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Sustainable lifehacks in everyday life from our grandparents

10 sustainable life hacks from our grandparents

Did you know that grandma and grandpa are the best sustainable lifehacks and tips have on it? That's only logical - because a generation that has already known a time without plastic, for example, inevitably already has a Life without plastic led.

In this article, I would therefore like to give you some sustainable tips for everyday life that we can learn from our grandparents.

1. plant food in the garden

Sustainable life hacks sustainability tips in everyday life
Grandma & Grandpa have always grown their own food in their own garden.

Whether herbs or larger foods such as potatoes, carrots or rhubarb. If you have the opportunity, you should grow your own food in the garden like our grandparents did. This is zero waste in its original form - because from Plastic packaging or other waste is not a thing here. What's more, you can be 100% sure that the food from your own garden has not traveled long distances and is completely untreated.

Incidentally, having your own garden is also a wonderful way to get into the start vegan life and is also incredibly easy on your wallet. This sustainable tip from grandma & grandpa is worth its weight in gold.

2. make your own food

Sustainable life hacks sustainability tips in everyday life pasta

It's not particularly complicated to make your own meals - grandma and grandpa managed it somehow. Whether it's pasta or bread - it doesn't matter. You can make everything yourself - from scratch and without any harmful additives. Just get a little inspiration from our DIY Blog. With this sustainable life hack from our grandparents, you too can make your everyday life sustainable.

Tip: If you have cooked something, you can also, for example. freeze plastic free and thus in the sense of sustainability Reduce food waste.

3. repair when something is broken

Sustainable lifehacks sustainability tips in everyday life repairing

The Repair is an important basic rule of the Zero Waste Lifestyle - as we call it today. Our grandparents used to repair everything, because at that time not everything was available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. In Berlin, for example, there are now regular meetings in repair cafés where people help each other to give things like toasters or shoes a second chance. This sustainable life hack from our grandparents is easy on the wallet and conserves natural resources.

4. ride a bike more than drive a car

Sustainable lifehacks sustainability tips in everyday life bike

In the past, not everyone had a car - and not everyone could travel around the world the way they can today. So our grandparents - whether consciously or unconsciously - were pretty environmentally conscious when they traveled. If possible, then get on a bike and leave the car behind. If you want to make your everyday life sustainable, then you should take this sustainable life hack to heart. You can also find out more in the article Live car free.

5. reduce and be happy

Sustainable lifehacks in everyday life from our grandparents

"We didn't have anything in the old days" is something you often hear older generations say - and it's kind of true. Because our grandparents didn't have a smartphone with the best Zero Waste Apps and couldn't just ask Google Maps for advice on the quickest route. Grandma and Grandpa only had what they needed to live. And they were happy. Today the Reduce in the form of the minimalist life is back in fashion - a sustainable tip that conserves natural resources and your wallet.

6. learn to sew

What do I do if I've caught my sweater on a corner and there's now a hole in the sleeve? Or if a zipper has come undone on a zip sweater? There is a very high probability that this sweater will end up in the bin for many people today, or at least be taken to the used clothing collection. This is because we have largely forgotten one of our grandparents' valuable and now sustainable life hacks for everyday life - the Sewing. As I can't do it myself, I take my sweater to grandma. It's definitely an advantage and not uncool if you can sew yourself 😉.

7. prefer reusable instead of disposable

Rethink everything that is only used once - This is a basic tip for sustainable everyday life. Disposable cups from Plastic serve 1-2 drinks and then end up in the bin. So why don't we just drink from washable glasses and avoid plastic waste? It would be sustainable and you can use the glass reuse in the sense of the Zero Waste lifestyle. Grandma and Grandpa didn't use plastic and somehow managed with their porcelain cups and glasses. And they filled their shopping in containers they had brought with them and didn't have any plastic packaging.

8. bring your own food

Our grandparents used to cook everything at home and Taken along for the journey. The meals came quite simply in Preserving jars and so grandma & grandpa could transport their food without any plastic at all. No disposable plastic bowls, no questionable disposable salad. Everything was home-made and possibly even from their own garden. Your own food in a Stainless steel lunch box or a preserving jar is also one of many important sustainable tips for an environmentally friendly everyday life.

Tip: If you're looking for delicious meals, feel free to check out the vegan recipes blog over.

9. use the washing line

You heard right - The good old clothesline dries sustainably. This is because no electrical energy is required for the tumble dryer. In addition, no limited metals are mined for an expensive tumble dryer, such as those used as a rare earths in smartphones knows. And what did our grandparents use to hang the washing on the line? They used Wooden clothespins used - completely without plastic. Simply letting the laundry air dry is a valuable sustainable life hack that we can learn from grandma & grandpa.

10. buy food unpacked

Today the Unpackaged stores are springing up like mushrooms - and this is actually nothing new. Our grandparents used to go to the grocery store to fill jars and tins with food they had brought with them. Plastic free shopping was already possible in the past - we just found it too inconvenient. In addition, more and more organic markets and supermarkets have so-called filling bars where you can buy pasta, muesli and even regional milk.

Tip: More about regional shopping can be found in the linked article.

Life hacks & tips for sustainable everyday life

Sustainable lifehacks in everyday life from our grandparents

When I ask my grandma today what she used to brush her teeth with, she says: "With a wooden toothbrush, my boy." - and the Wooden toothbrush is back in fashion today. Like so many things that older generations used to use.

What can we learn from grandma and grandpa? When there was no plastic, they showed us how to live sustainably and without plastic. Today we see the problem with the Plastic waste in the environment and are desperately looking for solutions for a large number of Environmental issues. We can learn from our grandparents how to get by with just a few things and how to make our everyday lives as sustainable as possible.

We hold: Our grandparents are the biggest life hackers! We now briefly go back to the rootsand then march into the future again with big and sustainable steps.

What are your sustainable life hacks and tips for a sustainable everyday life? I'm curious and look forward to your comments.

Stay clean,

Christoph from CareElite - Plastic-free living


PS: If you like, you can find more information under Zero Waste Tips many more tips and ideas for living as waste-free as possible.

Coffee box Suggestions for improvement Newsletter

* Links with asterisks are so-called Affiliate linksIf you click on it and buy something, you automatically and actively support my work with CareElite.de, as I receive a small share of the proceeds - and of course nothing changes in the product price. Many thanks for your support and best regards, Christoph!

Christoph Schulz

Christoph Schulz

I'm Christoph, an environmental scientist and author - and here at CareElite I'm campaigning against plastic waste in the environment, climate change and all the other major environmental problems of our time. Together with other environmentally conscious bloggers, I want to give you tips & tricks for a naturally healthy, sustainable life as well as your personal development.

12 thoughts on “10 nachhaltige Lifehacks unserer Großeltern”

  1. Hi Christoph, great blog with the hacks from grandma and grandpa. This makes me think of a story about an old woman being criticized at the checkout for buying a plastic bag and then naming exactly what you describe here in response. Namely that she used to live plastic-free and is now forced to use plastic in many things.
    It honestly annoys me that you also pay quite a bit more for unpackaged shopping. I pay here for a bottle of detergent or its contents more than 15€! That hurts quite a bit, even if I'm basically already ready to spend a little more even for organic. But some prices (toothbrush 3-4 €...and my daughter bites well and gladly every few days to 2 weeks one) are somehow not feasible. Well, maybe at some point the principle of "higher demand, lower price" will take effect. ....Greetings, Katrin

    1. Hi Katrin, thanks for your feedback!
      Unpacked is vllt a little more expensive, but for that most is also regional and simply has more quality than what you know from cheap packaging from the supermarket 🙂
      It will take some time for all of us to get more used to it.
      Best regards,
      Christoph

  2. Hello Christoph,
    It's totally refreshing to read a male zero waste post ?
    A few things have made their way into our household as well, like the cloth bag at the bakery and washing diapers for our youngest....
    Mostly it is only the habit that slows you down. Once you have changed something you can often no longer imagine how thoughtless you were before!
    In this sense, I can only advise all, just start with a little something, the rest will come after ?
    Love, Katharina

    1. Hi Katharina! Thank you for your feedback - it's true - the topic of zero waste is actually dominated by women 😀 But fortunately the topic concerns each of us.
      It's great that you're making progress step by step. You're right about that! I also constantly have situations in which I am surprised how ignorant I used to live.
      Best regards,
      Christoph

  3. Today I went to the market in our city for the first time in a long time. The food I bought there is not much different in price than in a supermarket.
    Will now also get into the habit, more often, no always to go to the market. Vorallem, there the food is still regional.

    1. Hello Christoph! You are absolutely right. Our grandparents had some really good tricks on them that have unfortunately just been forgotten. For example, I discovered the good old cooking box (the cooking bag ) about a year ago. Saving electricity (good for the environment ), thus saving money (good for me ) and with a little planning also saving time. 》Better it can not go! Greetings from Thuringia sends Ute

  4. Hi Christoph, thanks for your great report and yes it is important to ask grandma and grandpa, how was it in the past? Sometimes I am really shocked that cloth bags, cloth diapers, cotton handkerchiefs or cloth napkins are celebrated like a new invention. I grew up sustainable, self-sufficient and consciously consuming. I am glad that a change in thinking is starting and hopefully it will become a long lasting movement.
    Many love greetings Manuela

    1. Hi Manuela! Thanks for your great feedback - and yes, I see it the same way. A rethinking is taking place and we can also learn from those who used to get along without plastic. As for climate change (incl. food, air pollution etx.), again older generations have to learn from younger ones.
      Best regards
      Christoph

  5. Hello Christoph,
    Thank you very much for this valuable article.
    Hopefully it will reach many people. It is so often worthwhile to go in search of traces with our grandparents.
    But our own childhood can also be a guide and a source of ideas. For example, it's such a shame that we've centralized grocery shopping so much that it's now cumbersome to support smaller retailers.
    Especially when the urban environment is missing.
    I remember fondly when I was allowed to take my shopping list to the corner store. A lollipop always beckoned as a reward.
    It's a pity that our children can no longer do that.
    Many greetings Irina

    1. Hello Irina! Can agree with you wholeheartedly! Will that we live again so that everyone else can live from it. And not just a few.
      Best regards
      Christoph

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