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Airing His Laundry
Conservationist pins hopes on clotheslines
Alexander Lee is working to rope in out-of-control energy costs. So why does he think anyone can do that with a clothesline?
Back in 1995, Lee was student leader of Middlebury College's Environmental Quality club. Worried about the ecological impact of Vermont's two main electrical sources - Hydro-Quebec dams up in Canada and the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant down in Vernon - he invited anti-nuclear activist Dr. Helen Caldicott to give a speech that, to his surprise, would change his life.
"If we all did things like hang out our clothes," Caldicott said in one fateful sentence, "we could shut down the nuclear industry."
That got Lee thinking. One dryer, he knows today, eats up to $100 or more in power each year while emitting up to a ton of carbon dioxide. Collectively, America's more than 80 million dryers annually burn 6 to 10 percent of all residential electricity - second only to refrigerators and the equivalent of 30 million tons of coal or the output of the nation's 15 least productive nuclear reactors.
Lee, 33, sees clotheslines as the solution. But a growing number of housing complexes and communities, viewing them as eyesores that lower property values, have gone so far as to ban them.
Aiming to change attitudes and laws, Lee founded Project Laundry List. What began as a college campaign to promote clotheslines has grown into an internationally known nonprofit organization "to educate people," according to its mission statement, "about how simple lifestyle modifications, including air-drying one's clothes, reduce our dependence on environmentally and culturally costly energy sources."
Log onto www.laundrylist.org - 9,000 people do each week - and you'll find links to favorable press mentions ranging from the front page of the Wall Street Journal (under the headline "The Right to Dry: A Green Movement Is Roiling America") to Germany's most watched foreign affairs television program, "Weltspiegel."
The New York Times Magazine most recently pinned up its own praise, noting this spring that "Alexander Lee has what he calls an immediate, IMBY ('in my backyard') way to attack global climate change."
Phone world headquarters and you'll discover the project's definitely down home.
"It's just me here," Lee says in a Concord, N.H., apartment that doubles as his office, "and I don't get paid."
Even so, he knows his Vermont-inspired effort is paying off.
'On the line'
Ask Lee to sum up his life story and he starts with his mother hanging laundry outside his childhood home in Brookline, Mass.
"She called herself Mrs. Tiggy-Winkle," he recalls, "the Beatrix Potter character whose chief task is drying the clothes of all the animals."
Lee grew to care for wildlife, too. Going to high school at New Hampshire's Phillips Exeter Academy, he met Barbara James, director of student activities and an anti-nuclear activist. Traveling to Canada to canoe, he learned about Hydro-Quebec and how its dams could damage their surroundings. And back on campus, he heard about Caldicott, founder of U.S. Physicians for Social Responsibility, whose world network won the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize.
Moving on to college in 1993, Lee chose Middlebury for its landscape and its environmental studies program. But he soon grew concerned about Vermont's reliance on big-dam hydroelectric and nuclear power. The fall of his junior year, he made a cold call to Caldicott - "I'm not shy" - and invited her to speak.
Little did he know how her clothesline comment would snag him.
"I thought, 'Wow, this is really simple - people can connect with it.' That resonated with me."
The student helped launch National Hanging Out Day with signs like "Hang Your Pants, Stop the Nuke Plants" and "Put Yourself on the Line." In the spring of 1996, he went to a Green Corps environmental organizing semester at the University of Montana in Missoula and wrote a strategic plan for Project Laundry List.
Lee quickly lassoed in some prominent supporters. To raise money, his group raffled off clothesline art by Vermont printmaker and Middlebury alumnus Sabra Field. He went on to write a senior honors thesis focused in part on global warming author and activist Bill McKibben - and subsequently invited him to join the project.
Graduating in 1997, Lee apprenticed at Shelburne Farms, earned an environmental law degree from Vermont Law School and returned to New Hampshire to work on energy efficiency programs for the state's Public Utilities Commission, help chair the National Association of Regulatory Commissioners' Committee on Energy Resources and the Environment and open a field office for 2004 presidential candidate Howard Dean.
All the while, he continued to hang on to his clothesline.
'Pennant of eco-chic'
Lee was in law school when he formally incorporated the campaign in 2000.
Project Laundry List has a board of advisors - Caldicott, Field, James, McKibben, Vermont state Sen. Richard McCormack and Canadian science broadcaster David Suzuki - and a separate citizen board of directors. But after Lee graduated from college to career, he mostly limited his effort to maintaining the Web site.
Then a year ago last spring, the New York Times ran a feature story, "To Fight Global Warming, Some Hang a Clothesline," that quoted Lee and called his site "an encyclopedia on the energy advantages of hanging laundry." That snagged the attention not only of the newspaper's 1 million readers but also countless reporters nationwide.
"All you guys started copying each other," Lee says half-jokingly. "You hope for more than a decade that maybe this thing will catch on, and it did."
Log onto the "newsroom" link of www.laundrylist.org and you'll find almost 60 international press accounts mentioning what the Christian Science Monitor calls "the first U.S. clothesline activist group."
A front-page story in the Wall Street Journal last September noted that about 60 million Americans live in "association governed" residential communities that restrict clotheslines. ("An Illegal Solar Device?" a headline said.) Lee used the story to call for change, telling the paper that his campaign is "an outgrowth of interest in what-can-I-do environmentalism." Time magazine, in its own story last November, quoted Lee as saying that aesthetic concerns wilt with the threat of global warming.
"I understand the need for communities to legislate taste, but people always find a way around it," he told Time. "The clothesline is beautiful - gorgeous, sentimental and nostalgic for many."
Tell that to the Portland Oregonian, which last year reported that Lee sometimes has received complaints from overworked mothers.
"One woman said I was trying to reverse everything Betty Friedan had put in motion," he told the paper.
Instead, Lee just wants local and state officials to enact laws that allow the "right to dry" - something legislators in Vermont, New Hampshire and Connecticut tried and failed to do this year. In a recent Boston Globe story on New England efforts, Lee said that clotheslines, which some see as a "flag of poverty," need a new image.
"We want Martha (Stewart) and Oprah (Winfrey) to make the clothesline into a pennant of eco-chic."
Not that he isn't trying himself. Lee recently saw his project on an AOL Money & Finance Web page that hung clotheslines on its "Making a Comeback: 20 to Watch in 2008" list.
"That's the kind of stuff that's really neat," he says. "It makes me feel we're having an impact."
'Affordable and accessible'
So much free publicity - Lee spoke via phone this February to radio listeners in Perth, Australia - might seem intoxicating. But Lee sometimes finds it infuriating.
"You guys like conflict," he tells a reporter. "You like neighbor versus neighbor."
Although the press focuses on "right to dry" legislation, Lee spends more time responding to reporters than lobbying lawmakers.
"I get asked all the time, 'Do you hang your clothes out?' Of course I do. I go to the Laundromat, but I don't use the dryer. When I moved in to my apartment, my landlord installed a clothesline."
Lee prefers collaborating with individual homeowners and community associations. In a perfect world, he wouldn't face the media spin cycle but instead would speak person to person, place by place.
"I can't tell you how many e-mails I get - people like to talk about their laundry experiences, they want to get and give advice. It hijacks cocktail parties. Of course we'd like everyone to use clotheslines, but we're not telling people they have to. What we're trying to do is offer the opportunity. The reason we pursue the 'right to dry' strategy is because we're in a rush. Climate change is an immediate and pressing concern."
For all his worries about global warming, Lee works to stay positive. His pitch: Clothes hung to dry smell better and last longer. ("Where do you think lint comes from?") Pin them outside and the sun will bleach and disinfect. ("The sun basically does all the work for free.") Put them on racks inside and they'll add humidity in dry winter weather. ("The environmental message doesn't speak to everybody, so we speak about clothes-drying in a lot of different ways.")
Consider the fact, Lee continues, that dryers annually spark more than 15,000 U.S. structure fires, which in turn lead to an average of 15 deaths, 400 injuries and an estimated $99 million in damage.
"Dryers are dangerous machines. That makes me sound like a crazy person, but they're one of the leading causes of home fires. It's a tremendous amount of economic waste."
Lee has some knots to work out. A recent survey by the Pew Research Center found that 83 percent of Americans deem dryers "a necessity." With the development of more energy-efficient refrigerators, "we're going to see the dryer become the largest energy user in the house," Lee predicts.
Compounding the challenge, Project Laundry List reaps more press than profit. The organization soon will sell environmentally friendly laundry products on its Web site and anticipates corporate contributions from several clothesline distributors. But Lee must dip into his savings and work out of his apartment to make ends meet.
"It has been a tremendous sacrifice - I've been doing this full-time since September with little pay, and I'm not trying to play the violins here - but it's a work of love. I can't walk away from this. What keeps me going is that I believe we cannot continue to build large dams and nuclear power plants. This is something affordable and accessible to all of us."
© 2008 Times Argus
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24 Comments so far
Show AllI hung prayer flags where the first line would be. It gives me the added advantage of having my clothes softened by Om Mani Padi Hung before the prayers are carried off into the universe. Using a clothesline is not only good for the environment but good for ones spirit. Hanging wash amidst bird song under a puffy blue sky is renewing.
If you live in a hot dry climate, an indoor clothes line works. I run two lines, about 10 inches apart, running diagonal across my bedroom ceiling. Most things dry overnight and jeans dry in a day or two. It's not that much of an inconvience. Lehman's Non-Electric has pant stretchers that put an excellent crease in a pair of pants while they are drying. I cannot hang clothes outside in my apartment, because they have rules against it, but some of my neighbors have recently put small clothes hangers on their balcony anyway. Just gotta do what you can...
Australia and New Zealand have clotheslines you raise up with a crank, and then they rotate in the wind. You used them fair more than you used an electric clothes drier -- we used ours once and the thing burst into flames with clothes inside.
That was practical environmentalism that everyone used to practise: when did we lose our brains?
I love using clotheslines. They work well, save energy, save money, are more fun, and remind me of hanging laundry with my grandmother when I was a kid.
I have used clotheslines ever since the 70's when it seems we had another "energy crisis". Even in Oregon on the rainy side of the mountains, you can hang out at times in all but November, December and January. If you have enough sheets and undies, you can go a couple of weeks without washing (with no kids), then when the weather is nice, hurry up and get the clothes out on the line. Most of them will dry on a nice breezy day. If they are not all the way dry when you have to take them in,. just hang them over the shower poles.
It is great to hang out the clothes on a nice day and just let your mind drift to the beauty of the day.
We have a pair of old Maytags from the 70's and a few years ago the drier died. Even the Maytag repairman couldn't fix it because parts were no longer available. So, after some thought, we decided not replace it but use the clothesline. Here in south central Montana there's plenty of sunshine and a dry climate. Clothes dry in no time. And, as the article says, in winter the damp clothes add moisture to our dry interior. Luckily Montanans, at least here in Billings, aren't too strict about visual issues. Heck, with old pickups dead on the street, what's a few clothes hanging in the backyard.
(Our street isn't that ugly, don't get me wrong... just some streets!)
I wish I could hang my clothes out. In sunny Az they'd be dry in minutes, but I live in one of those places where you're not allowed to do that. I hope we get some encouragement from our governor to lighten up on the covenant rules. That would help.
I think the time is swiftly coming when hanging laundry out to dry will be mandatory, just like watering on certain days has been in certain areas for years during really dry times.
Of course that will do away with companies that make dryers, and drier sheets. Clothes smell so much better fresh off the line than out of the dryer.
If you've ever slept in sheets that have just come off the clothes line, you know the power of aroma therapy! Nothing like it ... unless you live in a town with stinky, noxious air.
dixie-
it often takes breaking the rules to change them.
good luck.
Well this certainly caught my attention. For starters, my blog is called the Clotheslineblog. Our tag line is, "No power, but at least our linen's clean." It's more political (progressive snark) than environmental, but not exclusively.
I hang out clothes to dry on an old-fashioned, parallel-line clothesline, complete with rusting clothespoles.
Life got complicated when adjacent neighbors who own pit bulls moved in. They are separated from us by an "invisible fence." Small comfort. And so it is that we are about to install a fence to separate us from the puppies, and restore our comfort level in air-drying clothes.
Meanwhile, I dart out to the clothesline, throw up as many clothing items as I have time and nerve to hang up before the dogs come out, whereupon I beat a hasty retreat to the house.
It isn't supposed to be this way. Actually, there's a parallel somewhere here to living in current time in the U.S.A. under the reign of BushCo. Our civil rights are being assaulted almost daily.
Well, I refuse to relinquish my freedom to air-dry clothes.
Mr. Lee, I think I read about you in the Boston Globe a while back. You're doing great things! Mighty oaks and all that. Booyah!
I live in Seattle area, family of 4 living here, we have always hung our laundry in the little laundry room above the washer and dryer. Get those little Japanese style racks which have about 20 or 30 clothespins hanging down. Hang your clothes densely from the clothepsins and let the whole load dry, all you need is a floor area around 4 x 6 feet. It's very damp here in the winter, and there's no heater in that room. So we sometimes use a 500 watt electric heater, and sometimes use a fan to move that humidity into the rest of the house. We run the furnace and heat the house up to around 60 degrees on laundry days. Never a problem. Long ago ceased talking about it or wondering why Americans don't do this. (The answer is clear: because they are of low intelligence, base and vulgar character, and think nothing of killing a million people for more oil. )
When I lived in Germany it was quite common to have whole rooms in apartment buildings devoted to clotheslines. The rooms were warm and moist - not pleasant to stay in for very long, but the clothes did get dry within a day and it was *definitely* a much cheaper way to do laundry. They had a dryer in my building, but it seemed to go unused and honestly I had trouble even finding dryer sheets... I think most preferred to save their coins for beer!
Of course, I tell my boyfriend about this and he says, how can we trust the neighbors not to steal our clothes? Such a bizarre society we live in.
Hail the clothsline, the push mower, the bicycle! Conservation steps toward a sustainable culture. From the other end we need a massive commitment to renewable Energy.
About 40 years ago, during one of the driest winters in Perth, we had 13 weeks of wet weekends. My wife was driven mad, so we bought a clothes dryer, used it once and the weekend rains stopped!
Every winter thereafter we would use it once or twice, as the weather dictated, but otherwise the dryer just sat on the wall of our utility room. Every six or seven years I would take it down to redecorate the room.
In 2000 we decided to move, and I decided the utility room needed redecorating. I went to take our 'as new' dryer down but could not move it! The young bloke next door came in and just lifted it from the wall as if it were a can of beans. The problem was that I was just too bloody old! I was no longer a young man who could move things around by brute force and ignorance!
We left the dryer in place when we moved -- it had only cost us about $40 and had only been used a few times -- but we never replaced it.
From Alex Lee's point of view Perth has excellent drying weather. Fot nine months of the year there is always some sunshine during the day, sometimes the first items are dry before the last have been pegged out. With Global Warming, almost permanent semi-drought and permanent water restrictions, we are getting 'summer weather' all-year round these days.
In the 'good old days' houses were built with a rotary Hill's Hoist included, but now people put up a piece of string across the garage or buy a dryer. As an aged pensioner I don't give a stuff about fashion, so our washing gets hung out on the line at the back.
...and only run the water heater overnight. Unplug and discard the T.V. and run the refrigerator a little warmer...
Make a planter box out of the SUV.
I've got a good Aussie Hills Hoist http://www.hills.com.au/
Its one of the old galvanised models that are cemented into the ground. We throw a few sheets over it to make shade if we are entertaining in the back yard. The new ones are more light weight and can easily be removed and colapsed for storage if you prefer a clear yard (with a small sleeved hole).
Even here in Vietnam, nobody, that I am aware of, uses a dryer. During monsoon season, I move the clothes indoors. One of the entrances to the house has a 3 meter wide corrugated steel door which rolls up during the day for the light. At night this door is lowered for protection against the slim chance of a break-in.
My point is that I leave the metal door down during the day and hang my clothes inside the house along the length of this door. Despite the rain, the metal door heats up quite a bit and is hot to the touch. This dries even my blue jeans in about ten hours. Everything else is dry within a few hours.
It's not as good as hanging the clothes outside during the dry season, but the clothes still get dry well before getting a moldy smell.
I lived in Southern Spain for years and the same thing happens there. Very few people used dryers when I lived there, and as so many have mentioned, there's nothing like air-dried clothes. If you have colored clothes just make sure you turn them inside out to avoid the sun bleaching the color out of the front side of the clothes.
I have been hanging laundry since I was a child (back in the 50s). Now I have posts in the ground and only have the lines running on days I do laundry. It only takes a minute to do - with toggles to turn to tighten the line on one end. The only thing to watch out for is days of bad pollution or rain. Even if you used the line vs. machine as your first choice, its a good choice. I always thought dryers were funny, especially in the summer where they are like an oven in the house, adding to the work of the a.c. (but then we always were a bit on the clueless side as a species).
Cloth diapers and clotheslines! That's how I raised my kids - cheaper by far and good for the environment. The sun and wind do a far better job of sterilizing and softening than any manmade concoction.
And here in arid regions it makes NO SENSE to use a dryer when you can simply hang stuff around, and it dries in nothing flat, contributing needed humidity to household air. (While we're about it, green plants will do the purifying of said air, plus also contribute humidity.)
And get up a bit earlier, predawn open up the house and get that cooler air inside with a small fan. Then close it and shade it - I now leave on insulating window protection in many areas - a layer of anything against the glass just sets the heat at a distance.
In Japan many years ago I hung diapers that were a long loop of cotton gauze on bamboo poles held aloft by metal brackets on my veranda. We also used those racks that fold out like umbrella ribs and can hang anywhere. I think the diapers must have been designed to dry quickly in that muggy climate. Now I'm in a similarly rainy climate (thunderstorm every day for the last 3 weeks, and more on the way) so the clothes are hanging inside on a wooden rack my husband made. I lit a fire in the wood heater yesterday to help the jeans along. If the sun ever comes out again I'll go back to hanging laundry on three outside clotheslines, which I always enjoy for the proximity to the forest that borders our backyard.
What keeps people from doing these kind of simple, green things? The illusion of a time shortage, mostly. If you're away from home working a lot of hours of the day, you can't run out and get the laundry if it starts to rain. And you need to find clean clothes ready when you dress for work. Just like recycling, living this way uses up time and requires some forward planning. If you're a typical debt-ridden American family, your time goes to commuting and working for wages to service the debt. Then you're the perfect stressed out candidate for some distracting entertainment. Then back to work. And so on. I feel compassion for those caught in such a deeply unsatisfying cycle. I've been there, and it wasn't criticism that helped me break free; it was the example of peaceful happiness from those who had broken away. Like a beacon, their example drew me toward a different way of life.
I'm glad people are doing this. I don't use a clothesline, but I keep a set of poles in my garage in case I decide to start using them.
In the summer, the energy used to dry the clothes is "free" since it comes from the atmosphere.
In the winter, however, when the clothes are indoors, the heat energy used to dry the clothes comes from the air in your house. This heat energy must be replaced by your heating system, so it is not "free." That said, your home's heating system may be more energy efficient than your clothes dryer.
A trick that has worked well for me is to vent the dryer into the house during the winter. This way, the extra heat produced by the dryer is returned to the house instead of heating the outdoors. Additionally, all of the moisture from the clothes is added to the interior air.
toddboyle June 22nd, 2008 9:30 pm
"Long ago ceased talking about it or wondering why Americans don't do this. (The answer is clear: because they are of low intelligence, base and vulgar character, and think nothing of killing a million people for more oil. )"
These comments are abusive and offensive.
"Clotheslines"? I don't think so! How passe! Those of us who've restrung those rusting poles in our backyards refer to them using more up-to-date terminology: solar driers. Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm going to go snuggle into my oh-so-good smelling sheets.