Britain's eccentric eco habits revealed

We all know that recycling, flying less and going vegetarian can reduce our environmental impact, but now a new survey has revealed the stranger side of going green.
The top 10 eccentric habits included stopping showering at all.The top 10 eccentric habits included stopping showering at all.
The top 10 eccentric habits included stopping showering at all.

Making wildflower seed bombs, ditching lawnmowers for Poldark-style scythes and eating less baked beans to limit personal emissions are all changes Brits are making for the planet, according to a poll carried out by renewable energy company Good Energy.

The top 10 eccentric habits were:

Making wildflower seed bombs

Using a scythe instead of a lawnmower

Eating less baked beans to reduce personal methane emissions

Not using toilet paper

Stopping showering at all

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Improving swimming skills to spend more time in the water instead of consuming

Booking a plot at a natural burial site

Telling teenage children that too long in the shower is bad for their skin

Not having kids to stop consuming more of the world’s resources

Having an eco-friendly wedding

David Brooks, managing director of Good Energy said: “It’s fascinating to uncover the lesser-known ways that the British public are doing their bit for the environment.

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“Driving less or switching to renewable electricity are now common knowledge, but this survey shows that there are plenty of other, and sometimes unusual ways, of being greener.”

Mike Childs from environmental charity Friends of the Earth said: “As experienced environmental campaigners we have seen plenty of fantastic ideas from people eager to make small but meaningful changes, and the British public continue to be full of surprises.

“It would certainly make for an interesting summer to see Aidan Turner lookalikes practising their scything skills in gardens from Cornwall to Carlisle.”

“A lot of the suggestions have multiple benefits: cycling and walking make you feel good, and by saving a short car trip it’s a meaningful way of reducing air pollution.”

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The survey of 2,000 UK adults found that the most popular green changes for 2016 were saving energy at home; cycling and walking instead of driving; reducing, reusing and recycling and buying locally.

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