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  <title>Green Options &#187; trike</title>
  <link>http://greenoptions.com/tag/trike</link>
  <description>Posts tagged 'trike'</description>
  <pubDate>Mon, 22 Oct 2007 15:26:32 +0000</pubDate>
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    <title>Weekend</title>
    <link>http://serenityii.greenoptions.com/2007/10/22/weekend/</link>
    <comments>http://serenityii.greenoptions.com/2007/10/22/weekend/#comments</comments>
    <pubDate>Mon, 22 Oct 2007 15:26:32 +0000</pubDate>
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    <description><![CDATA[<p>So I wouldn&#8217;t say we were incredibly green this weekend, but we were relatively green.</p>
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The dude who lives on the other side of Mr. Obsessively Mowing hadn&#8217;t mowed in a long time&#8211;longer than it had been for us.  So on the weekend, he mowed his yard. . .with a riding mower. . .then used a weedwhacker. . .then used a leafblower. . .then mowed again. . .while smoking.  Way to cancel out your lack of pollution, dude.
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Bill mowed too&#8211;with our reel mower, of course.  He is much faster at that than I am.  It&#8217;s nice to have all the leaves to enrich our soil.
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We drove about 40 miles in an old pickup to go on a bike/trike ride.  The colors were beautiful, we got to see some cool stuff, and it was a blast!  In the beginning I was pulling the kiddo and was having trouble keeping up with Bill, but on the way back he pulled the kiddo and I got up in the 20 MPH range three times (I wouldn&#8217;t be utterly shocked to learn I was going 30 the first time, although it was probably more like 25).
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We had a picnic.  It wasn&#8217;t completely environmentally friendly, but we did pretty well.  I used baby food containers to hold the pumpkin seeds we scooped out of our pumpkins when we made jack-o&#8217;-lanterns.  We have two kinds of seeds&#8211;salted and sugar &#38; spice.  We took pudding (containers are recyclable), applesauce (organic, again in a baby food container), sandwiches (reusable containers), juice (in reused juice bottles), tap water (in Klean Kanteens), baby food (recyclable containers), organic chocolate, not-so-organic chocolate, fruit strips, granola bites, and I don&#8217;t know what all.  It was an awesome feast, if I do say so myself.  I did take a Ziploc bag to hold the silverware so it wouldn&#8217;t get the picnic bag messy.  We used one recycled napkin.
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I gave my son one of my old toys this weekend.  Well, really it&#8217;s more like four of my old toys that are compatible.
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We went to Goodwill to donate a whole bunch of stuff.  Clothes, chairs, cookware, drinkware. . .so now there&#8217;s more space for the stuff we&#8217;ll actually use, which is nice. . .especially in the cookware department.  Led to some interesting discussion:
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Bill:  Why did we get rid of the silicone brownie pan?
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Karen:  Because we have two glass ones now, so we don&#8217;t need to use something that gives off a smell when I use it.
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Bill:  But we kept our silicone muffin pan.
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Karen:  That&#8217;s because that&#8217;s the only one we have left, so if we give it away and I have a cupcake emergency, I&#8217;m in trouble.  Don&#8217;t worry, there&#8217;s an iron one on my Christmas list.
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Bill:  That sounds light.
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Karen:  But good for us!
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Bill:  Until somebody drops it on a toe.
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Karen:  Well, would you rather have a broken toe or cancer?!
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Bill:  Well. . .either one would take a long time to heal. . .
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He does raise a good point.  Our gorgeous stainless steel pots and pans are pretty lightweight, but the other stuff we&#8217;re converting to is all pretty heavy.  I have trouble holding my terra cotta roasting pan steady in one hand (it weighs about nine pounds), which makes it hard to scrape stuff out of it into a container.  The glass stuff isn&#8217;t too bad, but the iron stuff is heavy and slightly complicated to take care of, since it can&#8217;t go in the dishwasher and has to be seasoned.  Still, I&#8217;m sure it&#8217;s worth it.  I&#8217;ve been smiling a lot in the kitchen lately.
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