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Going Trash-Free for One Year
Some words are like plastic: They linger long after they’ve been tossed out.
Amy Korst, a freelance writer her husband want people to think about their garbage habits. Since July of 2009, they have been on a quest to find the answer to a simple question: Is it possible for a couple to live for an entire year without placing trash in a landfill, in the country that produces more waste each year than any other country in the world?(Willamette Live) “We
get comments like, ‘Any time I throw something away, I think of you,’”
said Adam Korst, photojournalist with the Polk County Itemizer-Observer.
“It sounds like an insult,” he said, “but they mean it in the best way possible.”
This is actually the reaction they’re looking for, according to wife Amy Korst, a freelance writer. Both she and her husband want people to think about their garbage habits.
“Every time you reach for the trash,” she said, “if you make that motion a conscious thing, [you realize that you] reach for the trash so many times a day. I really was kind of amazed.”
With little over two months left to go, both Adam, 26, and Amy, 25, are nearing the end of their yearlong mission. Since July of 2009, they have been on a quest to find the answer to a simple question: Is it possible for a couple to live for an entire year without placing trash in a landfill, in the country that produces more waste each year than any other country in the world?
According to the Environmental Protection Agency, the average American produces roughly 4.6 pounds of garbage daily. Three pounds of it goes directly to a landfill.
So far, most of the trash the Korsts have been completely unable to recycle, reuse, compost or in some way reallocate fits inside one shoebox, which Amy keeps at the ready to show all visitors. By July, they will have kept one ton of garbage out of local landfills.
“We’re not 100 percent garbage-free, but we’re awfully close,” Amy said.
Trying to be environmentally conscious can be difficult, especially when there are sometimes no clear answers, and choices boil down to picking the lesser of two evils.
For example, do you choose paper or plastic at the grocery store? The environmental answer used to be paper, but now it’s cloth, as in bringing your own bags. A passionate environmental advocate, Amy recalls one instance at a Starbucks coffee shop where she felt obliged to purchase a bottle of water. She chose the glass bottle over plastic, but then realized the glass bottle had been shipped all the way from Italy, and had incurred a lot of “carbon miles,” she explained.
It’s ultimately what moved Amy to take the drastic new step in her efforts to be environmentally conscious.
“We were taking all the steps that are recommended for somebody who wants to save the environment, buying organic, buying local, recycling, and paying our bills online,” she said. “We decided it really didn’t have much measurable impact for us to see how we’re helping the planet,” she said.
However, “every month we were still filling up [the garbage can] and we we're still buying these horribly overpackaged products.”
So in a quest for tangible results, Amy, an English teacher at Willamina High School, decided to use her summer break to prepare the couple’s Dallas, Oregon home as they embarked on a yearlong vacation from garbage. Their goal, simply put: to generate no more than a single bag of garbage in a year’s time.
Their initiative, dubbed the Green Garbage Project, has garnered attention worldwide, primarily through their Web site and blog, online at www.greengarbageproject.com. The site generates roughly 500 to 1,000 hits weekly, she said. Adam and Amy have also appeared on KGW and KOIN locally, as well as CNN; they have shared their story with both the Statesman-Journal as well as The Guardian in London.
They share their daily lives online through their Web site, but they are looking for more than just attention. Both Amy and Adam spend a lot of time researching garbage and recycling information.
“If it was a stunt, I wouldn’t be doing as much research,” Amy said.
Instead of disposal, they have committed to reduce, reuse and recycle at all costs. But they have also made several changes to their behaviors and consumer choices in order to keep garbage-free.
They don't buy anything in packaging that cannot be recycled, and they use reusable bags at the grocery store. They patronize second-hand stores as well as stores that offer natural products or those made or grown locally. They've started a compost bin as well as a garden, and they have learned to make their own products such as soap, cheese, butter, granola and bread.
One of the biggest challenges to living garbage-free has been in the bathroom, Amy said, especially with medications, which generally come in plastic bottles with plastic tamper-proof seals, or in single-use packaging. Few legitimate pharmacies offer medications in bulk; this is one area in which they’ve had to cede ground.
Restaurants have also been difficult. Both Amy and Adam try to avoid paper napkins, food wrappers, straws and the like, but it is so prevalent in the food service industry that sometimes their only option is to take the offending refuse home to sort out later.
In contrast, one of the easiest changes to make has been food, especially rejecting freezer goods in their non-recyclable wax-coated cardboard packaging.
“I love to cook, and I love to eat,” Adam said. “I was afraid I’d have to give up all sorts of products, but we really haven’t.”
Through their project, the Korsts have also discovered something else first-hand: how changes in communication have greatly improved their ability to make a difference. Through the rise of the internet, blogs and social media like Twitter and Facebook, average people can reach more people worldwide than ever before.
And activists don’t need a lot of resources or equipment to make a bold statement. From filmmaker Morgan Spurlock eating McDonald’s food to blogger Julie Powell cooking Julia Child recipes and author Barbara Kingsolver living a year eating only locally produced food, people like the Korsts who are willing to spend a period of time immersing themselves in a social issue have found a receptive mass audience in both bookstores and theaters.
The Korsts are currently working on their own book proposal, Amy said.
They can’t impact larger issues like manufacturing waste or global warming by themselves, she said. However, they can encourage others to create less garbage by their own example.
Friends and family have been mostly enthusiastic and supportive, she said, but they hope their influence spreads farther.
“I’m hoping we’re maybe helping some people around the country - around the world - think about their garbage,” she said.
A worrier by nature, striving to live trash-free has made her even more anxious about how she may be impacting the environment, Amy said. However, she has also had to learn to let go.
It’s a typical misconception that in order to be an environmentalist, you have to give up everything that you love, she said.
“I want people to feel like they can do something for the environment and not lose their creature comforts, and live a completely normal life.”
Living trashless can be a completely normal existence, Adam said.
“I know that not everybody believes us, but it’s not a hard change for us to make.”
The project ends July 6. But in one distinct way, according to Adam, it will go on long afterward.
“We’re never ever going to produce the amount of garbage we used to.”a
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7 Comments so far
Show AllHayduke Blogs
http://hayduke2000.blogspot.com/
Why stop in July?
My wife and I have been living this way for over ten years in our 800 square foot mobile home. We work part-time, at jobs within walking distance from home. We manage energy conservation, recycling and composting in our workplaces as well as at home.
This is not an experiment or a media event, it's a satisfying way of life. Living simply is its own reward.
Have the Korsts discovered washable flannel wipes for the bathroom?
Michael and Jean
Santa Cruz, California
I wish we could go as far as you guys have, I would love a job within walking/biking distance. We have started recycling and composting as a way of life as well what a difference that makes.
Chris and Renee
Guthrie, Ok
"Even though I am not a global warming whiner..."
I know, right? I mean, since the world is flat, all we have to do is keep pushing our trash further out and eventually it will all fall off the edge. What's all the fuss about?
Okay, time for me to get in my Prius and drive over to McD's for a big fat carni-burger. Yum!
Tough to label others as smug when you write such a smug post yourself! Are all anarchists so smug?
Simply awesome. Thank you.
Thanks for this article C.D. editors!This is pretty amazing efficiency and the Korsts should be commended ,and imitated.It helps that they live in a recycling friendly environment.In my area we have mandatory recycling and the varieties of recyclable plastics accepted by our transfer station have just expanded significantly.This move should lower the towns landfill impact significantly.A big leak in the resource recycling loop is green waste ,and sewage.I think composting could be greatly expanded and composting toilets encouraged.
peace
We have not quite been trash free but we recycle plastics and paper. Our town does not have an "active" recycle program we have to drive to the firestation to drop it off at the recycle bins there. We have been composting for 2 years now as well and our garden is happy with that. We have weekly trash pickup here and we could easily go for a month and still not fill up the trash can.
Chris
Guthrie, Ok
This is the first I have heard about this "no trash for a year". I think that it is great. I am so glad to hear that this is going on. I have a problem with getting rid of cat litter. That is what I put in the plastic bags that I get sometimes by accident. But I found small paper bags at the dollar store that I can put the litter in and then store in large grocery store paper bag. At least this will all compost in the landfill. However, one cat produces a lot of urine so it still is a lot of litter (he is treated for diabetes but still drinks a lot of water). I have been composting for the last 11 years and recycling for 35+ years here in NC. Still I have about a half bag of trash a week. Although I have about 4 times that much in recycling stuff a week.