o.k. I went with a pole. Found a aluminum one at the BORG for 30 bucks. A couple considerations were centered around keeping the place from the redneck factor. There's already a massive pile of wood in the back, lots of random bicycles around, a trailer, and my ongoing woodfired oven experiment. The pole is a lot more compact and isolates that stuff out of sight of the road we live on, plus I mounted it so it's easily removed by my wife if we have guests. It' only weighs about 10 or 15 lbs. She's a happy camper, and it's already working on it's ROI.
One of the biggies is towels. With a pool we're always washing and drying towels. NOT ANY MORE
Yippie.
One thing that struck me yesterday was a question my wife asked that shows there's probably a larger general public problem in understanding energy usage. She asked what used more energy. The washing machine running a cold water load or the dryer. When I explaind that the Dryer needed to make heat, she still didn't get it. She said but their both plugged in... don't all things that plug in use the same amount of energy?
I GOTTA get a Kill-a-watt. Then she'll understand.
Education of the public is key.
Lots of these kids with the hot Honda's think they are o.k. since they're driving 4 bangers, the gas is less and they get the performance to boot. But running the piss out of a hot honda still consumes a lot of gas, and probably aren't doing much better than a Mustang with a V8. I had a friend with a Mustang GT who claimed he could pull 27-28 on the highway if he was careful. Educating people on how appliances, houses, cars, etc... is key, and I'm sure not enough is being done. My wife largely looks at things from a $'s perspective.
How do we find a way to get people to understand things with not only a $ perspective. Gore was marginally effective, but one movie that came across as a bit pius (and had some debatable science along with some amazing science and facts) isn't enough. We need to educate the kids better.