Room One – The Bathroom

So a couple of days have passed since my last post and things have slipped slightly. So tonight I’ve taken it as my mission to research all things Bathroom.

So i figured that my basic bathroom needs boil down to: shampoo, shower gel, a toothbrush, toothpaste, hair product, deodorant, a razor and of course toilet roll (I’ll get to the cleaning of the bathroom in a separate post).

So for Shampoo and Soap Recently I’ve settled on the guys at Primal Suds their soap is pretty reasonable, I do the ‘Boxed Off’ deal where you get five soaps for £20 plus £2.95 for postage. Their packaging is 100% compostable and you get a good-sized wedge for a fiver. I’d say I have to order a box of five soaps every six to eight weeks. The guys at Primal Suds also do a ‘No Bo’ bar, which would solve my deodorant problem (I’m currently using a Body Shop roll-on). I’ll give it a try next time I order and let you know how I get on.

I recently went to Eight Day Cafe in Manchester and bought a bamboo toothbrush. I think this was about £3-£4 and again the packaging is 100% compostable along with the brush when you’re done with it. I’ve read online that it’s recommended that you replace your toothbrush every three months, don’t quote me on that but £16 a year doesn’t seem that much. Toothpaste I’m going to follow this recipe from Trash Is For Tossers when we run out of our last tube.

Hair product, I’m currently using the Dirty range from Lush. This range is as good as any other hair wax I’ve bought and when you’ve finished wih it you can take the tub back to the store to be recycled. I’m starting to consider a more drastic approach though in shaving all my hair off. Saving the need for a shampoo bar or hair product completely. I have a friend and clippers already lined up.

Speaking of shaving, I’ve researched a few options and it seems like a safety razor like this one is going to be the best option. For shaving foam/gel I’ve just taken to lathering up soap as I tried a few other options and they didn’t really work.

So that leaves the grim task of finding a toilet paper alternative. I don’t think we’re willing to go 100% zero waste with this one to be completely honest and I’ve read/watched a few other zero wasters who opt for recycled toilet paper like this one a Waitrose (which annoyingly comes in plastic packaging) or the awesome guys at Who Gives A Crap where the packaging is 100% biodegradable. A little bit more expensive but if bought in bulk doesn’t seem like too drastic of a price increase.

So that’s the bathroom plan sorted (sort of), next stop is the kitchen.

POA

So yesterday I went into Manchester city centre to scout out some shops and supermarkets to see what they could offer in terms of zero waste.

I came home with some re-usable shopping bags and a biodegradable charcoal toothbrush from Eighth Day Cafe, a jumbo sized jar of coconut oil from Holland and Barrett (which I intend to use as a mason jar afterwards) and a load of veggies from McColl’s market stand. As an aside, I realised how much McColl’s and the adjoining market stand have to offer and will probably do a separate post on this at a later date.

I think it’s painfully aware I need a plan of how to tackle this challenge. It’s not as cut and dry as stopping all waste immediately and collecting odd things on a random shopping trip isn’t really going to work. I think the best plan going forwards is to look at things room by room.

Firstly stop then, the Bathroom.

Reading List

So, as part of my previously mentioned research I’m reading, Googling and Youtubing my way to understanding this task I’ve decided to take on.

Just recently I attended an interview for another job and when the interviewer discovered my intentions for 2019 they recommended this book:

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I would 100% recommend it and although its subject matter is not exclusively zero waste it has some great ideas to reduce your household plastic usage. Particularly interesting for me was realising that recycling schemes depend on your local council and something you might throw in your recycling bin in Manchester is entirely different to Salford.

If, like me, you live in the Greater Manchester area I would recommend visiting this site as it really makes you think about what you’re throwing into those different coloured wheelie bins.

Next on the reading list Bea Johnson’s Zero Waste Home

 

 

New Year (not quite), New Me

The aim of this blog will be to document my 2019 New Years Resolution. There must be a million or more failed resolution blogs out there but I’d like think my previous experience might help me out.

2017 was the birth of the resolution for me. The aim? To drink water and only water for an entire year. Once I had that one under my belt and the taste for a challenge it was time to take on 2018, this time Veganism. So far so good on that one but what’s in store for 2019?

Environmentalism is often included in many heated debates about the Vegan diet:

‘The single most effective thing you can do to reduce your impact on the environment is to cut down on meat consumption, or cut it out altogether.’ 

You’ve probably heard that one before but how can you go further than that? Zero waste, that’s how.

So the aim for 2019 is clear, reduce my household waste throughout the year to eventually reach the goal of zero.

First step, research. A lot of research.