perfect water absolutely clear to depths of at least 20 feet.
I am absolutely enjoying it – but also suffering from massive Catholic guilt. What am I doing to preserve this cleanliness and beauty? How am I doing on my stewardship of this gift for the next generation, or the one after? These thoughts are feeing my addiction to the No Impact Man blog, a website written by a New York Times columnist who has sworn off all impact-causing behavior for a year. In Manhattan. With a two-year-old and a Prada-loving wife. I’m absolutely fascinated by his progress – he intends to try absolutely everything and then see how much of it his family will retain at the end of the year. Check it out here: www.noimpactman.typepad.com
His experiment poses big questions: if I am worried about greenhouse gases, am I worried enough to keep red worms in a box in my kitchen to compost our vegetables and other organic waste? (Good luck convincing Courtney on that!!!) Am I ready to stop freezing things for storage or to spend an extra 25% of my already strained budget on organic local groceries? Must we city-dwellers stop patting ourselves on the back for taking the subway and not bagging our fruit at the grocery store? How sustainable are any changes I make? Yes, I have taken to the good-for-the-earth showers – rinse, turn off water while you soap up, rinse, exit. But can I keep this up in a New York winter in an apartment with a drafty bathroom? Even if I do, without millions of others doing the same, will the few gallons saved each day make any difference at all? Or should I luxuriate in the hot water and plan to go down with the ship?
Whatchya think? Should we all live like we have a personal tie to keeping the water clean, the air breathable, the landfills smaller? Any mini-tips out there on how to be green? Any reactions to No Impact Man?
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
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3 comments:
Huh. NoImpactMan is dependent on attracting as many readers as possible, and how many other people out there are using solar-powered computers? Not many is my guess. What is the impact of the energy use (not to mention that it's done on a computer... not a friend to landfills) of the collective time spent reading his blog?
Sorry to be such a skeptic - I *do* support reducing our footprint and I'm proud of the ways in which I do so - but it just seems like he's trying too hard to profit off this. And not that profit is bad, but in this case it seems a little too exploitative and gimmicky.
Lastly, do not, I repeat, DO NOT compost in your apartment. Bad, Bad idea. Especially if you don't like bugs. Or rats. This should be an outdoor venture only. You're more than welcome to come play with my compost bin, though! I don't flip or water it as often as I should.
Ooh, yuck. Thanks, Shane. point taken on indoor composting.
A bunch of the commetns at the start of the blog deal with the computer use/energy issue. I saw it as less resource intense communication than a newspaper column, but of course you're right that he's using lots of energy.
Only the crazy curious and curious with book deals will be No Impact (wo)Men. I vote for doing what you can, and a little bit more. But we're all hypocrites sometimes.
Speaking of voting, you vote despite being 1 of 35 million voters (and the many more eligible, tut tut). Subway rides and loose fruit add up the same way. You're also doing the Catholic thing of being a living example and perhaps encouraging others to live equally well.
Anyway, if you started taking 60 minute hot showers, your Catholic guilt would kick in, along with your frugality when the water/sewer & water heater bills arrive.
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