Showing posts with label Plastic-free. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Plastic-free. Show all posts

Sunday, July 10, 2022

Plastic Free July: Days 1-10

 Hi there,

As you know, I think about the Environment lots and try to make some changes and differences.

There's a great challenge called Plastic Free July which you can sign up for and they send you ideas for the challenge.  There's all sorts of resources including those for promoting it to others, e.g. posters and the resources are tailored towards different individuals.

Here is a Calendar of things you can do.

My Mum and I sat and had a read through the calendar today to see which ones we do and which ones we need to work on.

A disclaimer here.  When I share posts like this, it is never to shame anyone for what they do or don't do.  I do it because I care passionately about these things and I know having a dialogue about them is an important part of change.  I also hope it inspires people.  It's not a brag fest either.  There are plenty of unhealthy practises in my life which I need to change. If you take one thing from this post or find yourself in agreement or find it interesting, then I have achieved my aim.  However, I will always challenge practises in real life which I think are just down to being lazy as the lazy TA who couldn't be bothered to wash out her Lucozade bottle so she just lobbed it into the bin instead of the recycling bin and then the subsequent TA who laughed and said she often couldn't be bothered either, found out after I expressed my disgust.

Day 1:

Join the Plastic Free challenge.  Well, I joined in with this 2 years ago and it made me make some important changes and I am looking again at this challenge this year (to coin Ang's Words for the year) to see if there is any more I can do.   If you even make a decision to try and join in with the challenge, even in retrospect and make one change, then that is progress!

Day 2:

Bringing your own shopping bags.  I am good at this one.  This one is ALL about routines for me. Once you have used the bags, making yourself replace them in the place you will be able to access them again when you need them is the KEY to succeeding at this.  By the way, I include produce bags in this one too (which more often than not are old bread bags or junk mail bags). So, empty your shopping out and IMMEDIATELY put your reusables back in:

a) car boot,

b) under your car seat.

c) in your handbag

d) in your cycling pannier

e) in your coat pocket

f) by the front door

g) hanging on coat hooks with coat

h) in your desk drawer

i) in your work locker

j) in ALL of the above so you are NEVER caught short!


And if all above fails, CBC and I are TOTALLY stubborn on this one (at least when we are together).  If we can carry it in our arms to avoid taking a bag, we will, to the point of ridiculous! We will load it back into the trolley and stick it all loose into the boot, we will walk down the road with our arms full.  Once, I was in the supermarket and realised I'd forgotten my bags,  I went and raided the Recycling Carrier Bag point to reuse someone else's old bag rather than admit defeat. Another time, I took the carboard box on the Flour shelf and from the fruit display in Lidl to avoid taking a bag- like we used to in the 80's and 90's.

Day 3:

Bringing your own drinks bottles is another really easy one that I assume that most people do. I have not willingly personally bought a bottle of water since at least 2018 except maybe once.  I travelled to Italy by train (it took almost an entire day) and didn't buy a plastic bottle.  My key to this was having a few reusable bottles (I took 4 to Italy). Yes, they might be heavier to carry but it is worth it. Again, I travel by my own steam a lot of times- bike, walk or train- so it's not like my lifestyle makes it any easier.  Again, routines are your friend.  Every evening when I get home from work, I refill my Stainless steel 750ml flask and replace it in my bike pannier.  If I go out without my bike, I am in that mindset that I always think to put the bottle in my rucksack/handbag- having a few sizes would help if you are a minimal bag person - you could have a small one hanging off a karabiner.

Shenfield station (Platform 3) and  Liverpool Street station (to the left of the main Circle Line entrance) both have Filtered Water dispensers so it's worth seeing if a station has a refill point. Or just ask.

Buying a nice reusable for a friend is a great Eco-friendly present.


Day 4:

I have had a few reusables over the past 10 years or so. Again, having more than one helps. Keeping one in your hand bag, bag, one in the car helps. Routine is king again. Wash and dry it when you get back and replace it in the best place for you.

I bought a Hunu collapsible Hot drink cup last week- it folds tiny and is perfect for travelling.

I am also very stubborn. If a place refuses my reusable or has no option for drinking in in something they will wash up, I make a point of changing my mind about wanting a drink from that establishment and saying my reason. I don't care if they think I am awkward. I always try to remember to ask before I order to find out what it will come in but I have been caught  out once or twice.


Day 5:

Saying no to a straw is a tiresome one. Because, even though I make a point of always asking for no straw, I have been given one SO many times because they do it on Autopilot. At least they are mostly paper nowadays but still, I would prefer no straw. Say it clearly if you are refusing and say why- hopefully they will remember if you put emphasis on it.

If you go to Italy, the phrase for no straw is "Senza Cannuccia per favore."- I speak from experience! ;-) 

Day 6:

Again, I am quite au fait with this one.  Using what you have already is a great one! I make use of any suitable container for reuse.  If you have plastic bags from products you've bought, use those to house loose things you buy. My Mum is the expert at this. In the Zerowaste shops, they always comment on the sheer variety of receptacles I use.  Yesterday,I bought Mulberries in a Jelly Tots tube, Lentils in a biscuit tin, pasta in a posh chocolate box, tumeric in a yoghurt pot, apples in a bread bag, green beans in a magazine bag, broccoli in an old potato sack.  Have a 'reuse' bag ready that you can grab ready. Any useful bag or containers get shoved in it.

Day 7:

I've sort of mentioned Loose produce and how I approach that above but I tend to try and look for those products that don't come in plastic and stick to those.  Lidl is quite good for that. You can get Avocados, vine tomatoes, peppers, courgettes, sweet potatoes, aubergines, bananas, spring onions, onions, potatoes at most times of year and other seasonable ones. It does depend on where you live though but I try to always check if I am going somewhere, if there is an option where I might buy things.

I am lucky that I can easily travel to places to get loose options.  The Milk and More  does plastic-free options although they do cost a bit more.

Day 8:


Bar soaps and shampoo bars are a great way to avoid plastic and one we have embraced.  They are great gifts to give or receive and a nice thing to give to Food Banks also. We have been using Lush's Montelbano shampoo bars for at least 3 years now and they last well. I have been using a nice Comme Avant Shampoo bar recently that my hair loves too. It was a present.

Day 9:


Do I need to mention the "R" word again? Routines are your friend. I bought a lovely bamboo set (and received another as a gift) and keep a set in my bag (in a makeup bag).  I also just carried a metal set around with me before though.  Wash it up when you get home.  I put a set into CBC's glove compartment too so he always had a set. He's got his own set in my satchel too.

Day 10:


Plastic free cleaning products are great! Again, we've not bought things like washing up liquid, toilet cleaner, surface spray, descaler, bathroom cleaner for at least 3 years.

If you aren't lucky enough to have access to a Zerowaste shop (brands like Miniml, Sessi, Fill are very reasonable), you can order products from the  Ocean Drop online from a myriad businesses.  These come in tiny little boxes and are concentrate which you pop into an old bottle and add water and you have cleaning products ready.


And that's Days 1-10.  I'm happy with my progress on these 10 items. I wonder what I need to work on next week?


Wednesday, May 13, 2020

Eco things- Trying to be eco-friendly during Covid stay at home


            A lot has had to go by the wayside in terms of making eco-friendly, waste-avoiding decisions and actions during lockdown.  This has been quite hard to deal with but of course, sometimes, you can't do your usual ways of living in a crisis. However, it's trying to do little things which are important.
I thought I'd have a look back on what I've been able to do or things that have not worked out so well.

1.  Avoiding of fresh food waste.  Being at home all the time is very good in terms of avoiding food waste. We are able to monitor things that are going off and use them better, except the odd radish that has gone amiss.

2. Using up older items in the cupboard.  Some of the discoveries include: Self-raising flour with a BB2014 date on it- it didn't have weevils so it made a nice Leek and cheese pie.   A jelly with BB2015 and various flours and nuts and seeds have been utilized.
3.  Still getting our milk and juice from the Milkman and the milk and juice bottles are returned and reused.
4. Vegetables and fruit at school:  When we first went into lockdown and we were at school on that first Monday, there was a trolley full of apples which were/are the ones delivered for KS1 children for free. But we only had 10 children and there was no way of getting the apples to our kids at home. Leaving them in a box outside the school might be viewed with suspicion. I encouraged all the teachers to take bags home after all possible ways of getting them to the children was discussed.  I ended up taking home 3 bags of 10 apples which lasted me a month at home.  I also went to the allotment bed and picked 2 massive bags of Kale which was going to seed- this lasted us until April.  I also brought home all the items of food and drink I had at school to use.
5.  Thanks to a local Facebook group that CBC follows, we discovered a wholesaler not so far from us where we could go and buy vegetables and eggs from.  A tray of 30 eggs - so saving having lids for 5 boxes of eggs worth, a cardboard tray of potatoes, loose tomatoes, avocados, beans, spinach, cabbage, broccoli, lemons, courgettes, peppers, sweet potatoes, beetroots, satsumas, apples, pretty much everything.  So no plastic for our vegetables which are the majority of our food.  So happy to be able to get plastic-free vegetables. Even better, when we've been there, there's been no one else there so no queues or panicky trying to get out of everyone's way.
Also, managed to get asparagus from a local grower on our cycle ride and rhubarb. No packaging except for rubber bands.
6.  Did you just read number 5?  Well, we've managed maximise use of the eggs. Every egg that has been eaten in Lockdown has been shoved in a baking tray in the oven and left. Then, when the oven is used, the egg shells are baked and then I have crushed them and shoved them in an old M&S cake box- I have them strewn them around seedlings and plants that slugs and snails might be interested in to use as natural slug repellent.  In addition, I attended on online webinar on using 10 frames with children to support place value understanding and they recommended using egg boxes- so I've cut up my 30 box into 3 ten frames ready for school!
7.  Before lockdown, I ordered a box of 10 packets of 150g crisps from Two Farmers who make compostable crisp packets- it came in cardboard which I am saving for projects and to share with a friend who posts craft products.  In addition, I ordered my usual bulk order of Eco-Leaf toilet roll in compostable packaging, made of recycled paper.
8.  Any card packaging which has food on it that can't be recycled has been torn up and put into the compost, like chip papers from the few times we've had chips. This is something I do anyway.
9.  Religiously putting the coffee grounds and tea leaves onto the garden after every pot full.
10.  For lovely decoration, have been picking a few common wildflowers to put in my jugs in the kitchen- cow parsley and stitchwort. Free and providing interest and variation and bringing nature into the house.
11.  Being at home has been I've been using the herbs in the garden constantly- chives, rosemary, mint, lemon balm, sage, thyme, sorrell, marjoram.
12. We had such a spell of sunny weather in April that the waterbutt was empty so I took to having a shower with a bucket to catch the water which I then used to water the garden. Usually, I'd have no time to do this when going to school.  When it finally rained, I made sure to fill up the watering cans with water from the waterbutt so they could fill up more, I also took the bucket outside and did the same and the indoor watering can plus all the jugs and empty milk bottles- the water was then used to water all the indoor plants.
13.  I've spoken before about how I use cotton handkerchiefs.  When at home, I've been continuing to use these as my germs are in my own home. At school, I made sure to use disposables as to conform to rules.
14.  Bought Tony's Lonely chocolate in Sainsbury's. This comes in paper and foil and is very fair trade and slavery-free plus palm-oil free.
15. Most craft projects have been made out of packaging and things I've had already.
16.  Anything bought online has been second-hand.
17.  Tried to walk or cycle only except when going to the wholesaler to get the vegetables..
18.  CBC shared some bread flour with a work colleague when flour was scarce and we'd ordered a 13kg bag of flour from a local bakery.  We reused a large clean paper bag I'd carefully preserved from another order to put several kilos of flour in for him.
17.  We've reused some plastic yogurt containers for making hummus, planting seeds
18. My tomato seedlings were all planted in toilet rolls and all of them are in two plastic drawers bought home from school to save from being chucked. 

Things that haven't gone so well include buying various bags of crisps, sweets and biscuits, super noodles that have come in non-recyclable plastic wrappers (which I am saving to take to Terracycle at the library when it reopens), choux-buns and cheese and fish (a few times) in plastic packaging, having some things sent through the post, having bought a few things (though I have asked for recycled packaging to be be used if possible) but I've tried my best.  

In addition, making donations to charities that help others is an eco-friendly thing to do in this time, if you have the money to do so which I am lucky enough to be able to do.  Signing petitions to help others, including those who are the worst off is important- if we don't care for humans, how can we say that we care for the Earth?

It's important to remember that being eco-friendly is about being conscious and making the best choices that are available to YOU! Not everyone has a wholesaler with packaging-free vegetables or a milkman, or a garden or a bike or space to store a stack of crisp packets or even a council who are still picking up your recycling. I do the best I can and that's the important thing.  Circumstances are individual.  How much or how little you can do depends on doing what you can physically do in the circumstances you have available to you. It's making the conscious decision to do SOMETHING that is important.

Hope you are all well and sending you love.
xx






Thursday, January 09, 2020

Plastic free solutions- Toothtabs

As you may have noticed, I have been trying, for a while, to try and find plastic free, waste free or better solutions for various aspect of my life.

One of those areas I have struggled with is toothpaste.  Toothpaste tubes are one of those things that will not get recycled.  They sit in landfill once they have been used.

I've tried a few solutions over the last six months which I haven't felt satisfied with.

The one I am talking about today is/are Toothtablets.  These can come in fluoride and non-fluoride versions.  I've investigated various version online but I wasn't sure what to order.

Luckily, at the Eco-fair in a nearby town in October, there was a seller selling them so I decided to give them a try.

I bought a pack of 125 of them which is a 2-month supply - it cost £5.50.  I'm not sure how long a tube of toothpaste usually lasts me but this seems quite expensive.

The inclusion of Fluoride for me made these much better than the other plastic-free toothpastes I have tried- ones in glass jars. I like the fact with these, you pop the tab in your mouth, chew on it and then start brushing your teeth and it makes a sort of paste, albeit fairly thin with not loads of foam. My teeth have felt fairly clean .  The packaging is minimal and is a compostable, plastic-free bag (it seemed fairly strong and secure- made of some sort of corn-starch 
Here's the info on them:
Toothpaste Tablets packed in a refillable and recyclable metal tin, approximately 1 months supply for one person. Or choose a 2 month supply in a home compostable bag, 125 tablets. Made in the UK
These toothpaste tablets are 100% vegan and plastic free.
Available in Fluoride-Free or Fluoride.
ecoLiving will plant a tree through Eden Reforestation Project for every product sold!
How to use - Chew a tablet until it turns creamy - Brush your teeth with a wet toothbrush as usual - Spit - done!
The tin is food-safe and made in the UK, plus toothpaste tablets are made in the UK. Refills are available.
Ingredients: Sorbitol, calclum carbonate, kaolin, sodium bicarbonate, sodium lauroyl sarcosinate, hydrated silica, maltodextrin, yeast extract, sodium monofluorophosphate, magnesium stearate, mentha arvensis leaf oil, menthol, stevioside, mentha piperita oil. 
The fluoride tabs contain 1450ppm fluoride. That's the same as regular toothpaste.
Open opened use within 12 months.
Made responsibly in the UK
ecoLiving a member of 1% For The Planet, donating a portion of profits to protecting our oceans from plastic pollution. ecoLiving is also in partnership with Eden Reforestation Projects, planting native trees to help stop climate change and reduce extreme poverty.
Packaging 100% home compostable, recycled paper or food grade recyclable/reusable tin.


You can buy them at https://www.ecoliving.co.uk/toothpaste-tablets.html

What did I think of them?  Well, I don't like them as much as proper toothpaste but they are definitely the plastic-free solution I've liked best so far.  I like the fact these ones are philanthropic with donating some profits, the packaging is minimal, they are easy to use, don't take up much space, my teeth felt pretty clean after them- I would like it if they had a stronger minty taste (though they do taste minty). I do worry if they are as 'fresh-breath' smelling as normal toothpaste though I haven't had anyone recoiling in horror (at least I don't think so/hope so!), but they are a solution!


What do you think?
Would you give them a try?

x

Saturday, December 28, 2019

Eco-December

I haven't written many Eco-posts recently.  I think perhaps because I felt I hadn't done anything particularly noteworthy or new but that's no reason not to get on and post so here's a few ways I have tried to be a bit more eco-friendly in December or seen this that have been more eco-friendly

At our School Christmas party last year, I was distressed by vast quantities of Caprisun cartons and juice cartons that went into bin bags.  This year, I was super pleased to see that G, the person who was responsible for the parties was making up fruit squash into 90 plastic disposable tumblers which she was then rewashing after each party and reusing for the next one. Although it would be better to have 90 non-disposable ones (like borrowing them from the Canteen?), it is still an improvement on last year.  I helped her when I saw her washing them up and then after the party which I was at, I made sure we washed them and dried them ready for her so she would be willing to do this again. I made sure to tell a teacher for the next party that they needed to wash the cups up. I then made sure the tumblers went into the cupboard to be used again.

At the same party, the children were given a packet of crisps each. My local library collects Crisp packets to send to Terracycle to recycle into something else so I made sure the children at my party flattened their crisp packets for me and put them into a bag.  I made sure to ask the teachers at the remaining 3 parties to do the same. I'd already missed 3 parties the previous day but that is still 270 crisp packets that didn't go into Landfill and hopefully made some money for the library.


I have not purchased any wrapping paper.  Not least because I have A MILLION gift bags from children at school.  I've chosen to wrap my presents in old tissue paper, old wrapping saved from last year (in fact, my Eco-club colleague from school laughed when I handed her her Christmas present because I had used the exact parcel she wrapped my birthday present in and just crossed out our names on the label and wrote them in the other way round and then changed Birthday to Christmas Everything else is wrapped in 'Who gives a crap?' toilet paper external papers which didn't even come from my own toilet rolls!!!! I asked the loo ladies at my Music camp to save them for me when my did their jobs in the loo and came home with about 50 sheets of patterned paper!  I then used sticky delivery labels from school which the eco-friendly caretaker at school gave me after saying, "Agrgh, what is the point of them sending this massive stack of sticky labels with addresses." I said, "I can use those for parcels." and have been for the last few months!  Yes, my presents may look a bit scruffy and unconventional but frankly, I am not bothered and anyone who is, doesn't deserve a present from me with such a snobby attitude! ;-)

Our headteacher announced that there would be an afternoon tea provided on the last afternoon and so, in that meeting, I reminded people to bring along a container with them to take things home so that nothing would be wasted and lo and behold, people remembered and nothing was wasted! This made me happy!  I think everyone who had a container was also happy!

We ran out of glasses so my head asked for some plastic cups so I went and got the aforementioned ones from the party and brought them in. I also made sure to wash them up so they could be used again. Oh, and the crisp packets were all saved too...

My work colleague came into the staff room and grabbed a box of open Shreddies from on top of the cupboard (presumably left by someone a long time ago!) which had a Best Before date of June 2019 because he wanted the box for whatever craft they were doing in class.  He was just about to chuck the nearly full bag of Shreddies in the bin and I hastily stopped him and said I'd take them home for the Compost/food waste bin. I did, but actually, I've tried them and they taste good so free Shreddies for me for the holidays!

There were three 12 unopened packs of chocolate fairy cakes left on the table which were going out of date and were going to be chucked out so I grabbed them and took them to church for the carol service yesterday as an option for the mincepie haters!

I already mentioned my 'Secret Santa' gift at school was to buy 20 bamboo, plastic-free toothbrushes to be given out in hampers to school families- nice to include an eco-message.

I must say that one area CBC and I are struggling with is Toothpaste. We've been using glass jars or toothpaste and tooth tabs for the past few months but really aren't so keen on them. I caved and bought a tube of Colgate. I do miss proper toothpaste!

Went to the Refill room and filled our 3 Shower gel bottles- we haven't had to buy shower gel bottles for a year now as The Refill Room celebrated its 1st anniversary last week!
It's a small thing which is outside my control really but this year, whenever I have bought anything second-hand on eBay, I have always sent the seller a message asking them if they can reuse packaging rather than giving me something new and by and large, they have done that, a few saying what a good idea it was to actually ask!

I wanted to share an eco-message for Christmas presents and birthday.  I bought my niece a bamboo hot drink cup for her birthday and have bought handbag rolls which contain a fork, spoon, knife, chopsticks, straw and straw cleaner  made out of bamboo for a few people. Also bought shampoo bars for people from Lush for Christmas.  For my Mum (STOP READING NOW MUM!)

I have sourced several items in the charity shop and filled them with food items that are plastic free. Herbs and spices and dried goods given in washed out jars.  Same for my Dad! His chocolate cashews come in an old honey jar!

I'm quite pleased that with CBC's family, we all decided to give no Christmas presents this year but to just share food and joy together. It is quite a relief not to stress about presents and it is better to save resources.

This afternoon (written on 23rd December), I wanted to make some soup so I used the bag of carrots rescued from school which are about 2 months past their best before date. Of course, when peeled, these are perfectly good carrots, I also added in a lump of courgette that CBC would definitely have thrown away had he seen it plus using the small lump of Chorizo from CBC's party Paella and the plastic-free sundried tomatoes from Italy plus Tumeric, Paprika, lentils and herbs (plus a tin of butterbeans) from my beloved Refill room- proving it is stupid to live by Sell by dates and also that you can make things with a little of everything. We now have hearty-soup to eat on the 27th, 28th and some freezer portions.

Have you done anything particularly noteworthy with an eco-message recently?x
xx