Posted on 01/26/2008 11:53:56 AM PST by JACKRUSSELL
Here, reduce this.
I’ve used them for those purposes too, although now I use a carryall for lunches and perforated cat liners so I don’t have to do the scoop thing every day! And to line the smaller waste baskets in the bathroom. But I still end up recycling what seems like a ton of them - if I shop at the grocery store doing the usual twice-monthly shopping and don’t take my reusable bags, I might end up with 30 plastic bags. That’s twice a month and that’s only for groceries, that doesn’t count clothes or books or anything else we buy. I can’t use 60+ bags a month no matter how hard I try. So they all end up going to the recycling igloo.
The plastic woven bags - are they made out of packing straps? Like the yellow and other colored straps that come around pallets of goods? I’ve seen those advertised and I thought they’d probably be some heavy duty bags. Those straps are impossible to break!
My grandparents lived through the Depression too. They literally lived off the land, from the garden Grammie tended to the baking she did, to the game Grampie shot. Storebought bread was a real treat, lol. I so admire the way my grandparents lived that although my life is nowhere near what theirs was, I’ve tried to emulate them in a lot of ways. If we all lived the way they did, we’d all be millionaires. No throwaway society then. We still have wool patchwork quilts made out of their winter coats after they got too worn to wear. Canning and home cooking, sewing everything, raising their food-theirs was a great generation, eh?
I hate the way they have it set up-it’s hard to reach the groceries when they come off the conveyor belt after being rung up-the shelf and card machine are in the way. I’m still unloading groceries and they’re being bagged up before I’m done. I can’t be at both ends at the same time, unloading groceries and loading them up simultaneously! I’ve learned to give them the bags beforehand and even though I’ve gotten some looks, they do it now. A lot of people have asked where I’ve gotten the bags as they think it’s a good idea.
Living in a rural area doesn’t give a lot of choices for grocery shopping. I used to go to a place that charged for bags and if you didn’t want them, you could use cut-down boxes to load ‘em in. But that place closed down.
I guess my point really is, don’t go along with actual bans on items. The feds have already effectively banned certain types of cars and light bulbs with their latest energy bill, and Kalifornia is looking at regulating thermostats via FM transmission during “energy emergencies.” State after state has banned smoking in bars and restaurants, with a negative financial impact on some of them.
The problem with going along with or supporting such bans is that eventually the banners will come after something you hold dear. And like the C.S. Lewis quote says, they won’t stop, because they ban with the approval of their consciences.
i luv plastic bags!
si.
In the old days people walked around dog poop. It just sat there. After enough time, a green circle of grass would mark the spot.
Ha, I live in a suburb of NYC, and I see people walking their dogs around our condo townhouses with plastic bags. I wonder which end of the leash has the more intellegent species!
“What are we going to pick the dogs poop with then?”
Maybe you could borrow an environmentalist’s backpack.
It’s a tossup.
Sort of. I’m trying to find a way to describe them, but the best thing I am coming up with is plastic burlap. They plastic seems to have some fibers in it to make it strong. It is very strong and durable, perfect for lining a bag.
It really was an incredible, great generation of people. My grandparents and parents were very aware of waste. I am trying to be more like them and less wasteful and less thoughtless with our resources.
I can can and sew, but don’t do near as much as they did. I’m working on it, though.
You notice that too? Why on earth do the people who claim to care so much about the environment end up congregating in concrete jungles? I'm thinkin', they don't really care about the environment, they care about the idea of caring about the environment.
Of course, if the bagger puts too many items into a plastic bag, chances are that it will tear and the groceries will fall out. But you’re right, it’s a pain to carry groceries into the house when they are packed in plastic bags.
i always hated those plastic bags. The groceries would spill out of them in the trunk. And at least one of them would rip halfway from the car to the house.
They don’t ask “paper or plastic” anymore so i just say “paper bags please”.
Just occurred to me that my Gram probably would have found a hundred uses for plastic bags, all of them more creative than cat box liners or lunch bags! I can see it now - cut into strips and woven, an easy-clean braided rug at each entrance. Woven finer, a good mosquito screen replacement. Melted and hardened, a knife to skin Grampie’s deer, or scale the fish or repair a leak in the boat or in his rubber soled hunting boots. Insulation.
That creativity and thriftiness is what enabled them to buy, after going through WWII and a depression, a lot on the lake up there and to build their own log cabin for summer retreats. She chinked the logs with wet burlap strips that are still in place. 60 years later, it’s still in the family and the only place all of us head to Maine from all over the US in summer. My kids are 4th generationers there and it will never be sold. I bless my grandparents every day for that gift.
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