Cruising around in the latest hybrid may be the most visible demonstration of how eco-savvy one is, but the mom-reviewers at Mother Proof know there are other ways families can go green on the road without buying a hybrid.
“Making an environmentally friendly decision with your car doesn’t have to stop or start with buying a hybrid,” Mother Proof’s chief mom Kristin Varela said. “In reality, there are a lot of other car-related ways to contribute to a greener lifestyle.”
Keeping it Clean and Green
There are several eco-conundrums associated with washing your car, ranging from water waste and energy consumption to the harmful chemicals and cleaning byproducts that get washed into waterways. There are environmental pros and cons both to washing your car at home and doing so at an automated car wash.
Either way you go, Mother Proof offers the following tips to minimize your environmental impact:
At home
At a commercial car wash
With energy prices on the rise, car washes are reducing expenses by being more conservative with their resources. Not only is this good for their profits, but it reduces their eco-footprint. Choose your car wash with these factors in mind:
Pooling Together
One of the more obvious ways to help the environment -- and save some cash on gas -- is by carpooling. The higher gas prices get, the more popular this practice becomes, and new online tools are making it just as easy.
“Carpooling isn’t a new concept, and many families have carpools in place for school and kids’ activities,” Varela said. “However, with rising gas prices, parents are looking at other trips that can be shared.”
Divide the Ride (dividetheride.com) is a website that offers free online carpool planning created by parents, for parents. After registering with the site, users input their carpooling needs, compare schedules with families of their choosing and get on with sharing the driving workload.
Ridester (ridester.com) is another carpooling service that allows registered users to either offer a ride or search for a ride at no cost. If a match is made, Ridester.com collects a $2 ticket fee on the rider's payment and a 9.5% processing fee on the driver's asking price. The site offers a great transportation solution for college students coming home for a visit and other long-distance trips.
Sharing and Caring
Mother Proof also recommends exploring car-sharing services. One service, Zipcar, is a shared-vehicle ownership company that provides members with flexible car use, allowing them to pay by the hour or by the day. Participants simply reserve a car for whatever period of time is needed (online or over the phone), pick it up from its designated parking space, use it for their assigned time and return it to the same parking spot. Gas, mileage within a certain range, maintenance and insurance are included in the fee, which starts at $9 per hour in most markets.
“For two-car families that rarely use both cars at the same time, car-sharing services offer a way to cut back to one car,” Varela said. “In addition to reducing emissions, becoming a one-car family can make a huge difference in the family budget.”
About Mother Proof:
Mother Proof™ (http://www.motherproof.com) provides online car reviews and information aimed at the fastest growing segment of automotive consumers: women and mothers. The site was launched in 2004 by Kristin Varela, a young mother of two, when she was in need of a new car and couldn’t find information that was important to her and her family. Now part of the Cars.com family, Mother Proof’s team of mom-reviewers continues in a never-ending quest for the quintessential mom-mobile, searching for vehicles that make grocery shopping and preschool pickup just a little easier.