Showing posts with label recyclable. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recyclable. Show all posts

Monday, 8 July 2024

Pet Peeve: Unnecessary Plastic Windows in Pasta Boxes

Today's Pet Peeve is Brought to you by Catelli Pasta!! (And Barilla)

I was consolidating some whole grain wheat pasta to bring to my sister. I can't eat wheat stuff anymore and holding onto wheat pasta is just wishful thinking.

But as I consolidated two boxes of Rotini noodles into one box, I was left with an empty box.

No biggie. Just recycle it. Right? Easy peasy.

Not so much.

You see... I am a conscientious recycler. I am the person who sticks their hand into the opening of an empty tissue box and pulls out the plastic window in the top of the tissue box. They actually come fairly easily. And they do serve a useful purpose, ensuring that only one tissue (usually) comes out of the box at a time.

Because recycling a tissue box with the plastic window just contaminates the recycling stream. Which is not good. And as a conscientious recycler... I just... can't... do... it.

Which brings me to pasta boxes. You see... Catelli has a little clear plastic window in the middle of their pasta box.

For those of us who can't read and who can't determine the type of pasta based on the picture of rotini noodles on the cover. It looks like a pretty small piece of plastic. But in order to get it out of there... you have to tear the box apart and then try to pull the plastic off of the cardboard. But they use a much sturdier glue than the tissue box folks. And for such a small window... Catelli uses a HUGE piece of plastic!


So you grab a corner and you pull and... it tears. leaving you with shreds of plastic to peel off. I'm sorry, but I don't have time to stand in the kitchen muttering swear words as I peel off shards of plastic window material.


So that whole piece of cardboard with over-sized piece of window material goes straight into the garbage. Is this not a waste of cardboard? Waste of energy? Waste of plastic? Waste of time and energy and decision-making power? Why is it on ME to have to tear out this piece of cardboard in order to allow Catelli to have that itsy-bitsy teeny-weeny window in their pasta box???


So, while I was at Superstore the other day, I did an informal survey of pasta boxes... because I had come across a UK article that said Barilla pasta had gotten rid of their pasta box windows!!!

Let's see what we can find on our shelves...

Catelli. Yes, well we know what they do. But my box of whole wheat pasta was several years old so I thought... maybe they have changed? Nope.



President's Choice? Nope... little plastic window.

Catelli again... with a miniscule window into the heart of spaghettini... why?? What purpose does this serve???

And Barilla... from Superstore's online shopping... because the UK version has NO window... but our Canadian version... it has a plastic window. Ugh! 

I am so miffed with Barilla for being so two-faced that I went to their Canadian site's Contact Us Form and sent this message...
Can you explain why Barilla in the UK has gotten rid of the plastic windows in the pasta boxes but Barilla in Canada still has them?
Do you know what is involved in me recycling the empty pasta box?? With a plastic window? Why??? We can read. We can see your very clear pictures of the pasta. Take the eco-lead and get rid of these windows. They serve zero useful purpose. You don't see cereal boxes with plastic windows. Why do pasta companies do this? Thanks so much for your thoughtful reply that won't be a standard "thank you for your comment and we have sent this to our product team." 

Hmph. Back to Superstore... and look what I find. An actual box of spaghetti with NO window!  Amazing. Although this one was down the organic food aisle.


You would think that making boxes without windows would be easier and cheaper for pasta companies. You would think... But I guess they really like having people SEE what's in the box. Strange.

Post Script

I wrote to our city's recycling department to see what they have to say and after 10 days, received a reply. For us... we can leave the plastic windows in the pasta boxes! Yay! Win for us. Not so much a win for some other places. I do wonder though... in the pulping process of pasta boxes... when they fish out the plastic windows as contaminants... where do they go? Landfill?? Sigh.

That ends today's Pet Peeve Rant. Carry on with your normal daily activities.

Monday, 22 April 2024

Eco-Friendly Beauty: Discovering Makeup and Skincare Recycling Solutions

I was leaving Walmart the other day, having bought my jars of pickles (very specific pickles only available at Walmart) and a watch battery. I actually hate shopping at Walmart. I hate the self-checkout area which feels a bit like a bull-ring. I hate the talking tills. The whole thing just... irks me. I just want out of there! As fast as possible.

But as I scampered past the optical department... and almost reached the customer service desk... I stopped dead in my tracks. What the heck was this box?

TerraCycle Cosmetic & SkinCare Recycling Box at Walmart
TerraCycle Cosmetic & SkinCare Recycling Box at Walmart

Make-up recycling???!!! What the heck!? They have recycling for Cosmetics and Skincare products. Whooooaaaaaa... 

Now let me first say that I don't use cosmetics or make-up. But I do use skin-care products like lotions... and lip balm... and deodorant... And it has always irked me that these containers are either very hard to recycle (washing out a lotion bottle?) or impossible (deodorant - too many different plastic types).

There was a QR code on the side of the box... I scanned it and it took me here... It's a TerraCycle project! I know them! They have a system to handle "hard-to-recycle" things... like toothbrushes and toothpaste tubes...

Walmart has partnered with TerraCycle and a few cosmetics companies (L'Oreal being a big one) to take back cosmetic and skincare containers. From ANY brand! Cool! OK... I might need to re-evaluate my opinion of Walmart... a little bit.

So here's a list of things that they take... I'm going to need another bin to collect this stuff at home...

What You can Recycle

  • lip balm, lip gloss, lip liner and lipstick tubes
  • soap dispensers and tubes
  • lotion bottles, tubes, dispensers and plastic jars
  • non-pressurized shaving foam tubes
  • body wash containers
  • mascara tubes
  • eyeliner pencils and cases
  • eyeshadow packaging
  • concealer tubes
  • foundation packaging and bottles
  • powder cases

What You Can't Recycle

  • perfume (presumably because it has alcohol - flammable)
  • nail polish bottles (same thing... highly flammable)
  • nail polish remover bottles (same... extremely flammable)
  • pressurized canisters (including aerosol cans) (explosive)
  • sharps (including razors) (dangerous)

Excellent news! Kudos to Walmart and... wait a minute... I was doing some background reading and... London Drugs is also doing this. And has been for YEARS!

Well... not quite... yes, London Drugs has been recycling cosmetics for several years but NOT skincare products (like lotion bottles). So the Walmart box is more inclusive...

And to be honest... I've never seen a make-up recycling box at London Drugs. Mind you... I don't really go into the make-up section but I have definitely walked by it at various times. And never, ever has a recycling box (and they are big!) impinged on my radar.

Walmart has a good location for theirs... as you exit the store, where people are most likely to see it. Alright... I am going to have to make up a list (make up... make-up... hahahah!) of recyclable skin care/cosmetic products and pay more attention before I throw a lip balm in the garbage... or a lotion bottle.

Although... I still want to know about deodorant... it is not on the accepted list... but neither is it on the reject list. To recycle it... or not... I think I will add it to the bin and take it along next time

And... I just did a search for deodorant and recycling and came across the Beauty Vixen's blog post... apparently there are a swack of other stores that also do beauty recycling including Hudson's Bay, L'Occitane en Provence, Winners and Holt Renfrew. There appear to be size limitations though on some of them (less than 60 ml, under 2 inches by 2 inches, etc). Although... some even accept shampoo bottles!

Well then... now we know. Any and all beauty and skin care products (minus the flammable stuff) can be recycled via either TerraCycle or Pact (another outfit like TerraCycle). Just look for the boxes... or ask at the front desk...

So... don't toss your lip balm, your lotion bottle or your foundation container. Recycle instead.

Still need to work on the dentist to sponsor a TerracCycle dental products box... will try emailing them again...

More Resources

TerraCycle's page on cosmetic recycling

Monday, 15 January 2024

The Unseen Threat: Nanoparticles Lurking in Your Bottled Water

Plastic water bottles. They are everywhere. What would we do without them? From sporting events where cases of them are handed out to athletes... to emergency situations where we see truckloads of water bottles being delivered to victims of disaster (natural or man-made). But what if those bottles of crystal clear water are actually harming the people who ingest them? What then?

Let's back that up a bit and take a look at plastic to start with. It's sooo handy... cheap, lightweight, easy to transport, malleable, not breakable (generally). It can made into so many handy things. And let's remember where it comes from. All plastic originates with crude oil or natural gas. Plastic water bottles, for example are made from PET plastic (that's short for polyethylene terephthalate). PET plastic is made from petrochemical sources, the first step of which involves the polymerization of ethylene glycol and terephthalic acid or dimethyl terephthalate to produce PET resin.

Let's be really clear here... if you have trouble pronouncing those things... odds are they are not good for you. And ingesting crude oil is definitely not on anyone's diet.

But surely those plastics are... you know... inert? The plastic is made and then it just sits there, like glass... and does nothing? Nope. Not so fast. But let's get back to our plastic water bottles...

Benefits of Plastic Bottles

Cost: Plastic is generally less expensive than aluminum and glass, so manufacturers and distributors obviously like cheaper. And so do consumers. 

Weight: Plastic water bottles weigh less than aluminum cans and glass bottles, which also means cheaper transportation costs

Durability: Plastic is flexible and less prone to denting or puncturing, and definitely less likely to break. This means less product loss during transportation, handling and storage and less likelihood that the product will be damaged. Less waste is good, right? Certainly for the bottom line.

Convenience: Plastic bottles are resealable, which allows us to drink some now and save some for later. The bottles are also easy to squeeze and crush, making them less bulky afterwards.

Consumer preferences: This is us. We apparently like hte convenience of plastic water bottles...

The Problem of Plastic Bottles

Now the problem(s)... because while they may cost less in terms of manufacturing and transportation, there are other costs.

Recycling: While many plastics can now be recycled... that doesn't mean that they actually are. Many plastic bottles do not find their way to a recycling centre and get lost in forests, streams, ditches and waterways. Even if they are recycling, contamination of the recycling stream can limit the use and energy efficiency of the process. Many plastics can only be recycled a certain number of times before they need to be downgraded. So food or drink plastics eventually end up as lower-grade products.

Microplastics: The recycling process generates microplastics, teeny, tiny bits of plastic that contaminate the environment. But they are not the worst ones... these ones you can see with a microscope... but there are even smaller ones.

Nanoplastics: These are the teensiest, tiniest bits of polymer plastic, 1000 times smaller than the diameter of a human hair. Even a regular microscope can't see these ones. It used to be thought that a 500 ml bottle of water might contain 325 bits of plastic (micro or nano). But a recent study has shown that the actual amount is orders of magnitude higher...

Terrifyingly Tiny Plastics

Somewhere in the world, pristine water from aquifers or reservoirs or even just plain old tap water is poured into plastic bottles. That $0.01 of water in a $0.05 bottle then gets boxed up and shipped and sold to us. Costing us anywhere from $0.50 (if we buy a flat from Costco) or $2.50 if we get one at a convenience store. (Side Bar: Did you know Convenience = Expensive?)

Pure, clear water, right? We can see it through the plastic. It looks sooo good and clean. Not.

You see... plastic water bottles are NOT inert. They do not just sit there quietly and do nothing. Plastic water bottles begin shedding teeny tiny bits of plastic as soon as they are made - nanoplastics.

Now researchers have known this but they thought there might be 325 or so pieces of microplastics floating around in the water bottles. But a recent study took it a step farther. Because... remember... nanoplastics can't be seen under a regular microscope. You need a super-duper microscope to see nanoparticles. And what did they find... brace yourself....

The average bottle of water contains anywhere from 110,000 to over 370,000 pieces of nanoplastics.

And these bits of polymer plastics are soooo small that they can migrate into your body's tissue... into your muscles, your organs, your blood, your brain and your unborn child's organs.

And those nanoplastics carry all sorts of toxic things with them... endocrine-disrupting chemicals such as bisphenols, phthalates, flame retardants, per- and polyfluorinated substances, or PFAS, and heavy metals. All of which are used in the manufacture of plastics.

Response from International Bottled Water Association

And what do the bottled water folks say to this new research?

“This new method [of testing water] needs to be fully reviewed by the scientific community and more research needs to be done to develop standardized methods for measuring and quantifying nanoplastics in our environment. There currently is both a lack of standardized methods and no scientific consensus on the potential health impacts of nano- and microplastic particles. Therefore, media reports about these particles in drinking water do nothing more than unnecessarily scare consumers.” (quoted in CNN article)

Ummm... that sounds suspiciously like the response of tobacco companies in the 40s, 50s and 60s... downplaying the dangers of smoking... Class action lawsuits tell a different tale.

Also sounds a bit like pesticide companies saying that their pesticides are so safe, you could drink them (pesticide lobbyist Dr. Patrick Moore in an interview)... right... we know how that's playing out. (Class-action lawsuit against Monsanto & Bayer for the pesticide Roundup)

I foresee a class action lawsuit against plastic bottle manufacturers and bottled water companies... don't have a crystal ball... not a psychic... but anyone can see the writing on the wall.

What Can We Do?

Stop buying plastic water bottles.

Ugh.

We have a bunch as part of our emergency kit. They are so convenient for that. But plastic water bottles do have an expiry date so what do we do with the expired ones now? We used to drink them but... not sure I want to do that anymore.

But in all other ways... we avoid plastic water bottles like the plague. We have excellent tap water and fill up our stainless steel water bottles with water when we head out the door. There is no reason for us to have plastic water bottles in our day-to-day life.

But this also got me thinking... what about plastic pop bottles?? You don't think they are immune from nanoplastics do you? Or plastic liquor bottles. Or plastic ketchup bottles.

It is tempting to just throw-up our hands in despair and go "Ah, we're going to die someday anyhow from something..." Or we could start somewhere. Start small. Ditch the bottled water. Drink pop out of cans, not bottles.

And read the news. Now that researchers can identify and categorize the nanoplastics, we can expect a LOT more studies on their impact on our health.

PS - We Are Hooped - my Starbucks tea bag is plastic and studies reveal that a plastic tea bag can release BILLIONS OF nanoplastics into one cup of tea.

PPS - We are Seriously Hooped - Studies have also shown that a single tampon can release billions of nanoplastics into a female body

Further Reading

CNN article on nanoplastics in bottled water (there are a tonne of other news articles out there - early January 2024)

Monday, 20 November 2023

To Write or Not to Write... Christmas Cards

I am a writer and letter writer from way back. I used to send dozens of  Christmas cards every November/December. And yet, over the years, I have grown ambivalent about Christmas cards.

I love the excitement of finding something in the our mailbox, other than flyers and promo cards. I love seeing who the envelope is from and then opening the envelope.

I am then usually disappointed to find a mostly blank card with just the printed felicitations and then a signature or two. 

Meh. That seems like a lot of effort and money to just send a generic greeting and a signature. Yes, we can put the card up on our card holder and revel in the feeling that people still care about us and love us. But then what?

Recycling Christmas Cards

At the end of the season we don't keep the cards. We toss them in recycling except... we then need to spend some time deciding if the card is recyclable.

If it has any of the following, it is NOT recyclable...

  • glitter - sooooo bad for the environment
  • sparkles - same thing
  • singing/talking battery-powered - battery and plastic housing not recyclable
  • shiny foil bits - like the lettering
  • ribbons - gotta rip those off and toss them
  • jewels and other doodads - rip those off too
  • plastic coating - just wrong
  • photographic cards - ooohhh... of the family sending the card... those need to be kept!
And let's not even talk about the envelopes... all of the PSAs below make it challenging to recycle paper and can actually contaminate the paper recycling process. PSAs are "pressure sensitive adhesives" and they make the envelopes soooo pretty...
  • self-stick address labels
  • festive stickers (I'm guilty of this... I LOVE plastering stickers all over the envelope)
  • plain old tape - because sometimes the envelope flap glue is not great...

So I sit there every year and assess each Christmas card and their envelopes. I find that, by far, the vast majority are not recyclable. At least not the front cover of the card. I will often tear of the back part and recycle that and then toss the front part in the trash. My rule of thumb for deciding if something is plastic-y is... can I tear the card easily? If not, then it has some plastic baked into it. Paper-anything should tear easily.

But tossing the front of the card just seems... wrong. Such a waste. All the energy that went into making and transporting and buying and sending that card and then... it is used once and just... thrown out?

Reusing Christmas Cards

Would it be horribly horrid if we reused Christmas Cards? If we just cut off the back part and then wrote a new felicitation on the inner side of the front cover? So a Christmas post card? Or is that chintzy and cheap? Or thrifty and eco-friendly? Of course, if people wrote longer greetings on the inside cover... that would preclude this idea!

There was a day when I had grand schemes to reuse Christmas cards (the front cover) in new and creative ways. Like...

  • Cut them into a circle and use them as a mason jar topper if we gift garden preserves
  • Glue the front of an old card to a piece of folded card stock to make a new card
  • Write a recipe on the reverse and include when you send packages, parcels or gifts
  • Cut them into gift tags (that way you don't have to buy gift tags)

But those dreams of being a creative wizard, worthy of Pinterest fame have evaporated in the reality of life. Time to let those dreams of future me go! Although... some of those ideas seem really easy... like the jar toppers...

But maybe physical Christmas Cards are going the way of the dinosaur? Maybe it's more 123GreetingCards.com? Digital Christmas Cards? Although I really don't like those either. First, they usually end up in my spam folder and I'm never quite sure if they are legit... so I might err on the side of caution and just delete them, sight unseen.

So fear not... physical Christmas cards are still a "thing"... you just have to walk into any store to see boxes and boxes of fresh, crisp, shiny, glitzy Christmas cards.

During Covid, Christmas card sending went up over 144%! That's a LOT of Christmas cards! I can't say we were part of that. We kind of gave up on writing Christmas cards a few years back. It just seemed soooo... pointless and capitalist...

Capitalist Cards

Go out and buy a new box of cards? Nope. We gave up on that years ago. When we do send cards, we go to the thrift store and grab whatever we can find there. Are they stylish? Probably not. But they are cheap. They are second-hand. And they are mostly simple cards made of paper. (Pssst... we do the same for birthday cards... no way are we paying $7 for a new card!)

Then we have to figure out who we are sending the cards to and decide which type of card to send to each person. Some folks really appreciate the religious cards (Hi, Mom!) and some don't appreciate a hint of religiosity in their mailbox.

Then we get to write their addresses on the envelope, which causes us to wonder... have they moved this past year? Is this even the right address? Heck... do we even have a physical mailing address for them? We just have a street address but no postal code so need to spend time on Canada Post figuring that out.

Then it's off to the post office to buy stamps and mail the cards. Have you seen the cost of postage??? And the line-ups at the post office? Ugh! (I sound a bit Grinchy right now... don't I?)

We'd go to all the effort and send out 40 cards, and would receive less than half of that in return. Sometimes only 10. Meh... thinking of the money (purchase price, stamps) and the environmental impact (unrecyclable cards) and the time (writing the cards and then deciding if they are recyclable)... it just seems a bit pointless. An empty gesture signifying what... cultural norms? The "done" thing? But whyyyyy???? 

Family Newsletters

On the other hand... some cards include a family news sheet of the past year. We LOVE reading those!! That brings smiles and joy and laughter and connection.

We generally send ours via email though. Guess we are cheap. We don't want to print 40 of those on the colour printer (or at Staples) and have to do the whole Christmas card thing...

Those family newsletters are also much harder to let go!

We've fallen off the Christmas newsletter bandwagon the last few years. Will this be the year that we get back on it? Time will tell... But look for it in your email Inbox in early December... maybe mid-December... Maybe this blog will jump-start our newsletter writing.

I do have to say... I still tend to send physical Christmas cards to our elderly relatives, the ones who don't have ready access to email. I'll write some news inside the cards as well... none of this "Christmas card with just a signature"... I really don't see the point of those... But maybe that's just me???

An Alternative

Maybe we could try this instead... Think of the elderly, the single, the grieving in your network. Maybe it's that old lady in the little house down the street. The one that you see toddling along on her daily walk to the corner store. What if you figured out her postal address and sent her a card... with a personal greeting.

Maybe it's the single person up the block who keeps their yard so neat and tidy and has done a tonne of improvements over the last year. Send a card thanking them for all that they have done to beautify the neighbourhood.

For years, I drove by a house on the way to my local Starbucks. I always thought it was a very well-maintained house. Such a neat garden and well-maintained. I never saw anyone there, just the one car in the carport. I thought about writing an anonymous post card just thanking them for their presence. And then I saw the occasional second car in the driveway and I thought... "they are getting home support" I should really write that card." I never did.

Too late to send that card...

And then this past year, there was a For-Sale sign on the property. Now it's sold and... did the people move into a care home? Did they die? I don't know. But I never sent that card and that sits with me.

So... this year... we'll be trading writing "signature cards" for sending cards to... other folks. Call it Random Acts of Christmas Card Kindness...

Wednesday, 20 September 2023

What's Hanging Around in Your Closet?

What do you do with the plastic hangers when you go clothes shopping? Do you smuggle them home? Leave them in the store?

We used to have some of them in our closets but, honestly, they aren't the best hangers. Flimsy, weird sizes that don't look neat and tidy. Not a great deal. Although... some of them do have that flocking on them that prevents your clothes from slipping off. And the ones with the clips are kind of cool for skirts and stuff.

I think these were more popular for pilfering back in the day when wire hangers ruled. Single wire hangers are NOT good for clothes long-term so... back in the day... if we could smuggle one of these plastic store hangers home... that was a bonus!

But apparently over 100,000,000 of these flimsy plastic hangers get tossed away every year, in the UK. If we look at the USA... that number balloons to over 8 BILLION hangers (wood, plastic, metal) that are tossed every single year. That's a lot of hangers. And a LOT of plastic.

While these hangers aren't "single-use" plastic... they still aren't built to last. Although... I have to say... I am impressed with thrift stores that manage to get a LOT of mileage out of these hangers!

Mismatched Thrift Hangers

Then you have the plastic hangers that you can buy in a store. You know the ones... they come in an array of fetching colours and shapes.

They are OK. I just wish all of the manufacturers could stick with one shape and style! Our clothes closet has a lot of these and they are a real mish-mash. And somehow... I have this idea that matching hangers are better. But are they?

Because I can't remember the last time we bought new plastic hangers. If ours break or we need more... we just go down to the local thrift store and get a 8 or 10 for $1. Why would we ever buy new!?? And so... we live with mismatched hangers.

Innovative?

Now... we get to the crux of this... I was in Superstore the other day and I saw this sign at the check-out.

Whoooooaaaa... switching from plastic hangers to wooden hangers! Now that is cool! And apparently... the customers think so too! They are asking if they can take the wooden hangers home because they look so cool. And honestly... that is what Superstore thinks too. This is what their press release said in 2021 when they introduced this out east...

"Overall, we feel the look is more elegant and classy,” says Joe Fresh manager Gina Singh. “I believe it makes the product look a lot more appealing.”

So it's really a marketing ploy... but it makes them look good too because it has an environmental aspect. I am going to guess that the environmental impact of plastic hangers vs. wooden hangers hinges on one key factor... how long do they last.  It's the same with grocery bags... we think paper bags are better than plastic bags and that canvas reusable grocery bags are better than the ones made out of tarp-like material. But it all boils down to... how many uses do you get out of them??

Recyclable Hangers?

Another question is... are plastic hangers actually recyclable? They short answer is not easily and it depends. Many hangers are made out of multiple materials - different types of plastic, maybe a bit of metal for the hanger bit and... that flocking! So whether or not hangers are recyclable depends on the type of hanger and the jurisdiction. Our city just recently started accepting hangers in curbside recycling, so that's a definite bonus but... I wonder what happens to them.

In many jurisdictions, however, hangers end up in the trash unless you reuse them. Soooo... it really makes one think about pilfering those store hangers! Are they really going to work in your closet?

Wooden Hangers

Now, when I think of wooden hangers... I think of those sturdy ones that have been around for every it seems. Before thin wire hangers... there were wooden hangers. 

But they weren't cheap... and in our family, growing up, my Mom would use them for coats and maybe for her fancy dresses. But for us kids... we had thin metal hangers.

In terms of length of use... wooden hangers win, hands down. I read one Reddit comment where someone had had their wooden hangers for 65 years. I doubt that can be said about any plastic hangers!

Sooo... wooden hangers are better, yes? Well... yes and no. I don't think Superstore is using vintage hangers from the 1950s. They are getting new wooden hangers... which means somewhere, some tree was cut down to make a hanger. And, although it's hard to see on the Superstore photograph... they look kind of thin and... I just wonder how long they will last. Probably not 65 years.

I was reading another blog that mentioned some companies are making hangers out of recycled paperboard. Reduce, reuse, recycle. Which is good... but it does take energy to turn paper into a hanger.

Gramma's Hangers

I should mention at this point that... we didn't keep using metal hangers. Somewhere in the 1970s, my Mom discovered braided macramé hangers.

You know... you take too balls of wool, two identical metal hangers from the dry cleaners and... you make a sturdy, eco-friendly hanger that clothes won't slide off of. Win-win-win. Even more of a win when you could get the hangers for FREE from the local dry cleaners. 

My Mom was nothing if not frugal and thrifty. And so, of a winter's evening, my Mom, my sister and I would sit and weave macramé clothes hangers. Tidy ones... not the ones with yarn pom-poms and bits of yarn dangling artfully. These are basic, unfrilly hangers. And they work the best. Free. Clothes don't slide off, they last forever, or close to it. Some of mine are pushing 50 years old. And if you take care of them... there is no rust from the metal inside.

My sister gifted me a bunch of these for Christmas a few years ago. Eco-conscious and we'll get lots of use out of them!

Conclusion

Sooo... kudos to Superstore for switching away from plastic hangers but I'm not sure that their motives are purely environmental and altruistic. Hangers made from new wood... nope. Not buying it. They might have done better in saying... "we will be reusing plastic hangers for as long as they last... and we don't care about mismatched hangers". But... that's not very fashionable.

It's the same with some fashion, design and minimalism blogs. Buy cool new wooden hangers that all look the same and... ooohhhh... so pretty... so chic... so... yeah, no.

We'll keep using Gramma's hangers... we'll keep using our mismatched thrift store hangers. We aren't fashionistas... and we will try and get as much mileage out of the hangers as we possibly can. It's not much... but it makes a small difference.

Wednesday, 30 August 2023

How to Make Extra Work for Myself through Procrastination

There are some days where I could just kick myself. I see something that I need to do but I don't "feel" like it right now... so I don't do it and then... I end up making a tonne more work for myself. I don't know why I continue to do this... but I do. So I must a little mole hill ahead of me and at some point, it hits a magic threshold and POOF!... it turns into a mountain.

Here's the most recent example... We have an Airbnb in our basement and we ask all of the guests to please put their recycling into the blue box in the carport.

We don't want them to put it in the big blue curbside bin in the driveway because... our recycling system is complicated and most guests have absolutely no idea as to what can be recycled or not. They go by what works in their city or town. And even though we have diagrams on the fridge outlining what can and can not be recycled, inevitably, they make mistakes.

You see, our recycle (and garbage and green) bins get picked up by a huge truck with a big mechanical arm, that picks it up and then empties it into the top of the truck. And as it gets dumped out, a camera scans the items to see if there are "non-recyclable" items - like glass jars and styrofoam and filmy plastic. These are all huge no-no's as they can contaminate an entire load of recycling which then ups the rejection rate at the recycling plant for our city trucks which means that the city gets charged more and... our property taxes go up.

On top of that... you might get an emailed notice from the city saying that you had rejected items in your blue bin and to please do better. So far, we have been clean but... I don't want to start getting notices!

And so... we ask the guests to put their recyclables into the blue box in the carport. I then sort through that and place items in the appropriate bins. Some people are very optimistic as to what can get recycled... like price tags made out of cardstock. No... really too small. Anyhow, the system works for us. And for things like glass, styrofoam and filmy plastic, I bundle that up with ours and then take it to the local recycling depot. Because while they can't go into the truck... they can go into designated bins at the depot. Like I said... complicated.

Anyhow... there I am last week, and I see that the blue box in the carport is getting full and I think... I really need to sort through that... but I didn't "feel" like it. I'll do it "tomorrow". Yeah. Right. And that evening, I'm sitting in my office, with it's window overlooking the driveway and I hear cans and glass bottles hitting the bottom of a plastic bin. Noooooo.....!!!! Yesssssss... I see our current guest standing by the blue bin dumping the indoor recycling bin AND the blue box into the curbside blue bin. Nooooo... 

I guess they had more recycling in the suite and the blue box was too full for them and they... decided to just dump it all. I utter several suitable swear words. Now... I've got a bigger problem on my hands. The curbside blue bin is deep, like 3.5 feet deep and getting stuff out of there is a hassle. and it's all in a big schmoz and... bummer.

So... on a Sunday afternoon, when the guests were out... I spent a good 20 minutes rummaging through the bin, dumping stuff out on the driveway and pulling out all sorts of non-recyclables... glass jars, filmy and crispy plastic overwrap, styrofoam trays and an inordinate amount of Tim Horton's cups. While the cups are recyclable in the curbside bin, they need to be washed otherwise they contaminate the paper stuff in the bin. Same with the little yogurt containers and the margarine container and... on it goes.

Now, I would have had to pull all of those things out of the carport blue box when I sorted that... which is maybe why I procrastinated on sorting it then. Because we took all that stuff inside and ended up washing it. A lot of people would have just tossed it into the garbage bin but... we are somehow eco-nerds and sooo... we washed a good 2 dozen Timmies cups and various other plastics.

And then my partner came up with a bright idea... we have now put a large, clear, plastic garbage bag into the blue carport box as a liner. If ever the box is close to full but I don't feel like sorting it... I can just yank the bag out, toss it in the backyard and put a new bag into the box.

Hopefully one small step now avoids a much larger step later!

And perhaps I will learn the life lesson that... procrastination does NOT make the task easier or less onerous. In most cases it makes it harder and bigger and more icky! Lesson learned??? Only time will tell!

PS - We came out one morning after the recycling bin had been cleared out on collection day. There were several more unsorted, unwashed items in the bin. I pulled them out and decided to temporarily put them in the carport blue box. We then happily placed all sorts of recycling into the blue bin. And then... yesterday, a Saturday... I found that they had dumped their blue box into the blue bin AGAIN! Even though the blue box wasn't even close to being full. So... all those items that I took out... are back in there again. So much for solving procrastination!

PPS - The latest iteration of my procrastination habit saw me watching weeds grow in the front yard, thinking... "I need to go and stab those out". We are in the thick of summer, so the lawn really doesn't need mowing, the weeds needs removal. I procrastinated for a couple of weeks and when I finally did it... half of the weeds had gone to seed puffs and the job was so much harder and took much longer than if I had done it when they were small! Ugh!

Sunday, 16 July 2023

Your Recycle Bin is Easily Contaminated

Recycling... we all try so hard, but it is a huge challenge. I sometimes tell guests that they need a PhD in recycling to figure out our system. Some things can be placed in the blue bin, but some have to go to the depot. All cans and plastic tubs need to be washed to avoid food contaminating the paper in the bin. Pizza boxes... which look like they could go in the blue bin, really need to go in the green bin because of all the green stains on the cardboard. And on it goes.

We have a large basket in the cupboard under the sink that collects all of our recyclables. Once a week, I take it out to the blue bin and do a final once-over. There is always something that has snuck into the recyclables that doesn't belong there... a glass bottle, a pill bubble pack (mix of foil and plastic - not recylable) or a kleenex box with the plastic bit.

Our city is cracking down on blue bin contamination. They are sending scouts out ahead of the trucks now and checking blue bins. And woe to the household that has banned items in their blue bin. They might get a warning... and then after a few of those... something more serious might happen. Not sure what that is yet... but I'm sure we'll hear about it. Friends of ours have had two warnings already. Now... they recently moved into a house from an apartment so they are new to the whole blue bin thing. But they are getting a crash course!

Anyhow... I thought I would go over some of the obvious things that contaminate our paper recylables... A really good rule of thumb is this... if it's made of two different components (paper and plastic) it is NOT recyclable.

Tissue Boxes

This is an easy one. See that plastic window... it's gotta come out. And it doesn't take much to just reach into the box and tease the plastic away from the box. Depending on your jurisdiction, that plastic might even by recyclable... but with the filmy plastic stuff... not as part of the paper stuff.

I always flatten out the kleenex boxes as well, otherwise our basket under the kitchen sink gets full super fast.

It just takes a moment or two to tear out the plastic window and then flatten the box.

Pasta Boxes

And then we have pasta boxes... the ones with the little plastic windows so that you can see what type of pasta is in the box.

Not sure why we need that little plastic window... a picture of the pasta would be perfectly fine too! In fact... in the UK... in 2020... Barilla got rid of the little plastic window! They realized they didn't need it...

That was 3 years ago... not sure why that little innovation hasn't trickled across the Atlantic but... our pasta boxes still have plastic windows.

And guesss what... yep, you need to take the little plastic window out when you toss the box into the blue bin. And these ones are much harder to get out than the kleenex box. I often have to rip out the entire cardboard bit that the window is stuck to. So annoying. Time to ban those little plastic windows!

Christmas Cards

But they're paper, right? They should be easily recyclable? Well... it depends on what they are made of. Remember... things made of two different materials... especially plastic-y things... generally not recyclable. 

I hate to tell you this but there is no paper in the world that looks like shine-y gold or silver. All of that stuff is some sort of foil... probably nylon foil. And glitter/sparkles are definitely not paper.

Sooo if your Christmas card is pure, boring paper with no glitz or glam... it's probably recyclable. But if it's got sparkles or shiny bits... nope. I tend to rip the front off of these cards and toss that bit while recycling the back bit.

Store Receipts

Back in the day... we used to get short little paper receipts from stores, like tiny ones. One of the thrift stores in town still has a receipt like that. And it's actually "paper".

But most stores use thermo-paper and those receipts are super long with all sorts of information on them. But here's the thing... they are all coated (mostly) with BPA (Bisphenol A), a nasty industrial chemical that is super bad for human health. If you did put your receipts into the blue bin... the BPA would contaminate the rest of the paper... and might end up in tissues. We don't want that. Soooo... store receipts are NOT recyclable.

But what do you do with them? Throw them in the trash. If you're concerned about info on the receipts... then shred them and toss them.

Envelope Windows

I remember reading once that you could leave those little plastic address windows on envelopes when you recycle them. That still seems to be the case, probably because those little windows aren't super attached to the paper. It is relatively easy to heat the paper and have the adhesive dissolve. But if you want to go for it... tear out those plastic windows!

See... the rule of thumb about not recycling two different materials doesn't apply everywhere! Sigh.

Padded Envelopes

Some padded envelopes are obvious... they are plastic on the outside and have plastic padding (bubble wrap). Other padded envelopes are less obvious. They look like paper on the outside and inside... but have a layer of plastic bubble wrap hidden from view. You'll know they have plastic guts though because they are light... and make a plastic sound when you squish them and bend them. The other option is a padded envelope that is stuffed with paper products. They are usually a bit heavier and... for lack of a better word... feel lumpy. There are also some new ones that have a layer of honey-comb cardboard or corrugated cardboard as padding. Those are obviously great!

For recycling... pure plastic padded envelopes... can be recycled in our jurisdiction if they go into the flexible plastic stream and get dropped off a the depot. Pure paper padded envelopes can go into the blue bin. The mixed material envelope... with paper and bubble wrap... not recyclable. Goes in the garbage.

So annoying... Not sure why we need padded envelopes that can't be recycled... Do they "look" nicer than one-material envelopes?

Take-out Cups

These are a bane on the landscape. Timmies coffee cups. McDonald's drink cups. Starbucks latte cups. 7-11 slurpie cups. So many convenience cups. All of them lined with a thin film of plastic. What to do with them? Blue bin? Green bin?

They actually go into the blue bin, at least in our jurisdiction. As long as they are rinsed so they don't contaminate everything else in the blue bin.

Now that is all "in theory". I found this link which laid it all out quite nicely. The coffee cups are sorted out and then baled up and sent to a paper mill. There, they are shredded and then sent into a "hydropulper" which separates the different layers. Great! In theory...

The Cost of Contaminated Recycling

There was a recent news article on CBC which uncovered huge problems with our recycling system. You see... India receives tonnes of paper recyclables from Canada, which is not ideal to start with (huge carbon footprint shipping all that stuff overseas). But on top of that... the "pure paper" bales are contaminated with all sorts of things - like coffee cups and milk cartons and other plastics. 

And that's not the only time this has happened... Malaysia... the Philippines... All of them are miffed at Canada for sending contaminated containers containing "recyclables" which end up containing basically... garbage. Things like soiled adult diapers. That's just wrong.

Now, we aren't responsible for what gets baled and sent to India. Are we? Well, we aren't making up the bales but... what we put in our blue bin is the starting point. It all starts with us. Small steps... remember.

Saturday, 15 July 2023

What to do with Dead Batteries?

What do you do with your dead (or dying) batteries? I'm talking anything from AAA to 9 volt to Lithium-Ion to laptops to watches to car batteries. The average household has 80-100 batteries within its walls. Batteries are everywhere around us. Filled with metals and chemicals, some toxic, some not so much. But what do we do with them at the end of their life? Do they just go in the garbage?

Batteries in the Garbage

In some jurisdictions, batteries are frozen, crushed and then tossed in the landfill. Despite containing valuable metals, it's just not cost-effective to pick most batteries apart for these jurisdictions. At least not yet.

But this tossing of batteries is very short-sighted. Batteries will corrode and leak toxic elements into the groundwater, things like cadmium, silver, lead, mercury and nickel. This is obviously NOT a good idea - contaminated soil and groundwater is a long-term problem.

Car Batteries

Filled with lead and acid, these batteries need special handling. Your friendly neighbourhood car repair shop may take these free of charge especially if you are buying a new battery from them. Most transfer stations, landfills, and some recycling centres will also take car batteries.

But then what? Do they actually get "recycled" or just deactivated and dumped? Well... it's actually kind of fascinating... You can watch this YouTube video if you're super interested! But basically... they get all crunched up and then stuff gets sifted out...

  • 99% of the lead in car batteries is recovered during the smelting process and is recycled or sold as a commodity
  • 100% of the sulphuric acid is recovered and either recycled, sold as a commodity or neutralized for disposal.
  • Plastics (the housing of the battery) - recycled and sold as a commodity

There is no need to have a garden shed or garage you (or your aged male relative) stockpiles dead car batteries. They are much easier to dispose of nowadays. Same with car tires. No need to dump these out in the bush. That's just wrong.

Recycling Household Batteries

There are scads of places that accept used household batteries, everything from Staples to Home Depot. But what actually happens with the recycled batteries? Is this just a "feel-good" way of tossing them into a landfill?

Nope... more on that later... but for now... here's a list of places that accept old household batteries. And, in case you're wondering... batteries do NOT go into your blue bin. Just don't. You're basically tossing them in the garbage.

So... here in BC... you can recycle household batteries at places like:

  • Home Depot
  • Home Hardware
  • London Drugs
  • Staples
  • Canadian Tire
  • Rona
  • Best Buy
  • Recycling Depots - where you also bring styrofoam, plastic bags, used paint, etc.
But then what? You dump them in the bin at the recycling depot or at Staples and... where do they go?

Call2Recycle Canada

All of the battery recycling in BC is under the umbrella of Call2Recycle Canada. They are the ones who come and collect the batteries from participating retailers and process them. Want to know where a recycling collection point is for your area? Just type in your postal code on the Call2Recycle site and you'll get a list of places.

So what actually happens to your batteries? Well, they are sent to a recycling centre where they are sorted according to size and type. After that, they are sent to processing centres.

Nickel-based batteries, for example are sent to Sudbury. Depending on the battery type, they are then either melted, or ground into powder. The melting process allows the metals to be extracted. The single-use alkaline batteries are the ones ground into powder allowing the recovery of steel, nickel zinc, manganese and potassium. (Check out this YouTube video if you want to see the process.)

After that... the metals and/or materials are reused in different ways. The Call2Recycle site outlines the whole process and what happens to each type of battery.


I was a bit surprised when I saw that alkaline batteries are recycled into sunscreen and concrete aggregate! What the heck? Turns out the batteries contain zinc... and we all know that zinc goes into sunscreen. Whew.

Take-Away

The bottom line is... all batteries can be recycled. Don't throw any of them into the trash. Take them to a recycling centre/depot where they can be safely processed and converted into other products. No one else is going to do this for us. It's up to us to take that little bit of extra time and extract batteries from used devices (toys, watches, mobile phones, laptops, flashlights, remotes) and recycle them responsibly. We can do this. 

Monday, 29 March 2021

In the News - France Leads the Way by Introducing a "Repairability" Index

Have you noticed in the last few years (decades?) how it's gotten cheaper to buy a new [fill in the blank] rather than repair the old one? Whether it's a fridge, freezer, computer, lamp or bread-maker, somehow repairing these items has gotten ridiculously expensive, while the cost of a new one has gotten relatively cheap. There's something wrong with this picture.

I know that manufacturers have been building things under the motto of "planned obsolescence" for years now. The idea being, manufacture something so that it will only last a few years and the consumer (that's us) will have to buy a new one. Gone are the days when you buy a washing machine and expect to keep it for 25 years. Now, we're lucky if they last 10 years.

Part of this is also the "latest" fad. We need the "latest" iPhone or iPad or smartphone or purse or whatever. And where do the old ones go? The broken and worn out devices that are only a few years old? Well, hopefully they get recycled but... that's not always the case. Apparently a LOT of dead devices are sitting in people's cupboards, not being recycled. Some even end up in the garbage where they leach toxic waste.

Broken smartphone screen "Droid Eris meets pavement" by robertnelson is licensed under CC BY 2.0
Broken smartphone screen
"Droid Eris meets pavement" by robertnelson is licensed under CC BY 2.0

It's not an ideal scenario. Can you imagine if we changed cars as quickly as we changed our smartphones? Oh... wait... I think some people do that! But what if you always had to take your car to the dealership to get it repaired? What if independent mechanics couldn't access the user manuals and specs on your car's electronic systems? You'd be paying through the nose for dealership repairs. Sounds ridiculous but up until a few years ago in the USA, that was exactly what was happening. If your car broke down, you'd have to have it towed to the dealership. Their "proprietary" repair manuals and specs were not available to independent mechanics. You, as the car owner, did not enjoy the "Right to Repair". Crazy, yes?

Well... the exact same thing happens today with smartphones and other electronic devices. Oh sure, people can figure it out and there are all sorts of people and businesses that will repair smartphones but... did you ever notice the most appliances have a little phrase on the back/bottom? Something along the lines of "Attempts to open this appliance/case will void the warranty". Imagine if that is written on the undercarriage of your car motor? "Sorry... this car is not repairable... go and buy a new one."

The manufacturers don't make it easy for anyone else to repair their devices. In fact, repairability is not something that dovetails nicely with planned obsolescence. After all, why would you make something easily repairable if your ultimate goal is to have the device break down so that the consumer will buy a new device? The thing is... our current level of consumption is not sustainable. If the entire world consumed items at the same rate that we do in Canada and the USA... we'd need to find five more Earths. Not going to happen. We need to conserve what we have and use it very wisely.

Even something as simple as replacing the battery in a smartphone or a laptop can be a challenge. I remember our first smartphones (Samsung Galaxy S2) ... you could easily remove the back and access the battery and SIM card. Same with my old laptop... just pop out the batter housing and pop in a new one. Not anymore. Our new (1 year old) Samsung Galaxy S10s do not have a removable back. Same with my HP laptop. If the battery starts failing... well, then, it's time to replace the entire laptop and/or phone. There's a website, IFIXIT, that scores the repairability of smartphones... Here's what it has to say about the S10

-   battery replacement is possible but still unnecessarily difficult
-   glued-down glass both front and back means greater risk of breakage and makes repairs difficult to start
+   a single Phillips driver takes care of all the screws

Repairability index of a Samsung Galaxy S10 smartphone
Repairability index of a Samsung Galaxy S10 smartphone

That's just crazy... but that's a lack of repairability for you. The S10 scores only a "3" on the list (out of a possible 10). Does any smartphone score a 10?? Well, our old S2 scored an "8"... hmph. The S5 (which we also had) scored a "5"... And then the S7 scored a "3". See the pattern? Older phones are more repairable than the new ones. Sigh. But... there is hope... enter the FairPhone 3 which scores a solid "10" on the scale of repairability. The Shift 6m (German company) scores a "9". All of the other newer phones (since 2019) score a "6" or lower. The thing is... buying a new smartphone is NOT a cheap endeavour! They usually cost well over $1000 CAN and that is a hefty chunk of change.

This is why repairability is about to explode onto the global market. France is first out of the starting gate by introducing an index of "repairability" for things like washing machines, lawnmowers, televisions and smartphones. The ultimate goal is to reduce the amount of waste and keep appliances and devices in circulation for longer. Nearly two-thirds of Europeans would rather repair their products than buy new ones... savvy people.

France's repairability index (scale of 1 to 10)
France's repairability index (scale of 1 to 10)

And... in November 2020, the European Parliament followed suite and voted to support consumers' Right to Repair.

The resolution was adopted with 395 in favour and just 94 against, with 207 abstentions.

“By adopting this report, the European Parliament sent a clear message: harmonised mandatory labelling indicating durability and tackling premature obsolescence at EU level are the way forward,” said Rapporteur David Cormand, MEP from France.

Apparently, more and more US states are proposing Right to Repair legislation in their jurisdictions as well. Which is good news!

There are, however, a few potential hiccups with the French system... manufacturers are the ones who grade their devices/appliances on how repairable they are. Hmmm... still, it's a start and time will tell how that works as people engage with the devices and decide if the repairability index is accurate!

Repair Café from Wikipedia
You're likely heard of repair cafés popping up all around the world. The idea is that volunteers come and help people repair their broken [fill in the blank]. I just had a look at the link above and there's even a repair cafe in Nanaimo! (Although, I'm not sure how much it's doing during the pandemic!)

The truth is... some appliances have gotten so complicated (I'm looking at you Smart TV) that it's no longer an easy thing to just replace a tube or a transistor (or whatever). Repairing a Smart TV can be a daunting prospect.

On the other hand... we have also lost a lot of the repair no-how for simple things like a hole in a sock. My Mom used to darn our socks (remember that!?) but I don't think I'd be able to do it. Not only do I not have a darning block/egg, but our entire sewing kit fits in a cookie tin. There's no big supply of yarn or thread. We can still sew buttons back on... but that's about it! So... in some cases, the tendency to not repair isn't due to a lack of repairability... just a lack of ability!

I'm hopeful that this repairability thing will take off... we can do our own part. By not buying the latest whats-it... but taking our broken whats-it to a repair cafe. By asking manufacturers about the repairability of their devices/appliances. It can be hard. Not to be driving the latest flashy SUV. Ours is just a few months shy of it's 25th birthday... imagine that... driving the same vehicle for 25 years. Radical thought.

P.S. Another news article came out which indicates that the repairability legislation is spreading across Europe! Excellent news.