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Sustainable in the Suburbs

Sustainable in the Suburbs

By: Sarah Robertson-Barnes
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Want to waste less, save money, and make your home a little more eco-friendly? Sustainable in the Suburbs is your go-to podcast for practical, judgment-free tips and real-life stories to help you build sustainable habits that actually stick.


Hosted by Sarah Robertson-Barnes — a suburban soccer mum, sustainability educator, and founder of the blog Sustainable in the Suburbs — this weekly show brings doable advice, honest conversations, and actionable ideas to help you waste less, spend smarter, and live more sustainably at home.


Because sustainable living doesn’t have to be perfect to matter — and you don’t have to do it all to make a big impact.


Start where you are, use what you have, and live a little greener.

© 2026 Sustainable in the Suburbs
Parenting & Families Relationships
Episodes
  • 51: Can You Be Sustainable in the Suburbs?
    Jun 9 2026

    Can you be sustainable in the suburbs? Well, yes and no.

    Suburban life can make sustainable living complicated — especially when communities are built around cars, convenience, private space, and consumption. But the suburbs are also where so many of us live, raise families, volunteer, vote, garden, organize, and build community.

    So what does climate action actually look like here?

    This episode looks at sustainable living in the suburbs beyond eco swaps and bigger purchases, and asks what becomes possible when we start thinking about our neighbourhoods, local politics, shared resources, and community resilience.

    Takeaways

    • Why suburban sustainability is complicated, but very doable
    • How car dependency shapes the landscape and our daily choices
    • Why the suburbs should not be written off in climate conversations
    • How sustainable living goes beyond buying greener products
    • Why free, inexpensive, and investment-level actions all matter
    • How community resilience and local politics shape what comes next

    One Small Shift

    Choose one free action that connects your household to your community.

    Sustainability is something we practise, share, and build where we live — and sometimes that starts with one small step outside our own front door.

    Related Episodes

    Ep. 7 - Rethinking Zero Waste and Building Community Care

    Ep. 12 - How to Quit Using Amazon (and Why You Should)

    Ep. 24: 5 Sustainable Living Mistakes to Avoid (and What to Do Instead)

    Ep. 36: How to Host a Clothing Swap

    Ep. 42: Overwhelmed by Climate Change? Start Here.

    Ep. 45: How To Spend Less on Groceries by Reducing Food Waste

    Blog Posts

    50 Ways to Be More Sustainable

    How to Drive Less in the Suburbs

    How to Start Living Sustainably

    Support the show

    Connect With Me

    Website

    Newsletter

    Shop

    Instagram

    Support the Show

    Sustainable in the Suburbs is mixed and edited by Cardinal Studio

    If you enjoyed this episode, I’d love it if you followed the show, shared it with a friend, or left a rating and review. Every little bit helps more people find Sustainable in the Suburbs — and live a little greener.

    Show More Show Less
    28 mins
  • 50: Practical(ly) Zero Waste with Elsbeth Callaghan
    May 26 2026

    Back in 2020, I was a guest on the now inactive podcast Practical(ly) Zero Waste, hosted by Elsbeth Callaghan. At the time, my kids were little, the zero waste movement online was deep in its “trash jar” era, and many of us were trying to figure out what sustainable living looked like outside of perfectly curated Instagram squares.

    Six years later, a lot has changed.

    Kids are older, life looks different, and both of us have let go of a lot of the pressure and aesthetics that surrounded zero waste in those early online days. But underneath all of that, the values are still very much the same.

    In this full-circle conversation for Episode 50 of Sustainable in the Suburbs, Elsbeth and I talk about what sustainable living looks like now: parenting teenagers and young kids, balancing low waste goals with real life, navigating burnout and social media, building community, and why consistency matters a whole lot more than perfection.

    We also talk about what we’ve kept, what we’ve let go of, and how many of the “small shifts” we started years ago have quietly become lifelong habits.

    Takeaways

    • Why sustainable living looks very different after years of actually living it
    • The shift from perfection and aesthetics toward values and consistency
    • Raising eco-conscious kids through everyday habits rather than pressure
    • How composting, secondhand shopping, and reusables became family routines
    • The connection between sustainability, community, and raising responsible citizens
    • Why slowing down is often the most sustainable choice
    • How “eco-frugal” living can save money while reducing waste
    • Navigating low waste living with celiac disease and accessibility needs

    One Small Shift

    You can always start again.

    Even if you’ve fallen out of old habits, even if life looks completely different now, small intentional changes still matter. Start with one thing that feels manageable and build from there.

    Resources

    Practical(ly) Zero Waste

    PZW - Ep. 69: Raising Eco Kids

    Inkwood Print Shop

    Related Episodes

    4: How to Conduct a Household Waste Audit

    11: Money, Enoughness, and Community Care with Women’s Personal Finance

    12: How to Quit Using Amazon (and Why You Should)

    Support the show

    Connect With Me

    Website

    Newsletter

    Shop

    Instagram

    Support the Show

    Sustainable in the Suburbs is mixed and edited by Cardinal Studio

    If you enjoyed this episode, I’d love it if you followed the show, shared it with a friend, or left a rating and review. Every little bit helps more people find Sustainable in the Suburbs — and live a little greener.

    Show More Show Less
    50 mins
  • 49: Less Stuff, Less Stress — Sustainable Living with Kids (In Real Life)
    May 12 2026

    In this episode, I’m talking about what sustainable living with kids actually looks like in real life. Not the Instagram version — the real version. The conversations, the habits, the overwhelm, the convenience culture, and the small shifts that slowly become part of how your family moves through the world.

    Takeaways

    • Kids learn consumption habits by watching us
    • Sustainable living with kids is about buying less, not buying “eco” products
    • Convenience culture is deeply connected to overwhelm and mental load
    • Small habits shape how kids think about waste, spending, and consumption
    • Involving kids in the “why” helps sustainability become a mindset
    • Sustainability conversations naturally deepen as kids grow
    • It’s never too late to start having these conversations as a family

    One Small Shift
    Have a family conversation about consumption, waste, or sustainability this week. Ask your kids what they notice, what they care about, and what ideas they have. You might be surprised by the answers.

    Resources

    10 Tips for Going Zero With Kids

    How to Do a Trash Audit With Kids

    Thrift Shopping for Kids

    How to Prevent Food Waste With Kids

    Becoming a Zero Waste Family

    How to Pack a Zero Waste School Lunch

    Related Episodes

    Ep. 16: Sustainable Living with Kids — Save Money and Reduce Waste with Jessica Nakamura

    Ep. 17: How to Raise Eco-Friendly Kids with Talayna Zacharias

    Ep. 22: From Refills to Resilience — Simple, Real-Life Sustainable Living with Julie Darrell

    Ep. 32: Overstimulation, Overconsumption, and the Pressure to Do More with Gillian Gabryluk

    Ep. 40 – How to Host a Zero Waste Birthday Party for Kids

    Ep. 46: How to Talk to Kids About Climate Change with Brittany Jefferson

    Support the show

    Connect With Me

    Website

    Newsletter

    Shop

    Instagram

    Support the Show

    Sustainable in the Suburbs is mixed and edited by Cardinal Studio

    If you enjoyed this episode, I’d love it if you followed the show, shared it with a friend, or left a rating and review. Every little bit helps more people find Sustainable in the Suburbs — and live a little greener.

    Show More Show Less
    24 mins
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