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	<title>Comments on: About This Blog</title>
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	<link>http://savehouseholdenergy.com/energy</link>
	<description>Saving Energy in Your Household and Developments in Alternative Energy</description>
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		<title>By: Rachel Grier</title>
		<link>http://savehouseholdenergy.com/energy/about/comment-page-1/#comment-67</link>
		<dc:creator>Rachel Grier</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Jul 2010 04:08:48 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Dear Save Household Energy, 
I’ve been following your blog and would love to feature you in one of our articles about thrifty bloggers. I’ve been looking for bloggers who write about frugal living and practical skills—generally speaking, ways to thrive—and I’m very interested in the topics about which you write.
I’m part of a group that has recently created the website, Thrift Culture Now. For years, we’ve been researching to find the best ways for households to cut their monthly bills, reduce consumer consumption, and truly thrive. We started to publish this research in the form of ‘Thrifty Tips’ a few months ago. On our site (www.ThriftCultureNow.com), Monday to Friday, we give our readers a new idea for how they can cut their gas, cleaning, food, water, electricity, and health care bills. This is a free service, and those who sign-up can receive the new tip in their email in-box each day. 
We feel that practical skills play a crucial role when anyone tries to lower their expenses. Unfortunately, much of today’s population has no knowledge of the types of skills that people possessed just 50 years ago. Even a basic understanding of cooking from scratch, growing a backyard vegetable garden, or doing small household repairs, can save people thousands of dollars a year—and these are just a few of the hundreds of different practical skills that exist. We hope to put people back in touch with self-sustainability, even in the smallest way.
We are, therefore, launching a new section of our website entitled, Thrifty Bloggers, where we’ll feature individuals who write about thrifty living and practical skills. We want to give people information that they can actually learn from, and we think that your knowledge and experience could really be of benefit to readers.
If you’re willing, we would love to interview you briefly and talk to you about your blog and what you write about. We would feature this interview, with a link (either text or banner) to your blog, in our Thrifty Bloggers section.
We invite you to peruse our site (www.ThriftCultureNow.com) and please let us know if you’re interested in being a part of this exciting and mutually beneficial endeavour. If you would like to read the article about our first Thrifty Blogger, Kate (Living the Frugal Life), please follow this link http://www.thriftculturenow.com/thriftyblogger/312-why-kate-is-living-the-frugal-life.  And, if you feel that it’s suitable, we would really appreciate it if we could place one of our buttons on your site.
We look forward to hearing from you!
Best regards,
Rachel Grier (on behalf of Thrift Culture Now) 
editors@thriftculturenow.com</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear Save Household Energy,<br />
I’ve been following your blog and would love to feature you in one of our articles about thrifty bloggers. I’ve been looking for bloggers who write about frugal living and practical skills—generally speaking, ways to thrive—and I’m very interested in the topics about which you write.<br />
I’m part of a group that has recently created the website, Thrift Culture Now. For years, we’ve been researching to find the best ways for households to cut their monthly bills, reduce consumer consumption, and truly thrive. We started to publish this research in the form of ‘Thrifty Tips’ a few months ago. On our site (www.ThriftCultureNow.com), Monday to Friday, we give our readers a new idea for how they can cut their gas, cleaning, food, water, electricity, and health care bills. This is a free service, and those who sign-up can receive the new tip in their email in-box each day.<br />
We feel that practical skills play a crucial role when anyone tries to lower their expenses. Unfortunately, much of today’s population has no knowledge of the types of skills that people possessed just 50 years ago. Even a basic understanding of cooking from scratch, growing a backyard vegetable garden, or doing small household repairs, can save people thousands of dollars a year—and these are just a few of the hundreds of different practical skills that exist. We hope to put people back in touch with self-sustainability, even in the smallest way.<br />
We are, therefore, launching a new section of our website entitled, Thrifty Bloggers, where we’ll feature individuals who write about thrifty living and practical skills. We want to give people information that they can actually learn from, and we think that your knowledge and experience could really be of benefit to readers.<br />
If you’re willing, we would love to interview you briefly and talk to you about your blog and what you write about. We would feature this interview, with a link (either text or banner) to your blog, in our Thrifty Bloggers section.<br />
We invite you to peruse our site (www.ThriftCultureNow.com) and please let us know if you’re interested in being a part of this exciting and mutually beneficial endeavour. If you would like to read the article about our first Thrifty Blogger, Kate (Living the Frugal Life), please follow this link <a href="http://www.thriftculturenow.com/thriftyblogger/312-why-kate-is-living-the-frugal-life" rel="nofollow">http://www.thriftculturenow.com/thriftyblogger/312-why-kate-is-living-the-frugal-life</a>.  And, if you feel that it’s suitable, we would really appreciate it if we could place one of our buttons on your site.<br />
We look forward to hearing from you!<br />
Best regards,<br />
Rachel Grier (on behalf of Thrift Culture Now)<br />
<a href="mailto:editors@thriftculturenow.com">editors@thriftculturenow.com</a></p>
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