After seeing this list, I forgot some of mine:
>2. Consolidate all your errands in one place, and at one time
>so you don't make half a zillion little trips.
When I make my once-a-month or so trip to Urbana (which I don't do as often since doing a lot of shopping online---is online shopping environmentally friendly? I think it might be!), I make a circular route.
Even when I do in-town errands, I tend to make a circular route, so I don't backtrack.
>3. Slow down. Check your MPG - find the speed where you get
>the best mileage on the highway and stay there
On the highway, I drive 2-3 mph over the speedlimit, and rarely faster (unless I drive near Chicago, and have to drive faster to keep from being crushed! Or if I'm passing).
>1. Replace all incandescent bulbs with flourescent bulbs
I have flourescent bulbs in my most-used lamps, and I put (myself!) dimmer switches on my ceiliing lights).
>3. turn your heat down in the winter, AC up in the summer
>4. Think about not using the AC at all if your climate is
>bearable
I stay at 68 during the day in the winter, and 58 at night.
In the summer, I rarely put on the AC unless it's very humid and hot, and I keep it at 80 degrees.
>4. Don't water your lawn
I don't! And whenever I put a new plant in, I add hydrophillic (water-loving) crystals that retain water from rain, so I don't have to water as often, if at all (I water my food garden when the plants are young and need it, but I rarely water the flowers and bushes, unless we're mid-drought).
>6. Hand wash dishes instead of using a dishwasher
I do!
BUT, I just read in a Consumer Reports at the doctor's office that handwashing actually can use more water than an efficient dishwasher. But I suppose it depends on how you wash. If you're good, like my stepmother, you put soapy water in one side of the sink, wash in that, then stack the dishes in the other side of the sink, and once it's full, you use a spray nozzle to rinse.
I agree that little things add up, and if you get into the mind set of saving instead of using energy, it becomes second nature (which is why I don't even think of it).
TMI time!:
I live alone, so even though I don't have a composting toilet, I save water by going by the "if it's yellow, let it mellow, if it's brown, flush it down" rule of thumb. Though I'd add "if you've been eating asparagus, flush it down!"
What I'd like to do:
Get some water barrels that can be attached to the down-spout of gutters to collect rain water, which I would use in those times I need to water my garden.
Replace my windows with more energy-efficient ones, and maybe have a mini-greehouse window added to my kitchen or living room (on one side that gets the best light) to put herbs and maybe sprouts in to grow).
Get a bike and a good set of packs to use to do errands that I don't need to drive for.