In the morning, I woke up to the alarm on my cell phone (I
do not have an alarm clock, and I do not have a home phone, so turning off my
cell phone isn’t really an option for me). I timed myself for a 5 minute shower,
which I went over by 1 minute. The sun was already coming up outside, so I left
the bathroom light off and skipped the hair dryer that morning and walked to
work. Luckily, work is only 1.25 miles from my house and I usually try to
reserve this walk for casual Fridays. I find the walk to be more relaxing than
the short drive. It takes about 20 minutes and gives me some time to collect my
thoughts from the previous week, or to daydream about upcoming events.
The energy consumption at work is mostly out of my control.
However, when I left for the day, I made sure that I turned off my computer
that it didn’t continue to waste electricity when I was not using it.
When I returned home for the evening, I had had my walk for
the day, but my dogs had been stuck inside the house all afternoon! So, I took
them on another walk to my neighborhood Subway where we grabbed sandwiches for
dinner. The rest of the evening was spent catching up on homework and reading a
magazine.
In all, this day was not bad at all. I will consider walking
to work more often, weather (and circumstances) permitting. I do feel that I
can reduce my shower time down to about 5 minutes, however I don’t know that I
am entirely ready to give up my hair dryer.
Giving up tv might be out of the question, unless the prices become more
ridiculous than they already are. There is a maximum price that I am willing to
pay my cable provider, anything above $75/month for cable and internet and I
will turn them both off without blinking an eye. There are a few additional
energy uses in my house that don’t necessarily affect my everyday life, but I
have plans to change over time to help reduce energy consumption in my house.
The most immediate that I can think of is turning up the temperature on my
refrigerator and freezer. This will still keep the contents cold, but will not
make the refrigerator work so hard to keep the inside temperature at
unnecessary levels. I also have a fish tank with one lonely fish in it. The
filter uses energy on a constant basis, but this is necessary for the fish’s
survival. As soon as the fish dies, I intend to retire the tank.
I have saved the biggest energy hog in my entire house for
last. That would be the pool. To cut energy consumption on the pool, we have
recently purchased an energy efficient pump which allows us to control how many
rpm’s the pump is operating at and set the timing for off-peak energy usage.
The long term plan for the house (and pool) is to install solar panels. This is
not something that I intend to do over the next week, but is a possibility over
the next 5-10 years.
In this particular experiment, I did not use my washer/dryer
or the heat/air conditioning. The weather is perfect right now, so we are not
finding the need for heat or ac. I like to open the doors and windows to let
cool/warm air into the house as needed. During other times of the year, we have
a programmable thermostat so that we are able to adjust the temperature
automatically as we sleep and we do not keep the heat/ac on when no one is
home. I used to be diligent about hanging towels, jeans and sweatshirts outside
to dry most of the way. This is something that I intend to start doing again
this year as the weather gets better.
Great energy saving tip, I had not thought about changing the setting on my fridge but I'm going to do it. Good post.
ReplyDeleteYou're right about the pool being a big energy hog, our bill goes way up in summer when we keep the pool clean. We tried getting an energy efficient pump installed last year but there was some problem about not having the proper wiring for the correct voltage. So we have to redo all the wiring from the house to the pool area first.
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