Amber Adams

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since May 03, 2020
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Recent posts by Amber Adams

My favorite gardening handtool is the Nejiri Gama from Japan. It's absolutely fantastic for small weeding and hoeing jobs, it can get into all kinds of tight angles and helps me weed very smartly so I get the plants I want to remove instead of the ones I want to keep. It comes in left and right-handed versions. It's totally changed my attitude toward weeding. It's fun now instead of a chore.
4 years ago
This isn't something I've designed, but I recently came across this guy's YouTube channel and I'm definitely going to make his plastic bottle cutter. He goes into some depth on how to make it, use it, and how handy the plastic tape it generates is across a wide variety of applications. One man's trash is another man's tool:

4 years ago

S Bengi wrote:
I am always confused by the solar energy/carbon credits that utility companies trade.



Yeah, I am skeptical that it actually works at all. I've never been able to shake the suspicion they're selling empty marketing to assuage our consciences, which is part of why I'd rather reduce my energy usage. TVA has never been trustworthy when it comes to ecologically responsible power generation, and their behavior within the last few years is sending some regressive signals. I've often debated with myself whether to continue paying the green power premiums, so I'll feel better with the less electricity I use.
4 years ago

S Bengi wrote:Amber it sounds like your combined Electrical + Heating (electric) + Domestic Hot Water (electric) is 12MWH/yr or 1000KWH/month or 33KWH per day.

That sounds pretty impressive (unless you clarify stating that you also charge your electric car at home 80% of the time, in which case my mind would be blown)



I wish I had an electric car! I interned with Dr. Cliff Ricketts at MTSU back in the day, so the fact that I haven't built one yet causes pangs of guilt and regret now that I pause to think about it. You are correct that's my approximate electrical usage, with it being lower a few months out of the year and significantly higher during the hottest and coldest months. I've never gone above 1,400 KWH in a month, so I'm winning in terms of my local average. TVA also has a "Green Switch" program wherein you opt to pay $4 per 150 KWH to "purchase" or subsidize solar, wind, and biomass "renewable" energy generation, so for $36 extra I can completely offset even my highest usage months. You can pay these offsets for more energy than is on your bill, so if you wanted to pay enough to offset the fuel you burn in your car, for example, that's an option. I pay the extra $36 currently. There's also a solar program through the Nashville Electric Service wherein you pay $215 to subsidize a solar panel, and receive a "solar credit" on your bill. You can even gift these solar credits to other households. I haven't used that program yet, but it seems pretty neat. I still think it's ideal to try and reduce my electricity usage, though, if for no other reason than it would be more financially sustainable. In my gut, I feel like not using electricity is much better than (maybe?) offsetting that electricity with renewables.
4 years ago
Greetings! I am very new to permaculture. I read a little on the subject during my youth, but those books perished during a flood in 2010, and I've been a pretty typical suburbanite for all my life. I currently work as an emergency dispatcher for my local government. I just started reading "Building a Better World in Your Backyard," and I was intrigued by the Eco-Poser test. I found it to be a simple and straightforward approach for understanding where I need to begin and getting started on this journey toward a more sustainable lifestyle. Reducing one's electric bill is a gateway drug any Dad in America could eagerly embrace, and then before you know it he's stopped shampooing and drinks raw milk every day.

All that being said, I have a quibble (of course). The average energy bill in terms of dollars isn't a useful metric to me. This is because energy rates vary across jurisdictions, so there's a doubt in my mind that if I compare my bill against the average I'm not really getting an accurate measure of my energy usage so much as I'm measuring how much or how little I pay for my energy, relatively. The usefulness of measuring several different forms of energy (gas, electric, etc.) by expressing them in terms of dollars isn't necessary because my home only uses electricity. This makes it simple for me to look at my bill and see exactly how much energy I am using expressed in kWh.

So, I've decided to do my analysis by comparing my energy usage against the average kWh usage in the United States. According to the World Bank, the average US resident as of 2014 uses 12,993.94 kWh annually, which averages to about 1,082 kWh per month. This is quite a bit higher than the average according to the US Energy Information Administration which is 10,972 kWh annually per residential customer in 2018 or 914 kWh hours per month. I will err on the side of conservation and use this lower number as my measure for the average. Interestingly, the EIA also indicates that residents of my state (Tennessee) have the highest annual electricity usage for residential customers at 15,394 kWh annually or 1,282 kWh per month. Although I don't have any data on why exactly that is, I suspect it might be due to many Tennesseans using electricity for all their energy needs without any offset from other energy sources such as natural gas due to the historical and market forces of the TVA system.

My power company provides a very helpful graph of my total energy usage for the past twelve months. I am consistently below average for a Tennessean, but in terms of the EIA national average I am only below average for four out of the past twelve months. These four months correspond to the four mildest months in terms of temperature: April, May, November, and April again. When the temperature is neither very hot nor very cold, I usually turn off the A/C completely. When I do this, my energy usage isn't just below the national average, but it is easily half what I use in the hottest and coldest months.

This confirms that heating and cooling are indeed the worst energy culprits. It also gives me a goal to work toward, since it's obvious that if I can find better, less ecologically impactful ways of maintaining comfortable temperatures in my home, I'll be able to level-up on the Eco-Poser scale. I assume there will be some sort of shiny badge for this achievement, with exciting and exclusive benefits, which if they were widely known, would result in neighborhoods of wofatis stretching so far and so wide that the McMansions of America would become but a distant memory.
4 years ago