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by Joyce
Standridge
Kermit would agree you should consider these environmental
solutions
“It’s not easy
being green,” Kermit the Frog lamented in song. But just as
being an adored Muppet probably belies the lyrics, so would he
find that it’s increasingly untrue about building and decorating
a log home.
If the national news media haven’t already frightened
prospective homeowners with unrelenting doom-and-gloom tales of
an overwrought and over-worked planet, it’s because intelligent
people are fighting back and making a difference. Many people
are finding the prospect of a
renewable resource—logs—for the main building
material attractive and then looking beyond.
It’s not just the shell that’s jogged our collective conscience.
We are increasingly aware that the interior is just as important
to our planetary stewardship. If we are less than perfect, at
least we have many more green alternatives. Here are just a
half-dozen ways planning can better focus on living well while
also being kinder to the world (and, not so incidentally, to
ourselves).
1. Consider the type of wood. Many quality
furniture manufacturers, as well as millwrights and woodworkers,
choose
sustainable materials, using wood from tree
farms or plantations, although wood harvested from a controlled
forest can be hard on the ecology, too. Some farms are so
controlled that they become devoid of biological diversity.
Spraying with pesticides and herbicides may protect the
integrity of the wood from the outside into the core, but it can
actually do nearly as much damage to the land as clear-cutting.
It never hurts to ask about how the wood was grown and
harvested. Often that kind of information about the resources is
found on the company’s website. Special care should be taken if
a manufacturer doesn’t freely respond, because it may not be
paying attention to what’s happening with natural resources.
Forests, especially in tropical areas, continue to disappear at
alarming rates. Trees are clear-cut and often disposed of in
wasteful ways. Because the Earth has lost nearly half of the
primeval forests, including a total in the past 30 years that
nearly matches the square mileage of Alaska and Texas combined, it’s
past time to demand renewability—before we can no longer draw a
breath through our own carbon dioxide.
Look for
FSC-certified (Forest
Stewardship Council) labels on
furniture and items purchased for the home. Participants are
committed to providing comfort and care to consumers with
minimal damage to the environment.
Bottom line: Ask questions.
2. Avoid pressure-treated lumber. Log homes
nearly always includes a deck (or multiple decks), porches,
landscape timbers and sometimes a playground for children as
well. For many years, the material of choice has been
pressure-treated lumber, which is more durable than untreated or
painted lumber.
But one of the ingredients in the most common form of treatment
(CCA,
for
chromium copper arsenate) contains a known
carcinogen. In existing structures or recycled lumber, the
arsenic can be relatively neutralized by sealing with a
polyurethane coating every couple of years, although that may
not keep some of the chemical from leaching into the ground.
Still, removal is a problem, as disposing of the wood by burning
it can release toxics into the atmosphere.
In new construction, it is possible to purchase lumber that has
been treated with
ACQ (ammoniacal
copper quaternary) or
CA (copper
azole). These are less harmful to humans and to
nature. Better yet is
plastic lumber, which is made from recycled
materials, including ground plastic materials (a far better use
than winding up in the landfill). The best material, especially
in a log home, is naturally durable woods, such as redwood or
cedar, that require only routine maintenance to keep beautiful
and useful for many years.
3. Buy low-toxicity furnishings. Love that
so-called new-car smell? Learn to un-love it, because it results
from the release of toxic, off-gassing chemicals. For many
years, it was included in furniture, as well as cars, and the
purpose was laudable in that it reduced fire danger and could be
an element in extending the life of cover materials. But the
due-bill isn’t worth the gain.
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are a family
of chemicals that continue to off-gas breathable toxins into the
air for years after application to the furniture. In homes that
are well insulated (as log homes almost always are), that means
the VOCs are recycled within the interior air repeatedly, even
if you routinely open windows to help with circulation. In a
closed-up home during the winter months, the air quality indoors
can be as much 100 times worse than outdoors, due to VOCs and
particulates, according to green experts.
There are quality furniture construction companies that carry
the
Greenguard label on their products. This
ensures that the furnishings are low-release. (Everything,
including fresh-off-the-tree-farm material, will release
something into the air; the objective is keeping it natural and
low.) Significantly reduce the amount of toxic chemicals
released in the vicinity of you, your children and your pets.
4. Rethink using popular materials. Watch any of the home
shows on the wonderful HGTV network and you’ll hear
prospective homeowners squeal with delight at the sight of a
granite countertop. Or marble tile. Granite and tile
are non-renewable and non-sustainable. Take a slab out of the
ground, and it’s never going to regenerate.
Increasingly, bright developers are coming up with beautiful
alternatives that feature recycled materials. Countertops
are now made from cardboard that belies the immediate concern
about strength and durability. Care has to be taken regarding
the VOCs required to bond the cardboard (or pressboard or any
other composite material, for that matter), but it’s possible to
design with surprising—and renewable—materials these day—and
without breaking the bank.
5. Consider bamboo, cotton and wool. It’s not
necessary to avoid every trend. Bamboo, a form of grass, has
enjoyed a remarkable renaissance in recent times. The one knock
against it is that it often is imported, and transportation is
the most visible expense of energy. On the other hand, it has
rarely ever been treated with herbicides, so it is likelier to
be worry-free in the handling of it. An added bonus is how
quickly it renews, maturing in less than a decade, while many
wood species require several decades.
In furniture, flooring, cabinetry and accessories, bamboo is
remarkably flexible, allowing the creation of interesting shapes
and attractive finishes. Usually, bamboo has plenty of
character, too, although it is possible to find it in smoothly
colored grains as well.
In addition to sisal rugs (also constructed from grass
fibers), carpeting and rugs made from cotton or wool are
increasingly popular for both warmth and style. Unlike nylon,
which is synthetically engineered, or tile floors (some from
non-renewable resources) or even hardwood floors (from materials
that take extended periods to regenerate), cotton and wool floor
coverings, depending on how they are constructed, can be among
the greenest ways of covering a floor. They also give your toes
something to luxuriate in.
6. Recycle, recycle, recycle. After living in a log home
for a while, most homeowners are going to update their interior.
Styles change, furnishings wear out, and a fresh look can
revitalize a beloved home. The answer isn’t to cart discards to
the curb for the trash collector to haul away to overflowing
landfills. Or to take things to the far corner of the acreage
and burn. There is consequence to any form of removal.
Instead of tossing your old things, find a way to give them new
life. For example, instead of tossing a worn-out sofa, having it
reupholstered can create a like-new prize. Wood that has been
scarred can nearly always be sanded and refinished. But if
something simply must go, find a new home for it. Remember the
cliché: One person’s trash is another’s treasure. Recycling is
just a way of ensuring that the next owner’s treasure is
available.
The time for being selfish has passed. Nearly all log-home
owners want to pass along a beautiful dream home to their
children and grandchildren, but in the process of creating a
genuine homestead, it is incumbent upon all of us to build and
then fill the home with carefully planned and crafted styling
and furnishings that reflect a concern for the future as well as
for the present.
This article ran in the September 2007 issue of Log Homes
Illustrated.
Buy it here and
click here to subscribe.
Source:
Log Homes Illustrated
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