Monday, March 9, 2009

adventures in green living: the clothesline


Back in the 90s, I was a ski bum living in Crested Butte, Colorado. Skied all day, socialized in the small town bars in the evenings. One of the bars hosted two talented singers, Jackie and Vanita, who were spending time town on their way to Alaska. They were similar in sound to the Indigo Girls. One of my favorite songs of theirs was "Hanging on a Clothesline" and it was a funny take on a bigger girls' relationship with a thinner guy, and how their clothing looked together big and small, hanging on the line, flapping in the wind.

Fast forward to today, it's beautiful here in Atlanta, about 80 degrees already, and I'm starting to put out some clothes to dry. We live in an urban environment, with only a small bit of outdoor space, so I've always just brought a few clothing items out on hangers and hung them up to dry. This spring, I'm going to pick up a retractable clothes line I can hang up, and dry even more items outside. this is the one I'm going to buy.

The fact is that hanging your clothes on a line to dry is better for them. Colors last longer, giving your clothes a longer life. The fabric holds up longer--dryer lint is nothing but a thin layer that has been sheared from your clothes. The high heat of a dryer can also play havoc with the size of your clothes, so that something with a perfect fit comes out misshapen or, worse, six sizes smaller.

Also when you line-dry something, you're not eating up electricity. In terms of energy, dryers are by far the most wasteful appliance in the house, gobbling up 6% of your electric bill. The Wall Street Journal reported that eliminating the dryer portion of your laundry chores will cut an astounding 4.4 pounds of carbon emissions. One ecological watchdog calculates that as the equivalent of losing 16 square feet of natural habitat per load. Run a dryer for two hours only six times a month, and you're spending at least $70 a year, based on a national average of 12¢ per kilowatt-hour.

In Atlanta, line drying season has begun! I encourage you to give it a try.

1 comment:

Beverly said...

Love it! Have an Aunt who NEVER uses clothes lines, and, she's in Chicago, so, if she can do it for 4 decades, then we in the south can give it a go.