Monday, July 6, 2009

Money & Business

Fresh Greens by Maura Judkis

4 Easy Ways to Be a Freegan

July 28, 2008 03:26 PM ET | Maura Judkis | Permanent Link | Print

Conventional wisdom states that dumpster-diving is for the homeless. Freegans, however, are a small anticonsumerist group who won't allow anything useful to go to waste—to the point where middle-class environmentalists can be found scavenging the trash bins of grocery stores for the still-good food thrown out every day. Some of them even chronicle their finds on the Web, boasting of spending only a few dollars on food each month and furnishing their homes for free, often to the dismay of store owners who see them as scavengers.

Thankfully, you don't have to dumpster-dive to subscribe to the freegan philosophy and reap the cost-saving benefits. Here are a few tips for accessible—and considerably less smelly—freeganism:

  • Need a couch, or tennis racket or tea kettle? Rather than buying a new one, check the free listings on Craigslist or Freecycle. Often, people who are moving or spring cleaning put gently used belongings on the site, free to anyone willing to trek to their place and pick it up. It's far better than the environmental effects of the manufacturing, packaging, and transport that go into a new tea kettle, and if it breaks after two months, you never paid a dime for it, so who cares? Just search the site for another one. Be wary of searching Google for offers of free stuff, though—they might come with strings attached, like making you sign up for a credit card or other promotion. It's best to stick to local sites.
  • Remind yourself that one man's trash is another's treasure, and check with your friends and family while doing any massive closet or garage cleanouts. If you and your friends are similar in size (or your kids are), host a party where you swap all the clothes you were going to pitch. Anything unclaimed by the end of the night goes to charity, and you'll end up with a few new outfits if you're lucky. Some of my favorite skirts once surrounded the waists of stylish friends, and my sister's favorite place to shop is my closet. The same theory goes for neighborhood-wide yard sales, where you might be able to swap a mismatched lamp for some new picture frames. You could also join a swap group, like these listed on meetup.com or on flickr. Before you go, check out our tips for effective bartering.
  • This tip comes courtesy of a clever coworker, who always keeps an assortment of Tupperware at her desk. Whenever there's a work happy hour or party where there will inevitably be more food than people, she makes a beeline for the Tupperware and packages up all the leftovers before they get to the garbage. This way, a veggie platter and shrimp tray become the makings of tomorrow's stir-fry dinner. I employed a similar method in college at huge university-wide picnics, where I'd stash leftover soda cans in a backpack. Intercept food before it makes its way to the trash, and you're a far cleverer freegan.
  • Look on the Web for free events in your city or town—a newspaper's listings or city guide will tell you where they are. If you take advantage of free concerts, street festivals, outdoor film showings, and other events, you'll pick up new interests and also have more money for paying the bills—or to put toward eco-friendly purchases, like organic products. Search a local listing, or a site like eventful.com, for the keyword free.

 

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Reader Comments

not quite freegan

I did this for so long that people started avoiding me. I have since modified my life to be an opportunist, rather than any strict regimen. For some items, the carbon foot print of driving to pick it up and finding it useless is greater than the actuallity that you wouldn't buy it new in the first place. There are plenty of false eco-saving programs out there, being that it takes more to implement them, than is saved in the long run. For example, household tool library program at Berkeley: most tools can be found so cheap (screwdrivers, sockets, drill and bits, power saw) that very few tools merit driving to and from a few times a year. Perfectly good keyed chuck drills can be found for $5 at flea markets, $10 for a 7" power saw. worm drive saws are selling for $30 since the introduction of lighter saws (mags). screwdrivers and hammers and such can usually be found at garage sales and such for under a buck.

Here's an energy saving tip for those with electric kitchens, there are re-use paper and plastic plates and bowls. These are power zero when microwaving. Any plate or cup that gets warm to the touch in a microwave is consuming power. Serve on a regular plate. Electric resistance heating is the most wastefull of all the cooking methods.

It's still amazing to me how much yearly income is wasted on froo-froo items.. The whole energy problem could be solved if the Chinese would stop using plastic to make all the cheap crap that we find in our landfills, the toys that are power-sold to our kids, the whole range of small things at every register. Maybe that's an overstatement, but not by much.

real old furniture was not made with the whole range of off-gasing glues and formaldehyde (sp). They are mostly real wood plank items, not plywood, or more recently chipboard. So using old chairs is not only often cheaper than new, it is doubly eco friendly (2 x eco as it is green in 1st place, and it is a reuse in 2nd place).

look down and find tons of lost items, moola to gold rings. There are people at race tracks that live off wrongly discarded tickets. these people don't do it overtly, but you might see someone flipping a ticket on the ground with a cane.

i wish the world freegan didn't rhyme with vegan

i wish the world freegan didn't rhyme with vegan. there are freegans, there are vegans, there are vegan freegans but not all freegans are vegan (as confirmed by the bacon acquisition mentioned above).

i once met some folks who said they were vegan unless it was freegan and then they would eat whatever they found in dumpsters. so they weren't even vegan or vegetarian if they got it free. when they spent money, they ate vegan but if 20 steaks came out of the dumpster, they ate it.

as long as folks don't connect freegan with vegan, it's all good...

supermarket wastefulness

To numerous to list but I get new surprises everyday. Several days ago I found 2 20lb cases of vacuum packed bacon 1 day over use by date. BLT's all summer for me and my friends.

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About the Fresh Greens Blog

Send an E-mail to mjudkis@usnews.com.

Maura Judkis is a producer at U.S. News. She writes about the green movement and looks for ways to be an ecofriendly consumer without breaking the bank. You can send her your green tips at mjudkis@usnews.com.

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