by FoolYap » Thu 03 Jan 2008, 14:55:19
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BlueDawn', 'I')n particular, I have lowered our energy consumption considerably in the last year. Although I do not believe it will make a large difference in offsetting peak oil, but it is teaching my family to live using less energy, in preparation for the time when less will be available. This also has the beneficial side-effect of saving us money, which we can are using towards our debts and the eventual purchase of property outside the city when the time comes. If any of you have further tips, I would love to hear them!
Hi. Sounds like you've made some great changes. No matter what happens, you're saving money now, right? I'd advise using the "found money" to increase your savings and reduce debt; those are both good things to do, regardless.
Driving is our biggest carbon "footprint", and our biggest oil-related expense. My wife and I both dislike our current jobs, but we work at the same place so we can also commute together (in a '96 Corolla; not the best MPG, but not bad and it's long been paid for). We'll also be moved later this year to a site closer to our homes, and we can probably transition to some telecommuting.
In winter when we're both gone during the day, we switch off the thermostats, and turn them back on when we return. So far it's never gotten colder than 52 on the first floor and 49 on the second.
I would love to be able to get our thermostats set lower when we're there (68 on 1st floor, 65 on second), and even lower at night when we're sleeping (we switch off the 1st floor, 65 on 2nd where the bedrooms are), but my wife's at her tolerance levels as-is, so I compromise.
We're supplementing winter heating with firewood, in a small, efficient woodstove that keeps the entire 1st floor almost uncomfortably warm (for me, not my wife

). We can cut our own wood for nearly free (modulo chainsaw food and some diesel for the tractor to make to easier to haul the stuff home), so it's worth it to us. If you have a way to burn wood efficiently (i.e., not in a traditional fireplace), it may be worth it to you to do it, even if you must pay for the wood. The northeast has a lot of timber, and there's often "trash wood" (downed trees, trimmings, etc) to be had for little more than the sweat and gas to haul it away.
Wear slippers. Cold rooms often have cold floors; easier to stand them when your feet are warm.
Wear sweaters. Wear warm underwear / bed-clothes. Pile on the blankets. Add a wool mattress cover, or a heating pad.
Find and stop all drafts, no matter how small. Several walls' worth of drafty switch boxes on external walls can add up to the equivalent square footage of a small window. Use foam inserts under the box covers, or low-expansion foam around the edges of the boxes with covers off. Add flexible strip-seals (with adhesive backing) to the bottoms of double-hung windows to kill any leaks there. Replace or add weather-stripping around exterior doors. Check if there are leaks (there often are) where your basement foundation meets the sill plate; often the wooden sills shrink in cold weather, and gaps open. Seal these with low-expansion foam. Insulate any exposed ductwork in the basement.
We're installing honeycomb blinds that come with side-seals (screwed to sides of window jambs, with tabs on blinds riding in slotted tracks on the seals) to get a pretty decent fit when shut. I'd like to add heavy drapes over those, so we can really cut down on the heat-loss through windows.
Electric hot water heater? You might consider putting it on a timer, though if it's well-insulated it doesn't amount to much savings. (Our domestic HW is made by the boiler that supplies heat, and it came with controls that allow me to program it not to make domestic HW during hours we don't typically use it. Doesn't save much but what the hell.)
Good on you for washing in cold water. We wash almost nothing in warm or hot water, and even then our washer (Fisher-Paykel; great unit at a great price) only does an initial pre-soak at that temp and then switches to cold. Our next biggest savings is going to come from line-drying clothes, as we currently have an electric dryer.

At least the washer spins out well, so stuff enters it wrung out nicely.
Clean all the lint / dust / cat hair

off your refrigerator's coils once a year or so. A fridge is one of the biggest power hogs in the average house. Is your older than a decade? Might actually pay to replace it.
Cover your pots when cooking, whenever possible; they'll heat faster / use less heat to simmer.
Microwave ovens are pretty efficient, so due to that and the time-savings, I tend to make very large meals, and have several meals' worth in the fridge to reheat, rather than having to make-from-scratch on the stove.
--Steve