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- How to conserve water by using graywater for landscaping.
- According to EverydayHealth.com, there is good news and bad news about older homes. There are also simple steps you can take to make a big difference.
- How to clean "greener" to make your home healthier.
- Choose products made from less flammable natural materials, or made by manufacturers who use safer alternatives.
- Some plastics contain BPA, which is linked to health issues. Avoid clear, hard plastics marked with a "7" or "PC" and choose baby bottles made from glass. Don't microwave plastic containers. Stay away from toys marked with a "3" or "PVC." Give your baby a frozen washcloth instead of vinyl teethers.
- A University of Melbourne researcher has found that common consumer products, including those marketed as ‘green', 'all-natural', 'non-toxic', and ‘organic’, emit a range of compounds that could harm human health and air quality. But most of these ingredients are not disclosed to the public.
- Going beyond the surface of BP's obvious pollution, there is more damage done daily to the environment and our health.
- There are more than 80,000 "chemical substances" in legal use, and, according to the book - Smart Mama's Green Guide by Jennifer Taggart: "less than 10 percent have been reviewed for toxic effects."
- Spring cleaning is the time to get tough with the dirt, but not with your health. Here's how to choose less toxic green cleaners this spring and anytime of the year.
- Smart strategies that will help you get your home clean while keeping things "green."
- Improving and cleaning your air is an often forgotten task of spring cleaning.
- Review of iGozen's line of green cleaners - Fruit/Vegetable Wash, Meat/Fish Cleaner, and Everyday Cleaner.
- When's the last time you attended a conference and one of the keynote speakers was only 16 years old?
- How coal-tar sealants could be impacting our health and increasing our risk of cancer.
- Biomimicry is the “study and imitation of nature’s remarkably efficient designs, bringing together scientists, engineers, architects and innovators who can use those models to create sustainable technologies”.
Recent innovations demonstrate ways that biomimicry is helping to make homes healthier.
- HHI Staff and EverydayHealth.com give simple tips to minimizing indoor allergy triggers.
- While they may not have asthma, allergies, or chemical sensitivities, they may have other life-draining health complaints related to unhealthy homes.
- Nanoparticles are now being used in many consumer products. But how safe are they?
- The primary lesson I have learned in my first two weeks of home ownership is to let go of expectations.
- When using the term “green prefabricated homes”, some of us can’t help but imagine a small double-wide mobile home covered in some sort of mossy overgrowth. While that notion is pretty far out, many of us have preconceived notions about green housing that frankly aren’t true. This book - Prefabulous + Almost Off the Grid - contests these fallacies.
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We do not strictly control Google ad content. If you believe any Google ad is inappropriate, please email us directly here.
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