South side of house.
West side of house (walk-out basement)
We will be doing the tankless hot water heater from the get-go and also Kinetico water system and reverse osmosis drinking water. Though a reverse osmosis system is not considered green, Bonnie justifies it's inclusion in the cottage because of it's health benefits (we will have a well). Bonnie plans to use Safecoat paints from Green Way Supply in Indianapolis for our interior colors. The colors we currently like are very rich and earthy.
We are also looking into bamboo flooring which is harder than red oak or maple and can be resurfaced several times...bamboo because it is a renewable resource. In addition, if we can afford it, we will have Icynene applied as our insulation of choice. It is Energy Star compliant and green certified, is healthier than other insulation, and acts as a noise barrier from outside noises.
We will be taking our current stove and fridge because, when we purchased it for our villa in Ft. Wayne, we thought they were the last we were going to buy and we got exactly what we wanted. Though Kathy has since changed her mind about the side-by-side fridge (the freezer is too small and too narrow), she does like the ice and water through the door and the great filtering system. She thinks the drinking water through the door is about the best she has ever had. Also, the fridge is Energy Star compliant. So new and less expensive appliances will be in place when the villa goes up for sale, saving us hundreds of dollars. We have a commercial upright freezer (Energy Star compliant) that will go in the basement as well as a small dorm-sized fridge/freezer and a wine cooler, so we are set for fridges, coolers and freezers.
Bonnie brought Kathy home some apples from the Good Life Show that are excellent. They are from Country View Greenhouse in South Whitley. They are a green apple and are called Shizuka. Part of green living includes buying locally. You buy an apple from a local grower and you save energy by not purchasing the same apple from the State of Washington where it had to be shipped. Here is my question though...if you have to drive to South Whitley to buy the apples, aren't you still using energy (gasoline) to get there and back? How is this green? Or is it just greenER buying locally grown produce than that produced in far-away states?
Bonnie complimented Kathy on having lived somewhat green most of her life. If buying clothes from Goodwill and wearing them until they have so many holes in them that they are indecent and you have to be told to put them in the rag bag is green, then she is green. If buying a low-mileage used car and driving it for 15 years or until it won't run any longer without huge repair bills is green, then she is green. If wearing the same pair of shoes long past when they have gone out of style, or pulling Bonnie's cast-off tennis shoes out of the trash to wear to go geocaching (even though they are two sizes too large) is green, then she is green. If making do with tools that aren't quite suited to the job in order to not have to go out and buy a new tool (even if that means taking twice as long to do a job) is green, then she is green. If washing the colors with the whites to conserve water (even if it means that the colors might run and the whites have to be washed over again using bleach) is green, then she is green. If (and this is Bonnie's least favorite of Kathy's green doings) getting every drop of margarine, mayonnaise, etc., out of a bottle, jar or tub is green, then she is very, very green! If taking a shower only once a week in order to conserve water is green...ok, we have gone too far! But you get the picture.