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Case Study: Going green - one Aucklander's story

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Max Giles makes furniture from recycled materials. Photo / Dean Purcell
He also makes jam and cordial from his citrus trees, avoids plastics, prefers arts and crafts over TV and uses public transport as much as he can.
The dream he has for himself, wife Jane, and daughters Olive and Morgan, is to live out in the country somewhere, completely off the grid.
All of this doesn't make him a radical greenie, he says - it's more just about stripping the needless excesses from our daily lives.
"I do really care about the planet, but I guess I'm also just a normal person in that I don't like letting things go to waste."
Mr Giles grew up with an interest in gardening but says it was probably living for a short time in an Australian commune that turned him on to sustainable living.

His backyard wedding was decorated with a wooden bar and tables, all made by himself, while the food and even the beer was also self-prepared.
This year, he launched his own business, Maxwell Giles Furniture, selling wares made entirely from recycled timber.
While Aucklanders didn't have to such extremes to lessen their enviromental footprint he said, they could take simple, cash-saving steps like walking, cycling or using public transport, growing vegetables, limiting their use of plastic packaging or just switching off the TV when they weren't watching it.
"It doesn't take much and I think it's important people dedicate time to those sorts of things."