Above is my sugar bowl after too much holiday celebrating. This photo was taken after I added the leftover powdered sugar with red sprinkles from my holiday cookie baking, just a little recycling of the more attractive variety.
We have a small lidded jar on the kitchen counter that gets all the vegetable and fruit peelings, the coffee grounds, the wilted lettuce and anything else that will work to our benefit in the compost pile in the garden. We do get the rare batch of hatching fruit flies, but if we are careful, they only last a few days.
We take out the leftover grease from the pot roast and carry it to the ravine for the squirrels and foxes. We dump the shells from clams and oysters at the far edge of the river for the raccoons and otters to clean. The stale crackers go to the birds and the stale bread to the ducks, and recently, some spoiled raw lamb stew meat to the crows, which was most interesting to watch.
We use the newspaper to mulch the weeds in the garden and recycle all the magazines at the dump along with the rinsed glass and metal and plastic and foil.
We take the clothes, shoes, games, books and other stuff we no longer use to the church store.
We usually take our own cloth bags to the grocery store, but when we forget, we still find uses for the plastic bags that we bring home. They help group all the zip-locked garden vegetables by type in the chest freezer or they are used for carrying stuff up to my daughter's house or holding the used batteries until we take them in. We tuck them in our backpacks to carry out any trash we may find on our hiking adventures. They are useful as shoe-bags in the suitcase.
I return my printer cartridges to the office supply store for a discount on expensive new printer cartridges.
We combine our errands so that we take fewer car trips to the store and post office.
But I am not patting myself on the back because these are such teeny-tiny and common gestures to help reduce our footprint on this planet. We are not handy types and thus fail to repair or replace broken machinery or appliance items so that they can be used once again. We are not as careful as we should be on our use of oil and electricity since we are only two people using a big house, and we tend to move to new technology as soon as we can afford it...me with my camera and PC and my husband with his GPS and boat.
I sincerely believe that global climate change, removal of fossil fuels, disposal of toxic waste, and accidental introduction of non-indigenous species to areas is changing this planet at a hugely rapid rate. Just watching the natural disaster news for a month proves that. I work regularly to help my grandchildren learn what fresh natural food tastes like, how being careful with toys and turning off batteries help the planet, and keeping them aware of the fragility of our natural environment as they tramp through it. But my overall battle plan seems so small and weak and any help you all can give will make this much better.