While reading the (sydney) magazine enroute home the 392, last page on the (sydney) grill where 15 questions were posed to James Valentine (whom I don't know), ABC radio host on all things (sydney), okay that's hell load of parenthesis in one sentence; the opinions page on SMH; and in between washing the dishes, my theme for the blog came up - I've decided to blog about good ideas, good food, and 'wow I didn't know thats (which is a lot)' that should be shared across countries, having travelled 5 countries (Thailand, m'sia - I lived there, so probably doesn't count, S'pore, US, Aust) in four months, recounting 4 time zones, carrying 5 currencies, speaking 6 accents (Hokkien, smattering of Cantonese, Manglish, Singlish, Aussie, and a terrible attempt at sounding vaguely loud (to my ears)) and being officially broke from all that...
it is all rather random, as usual. today's idea: recycling!
The uni at US had a damn good system: bring your own mug and it's 50 cents off coffee. coffee is 1.50 per cup in the US, and 2.80 per cup at a uni in sydney. what gives? although at off peak hours, the aussie bloke over the counter will happily stir in the 2 sugars into your cup (minus the coffee collar, which I am so in love with after the show 'maid of honor', because the guy, Patrick 'McDreamy' Dempsey became rich after inventing the coffee collar). but of course, i'd take coffee in australia anyday to starbucks (opps, might have offended a whole list of people), but i dare say it must be due to preferences more than anything else.
US made it so easy to recycle because there's a compost bin at the cafe (which I always had to refer to the idiot proof way of sticking samples up against the bin to show what you can throw into where), and recycling bins in campus buildings and I actually developed the habit of recycling, i.e. deliberating holding onto used papers and only throwing them into the bins that say 'paper only'.
Imagine the shock I found when, I couldn't find any recycling bin at uni here! okay, there is a set of dumpsters lining up the driveway at the house I'm staying - unfortunately, that's as close as i can get to recycling.
Sustainability = recycling = design for lazy people = make it convenient
hmphz, I'm suddenly a huge advocate for recycling and have 2 woolies, 1 coles, 1 borders, 1 API shopping bags all in 3 weeks. And woolies shopping bag tops as most practical.
oh no, i'm turning into some suburb mall hopping "fill in the blanks". i can't blog further.