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Nike ‘Reuse-a-Shoe’ up and running in the UK

It always amuses me when large companies like Nike come up with ‘green’ ideas to ingratiate themselves with the public. They have a lot of work to do before we accept them as an ethical company, but I guess their initiative to recycle sports shoes is a step in the right direction.

Reuse-a-Shoe is a type of heaven for your sweaty old trainers, where their life is continued (after they are brutally ground down) in the form of sports and play surfaces. Nike began the scheme back in 1993 and it has been gathering momentum worldwide ever since. Now you can deposit your old sport shoes in several UK locations. Nike see it as part of their lifelong commitment to reducing waste, and also as a way to encourage more activity in kids by producing good quality sport surfaces where they can play. Handing out free trainers to kids would also be a good way to get them moving, but maybe I’m just being cynical?

Related: Review: Who’s afraid of Niketown? | Nike’s ethical shoes

Nike ‘Reuse-a-Shoe’ up and running in the UK

It always amuses me when large companies like Nike come up with ‘green’ ideas to ingratiate themselves with the public. They have a lot of work to do before we accept them as an ethical company, but I guess their initiative to recycle sports shoes is a step in the right direction.

Reuse-a-Shoe is a type of heaven for your sweaty old trainers, where their life is continued (after they are brutally ground down) in the form of sports and play surfaces. Nike began the scheme back in 1993 and it has been gathering momentum worldwide ever since. Now you can deposit your old sport shoes in several UK locations. Nike see it as part of their lifelong commitment to reducing waste, and also as a way to encourage more activity in kids by producing good quality sport surfaces where they can play. Handing out free trainers to kids would also be a good way to get them moving, but maybe I’m just being cynical?

Related: Review: Who’s afraid of Niketown? | Nike’s ethical shoes

Reel rocker chair by David Meddings Design

Having recently swapped my city centre flat for a house in the country, I am now faced with the search for the perfect garden furniture. I want something eco friendly, which is also stylish and unique.

So how excited was I when I found this chair by Reel Furniture? It’s made using a reclaimed cable reel, which is already seasoned and waterproofed, so no nasty chemical lacquers are required. The wood is gnarly and knotted, which gives each seat it’s own individual character. Perfect for lounging around outside in style.

At £435 it may not be the cheapest garden chair you’ll find, but what price great design?

Related: Reviewed: Reel’s recycled bookcase | Crocus sustainable relaxer chair

Reel rocker chair by David Meddings Design

Having recently swapped my city centre flat for a house in the country, I am now faced with the search for the perfect garden furniture. I want something eco friendly, which is also stylish and unique.

So how excited was I when I found this chair by Reel Furniture? It’s made using a reclaimed cable reel, which is already seasoned and waterproofed, so no nasty chemical lacquers are required. The wood is gnarly and knotted, which gives each seat it’s own individual character. Perfect for lounging around outside in style.

At £435 it may not be the cheapest garden chair you’ll find, but what price great design?

Related: Reviewed: Reel’s recycled bookcase | Crocus sustainable relaxer chair

Smart Soil composting

Since we read that people in the UK throw away one-third of the food we buy, everyone in my house has been trying to cut down on our food waste. We already feed scraps to pets, but it looks like to really cut down on our waste we’ll need to start composting.

In my search for a suitable composter today I discovered Smart Soil, whose sealed, rotating compost bin allows you to add meat and fish scraps along with the usual vegetable matter from your kitchen and turn it into usable compost in around eight weeks.

Personally, I’m taken with their Sun Frost Scrap Eater (pictured), as it allows you to grow plants off the compost you’re making in the middle – and it looks much nicer too. Now all I have to do is convince my housemates to help me pay for it…

Related posts: Making recycling sexy | World’s cutest composter?

Recycle Your jeans and make shoes

Cumbrian based shoe manufacturers Softwalker Ltd have launched a new online business Recycleyourjeans.com which takes in your old jeans and recycles them to create new footwear. Sign up and they’ll send you a prepaid envelope for your jeans and a week or two later you’ll get some sandals back.

“More than 99% of all footwear sold in the UK has travelled half way around the world before it gets to the consumer, whereas the Kalahari sandals are made locally and so have the lowest transport footprint of any sandal on the market,’ says sales and marketing director Cat Stables.

“Our new environmental range has the lowest carbon footprint of any shoes or sandals in the country, and it’s a fun way to personalise your re-cycling. They make a great eco-present for green warriors. Wearing your old jeans on your feet is a more practical statement than just wearing your green heart on your sleeve”.

The footwear are also vegan and simply consist of the old jeans, sewing thread, woven labels and metal buckles.

Related: Great Green Shoes – new blog for ethical footwear I More fashion and accessories I More recycling

Heels on wheels: cycle in any shoes

I can’t walk in high-heeled shoes, so I’ve given up buying them, but this new gadget from the ethical superstore made me smile so I had to share it.

Heels on Wheels is a rubber attachment that fastens on to your bike pedals so that your feet will grip the pedals no matter what shoes you’re wearing. That means no more using your heels as an excuse for driving or getting a taxi…

Related posts: Winter shoes to keep you on your bike | Put on your recycled dancing shoes

Envirope hammock

Summer is definitely on its way now, and I like the idea of spending hot, lazy afternoons relaxing and drinking outside, and where better to swing the afternoon away than a hammock?

This ‘Envirope Hammock’ from Twin Oaks is made from recycled polyester fibre (derived from old soda bottles) – so not only is it environmentally friendly and apparently very comfortable, but it will last outdoors if the weather doesn’t quite live up to my daydreams…

Related post: Click-clunk: the seatbelt hammock

Birthdays and the compact

You win some, you lose some. For all my mothering and motherhood skills, I suppose I have a trick or two to learn from Thrifty Mommy, though I’ve come a long way.

I’ve been trying to adhere to the Compact, as well as I can. Basically, I’m not supposed to buy anything new except medicine, food, and underwear. Glasses, I suppose. For the eyes, not the drinks. For the most part, I’ve been doing well. About a month ago, I spotted a platform bed in shambles on the street. I  borrowed a friend’s car and schlepped the pieces back to my house, then spent a laborious week trying to find the right bolts to put the thing back together again. Yes, I had to buy the bolts new, but I figured such a detail was mitigated by the sheer bulk of wood and such I’d just rescued from the dump.

It’s a very pretty bed, once I glued the broken bits back together and figured out that beds made in Malaysia might need metric bolts.  Never mind that I’ve got a (donated) full sized mattress on a queen sized frame. Ain’t nobody here to complain about it, just me and my boy.

Last month, I took the proceeds from the two blogs I write and treated myself to a set of three nesting tables: Danish Modern, used. That falls under the Compact, because I didn’t buy it new. And I made a new friend, who does personal shopping. If ever I own my own home, I’ll ask him to help furnish it. But those tables are the only things I’ve bought. Everything else came from family, friends, or Freecycle.

I buy all my clothes from a consignment store in my neighborhood, and the King of Everything is happy in hand-me-downs and thrift store finds. I pass his clothes on to a friend who has helped me out immensely, and to another single parent who could use a little help now and again.

In theory, I’m supposed to barter for services, but that’s just not going to work. There’s nothing my favorite hair dresser would need from me, and I don’t have the time to do any marketing or PR work for him anyway. So I pay for that haircut, and a luxury it is… massage chairs and a head massage at shampoo time, a cuppa in one hand and a good chat in the mirror as Dennis makes me something approaching teh hot. And I succumbed to the siren call of a pedicure and hey, the manicure was only $8 more!

I didn’t do too badly on the kid’s birthday, either. Friends and family bought him a few presents, no one went overboard. His father sent him some great space books, including a pop up pop out book on the space shuttle that unfolds to a four foot long extravaganza. But I gave Nico toys that friends have gifted us when we moved into our new house, toys they were recycling from their kids. Still in the box! My best score was a digital camera from Freecycle. He has been asking for a camera since Christmas, and takes a decent photo for a four year old. But I totally fell down on the job when it comes to plates, cups, napkins, and party favors. I bought them. New. And someone else made the cake.

And my guilty little secret: a couple of times a month I stop into the Caribou Coffee a block from the office to get a decent cup of coffee. But mostly, to say hello to the manager and soak in some of his incredibly kind, warm, friendly personality before I wander into my oh-so-amazing and stress-laden job.

Carry-a-Bag shopping in style

It’s only a matter of time before Gucci and Prada are making recycled cloth shopping totes. It’s no longer cool to use plastic bags from supermarkets, even they are offering you ‘green points’ on your loyalty cards to re-use your own bags, and all the hoo ha over Anya Hindmarch’s reuseable bag means everyone wants a cool shopper.

So if you want to look stylish while you’re saving the planet why not bag yourelf (see what I did there?) one of these pretty totes from ‘Carry-a-Bag’. They come in all sorts of lovely colours and designs, all made from recycled curtains and tablecloths. They are fully lined and reversible, which means they are strong and you get two looks for the price of one! You can buy a bag with a standard message on it, or have one specially made. Bags range in price from £15- £50

Related : BYOB reuseable shopping bag | The bag you’ll never forget


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