I was out jogging just now and picked up this from the verge!
I couldn't believe that someone is not willing to share their teabags, yet they are prepared to let them rot on the roadside. A sad waste.
There seems to be more and more rubbish on our roadsides these days and the problem is getting worse not better, I feel. It is not just packaging that has gone crazy, but our whole attitude that we can just throw something away and not worry about it any more. More than ever this year, I want to do my bit to minimise waste, encourage others to do the same and to be really strict with supporting companies who are making the change to a circular economy.
That's my wish for 2019.
To help me maximise this target I've signed up to Rachelle Strauss' Waste Warriors course as although much of the content is what I cover in my books, I know there are steps further into the course that even I've not dabbled with yet.
Without wanting to give away too much of what's in the course the first two days are all about motivation and what makes you want to reduce your waste. What's your big why and what will keep you sticking to your new principles when you get short on time and tempted to waver. I've been on a zero waste journey for such a long time now, I realised as I was listening to the course (it is a daily 5 minute audio accompanying a simple call to action), that I have forgotten my own 'big why'! What made me start to radically reduce my waste in the first place?
I really, honestly can't remember any single incident that made me decide to reduce my rubbish. For me it is just that I don't like waste! So I had a little look back at the pictures on my phone and found this one.
For now this is my big why! This really shouldn't be necessary these days. We have the technology and the understanding to be able to preserve resources. Manufacturers and suppliers just need that little push in the right direction, to use that technology and understanding. We, the consumers can give them that push. Let's make 2019 the year we do things differently - the year we make that shift to valuing our resources rather than throwing rubbish away.
Time for a cup of tea?
Showing posts with label plastic pollution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plastic pollution. Show all posts
Monday, 14 January 2019
Thursday, 30 April 2015
The Plastic Challenge - four months later
The Pitt family have been plastic free now for four months. Well almost… almost plastic free that is.
Any eco challenge would really be pointless if you didn't use up what you already had and despite the fact that I've been doing my best for naked shopping for a long time now, I feel that at the end of four months of being close to plastic-free purchasing, we are still surrounded with plastic, plastic and more plastic in our house.
By the end of February we had accumulated this little collection below - all from items we already had in stock before the start of 2015. I kept this stock of plastic in a small box in my recycling cupboard.
It came in handy last week when I did a Dustbin Diet workshop at St Christopher's School, in Accrington, Lancashire. I did take great care to gather up all my plastic resources to bring home with me, having littered the stage with them in assembly and then thrown them around the classroom while discussing the difference between valued resources and wasted rubbish. The students absolutely got the point and they are now working away at their own version of 101 Ways to Live Cleaner and Greener for Free which will be published in July this year, and more importantly they are thinking about how to break the habit of throwing away rubbish and planning ways to reduce, reuse and recycle more.
Then on Friday, while I had the loan of the car, I had a clear out of my recycling cupboard. I had cards to take to a local collection point to be turned into new cards, which are sold for charity. I had some clothes I no longer needed - a cardigan that somehow got left out of the children's clothes clear out a couple of years ago and some golf trousers belonging to Mr Pitt's slimmer days as well as some old frayed shirts. All this was destined for the community shop where they sell the clothes but also get money for 'rags' too. I had a broken mouse and and a broken iron destined for the small electricals collection bin in a nearby car park and I had my tub of plastic. Having cleared out my cupboard, the temptation to recycle the plastic was overwhelming and so out it went into the recycling box. I have the pictorial evidence to remind me.
Then I wondered: what would I use as resources for my next Dustbin Diet session? Time to start again on the plastic packaging box, I felt, and so I've been having a use it up week.
On Saturday, we munched our way through a packet of oatcakes that came in a Christmas hamper. On Sunday we used up some biscuits in a lovely lime cheesecake. We finished up a layer of a box of chocolates that had been hanging around a while, and we finished one layer of the cheese crackers we bought at Christmas. That was already quite a lot of plastic!
Then, I finished up an old packet of yeast that had got left behind in the back of a cupboard. (It still worked fine.) I emptied out a few things from their flimsy plastic packaging and put them into reusable storage jars. I also rounded up the bottles of various products such as shampoo and conditioner in the bathroom and finished them off this week, rinsing out the last dregs. In no time at all I have filled my plastic resources container ready for the next school!
But all that is plastic we already had, so what of our plastic free purchasing this year? I have to say, that as we are trying to live our lives as close to 'normally' as possible, we haven't managed to succeed in keeping our purchases 100% plastic free. I think we have managed to cut down significantly though.
Here's our single use plastic purchase list for the first four months of 2015.
The necessary stuff...
The stuff we could have avoided if we had been more organised…
Stuff we could have avoided but didn't notice or think about...
Stuff that we could have avoided but cracked (i.e. the complete fails!)...
Junior daughter's list:
My list:
Family shopping list:
Plastic brought in to the house by others…
Other miscellaneous items that have appeared...
Who did they get munched by, I wonder?
And here it all is:
In addition to all this we've acquired:
So how have we avoided having much more plastic than this?
1. Quite a bit of home baking - we have so far made all our own bread, biscuits and even oat cakes and crisps.
2. Always taking our own bags and containers when out food shopping.
3. Buying from shops rather than the Internet and whenever possible buying second hand from charity shops.
4. Being organised about taking drinks, meals and snacks when out and about and particularly for Junior Daughter taking sufficient food to school in her own containers to avoid all the pre-packed plastic covered food available in the canteen.
5. Having a plentiful supply of peanuts, Japenese rice crackers, giant corn, and Bombay Mix all purchased in our own containers from either SESI or Whole Foods Market.
6. Cooking from scratch from fresh ingredients rather than buying pre-packed ready meals - but we have been doing this for years so that's just a habit we already have.
Conclusion? We could try harder but not a bad effort, dare I suggest?
Any eco challenge would really be pointless if you didn't use up what you already had and despite the fact that I've been doing my best for naked shopping for a long time now, I feel that at the end of four months of being close to plastic-free purchasing, we are still surrounded with plastic, plastic and more plastic in our house.
By the end of February we had accumulated this little collection below - all from items we already had in stock before the start of 2015. I kept this stock of plastic in a small box in my recycling cupboard.
It came in handy last week when I did a Dustbin Diet workshop at St Christopher's School, in Accrington, Lancashire. I did take great care to gather up all my plastic resources to bring home with me, having littered the stage with them in assembly and then thrown them around the classroom while discussing the difference between valued resources and wasted rubbish. The students absolutely got the point and they are now working away at their own version of 101 Ways to Live Cleaner and Greener for Free which will be published in July this year, and more importantly they are thinking about how to break the habit of throwing away rubbish and planning ways to reduce, reuse and recycle more.
Then on Friday, while I had the loan of the car, I had a clear out of my recycling cupboard. I had cards to take to a local collection point to be turned into new cards, which are sold for charity. I had some clothes I no longer needed - a cardigan that somehow got left out of the children's clothes clear out a couple of years ago and some golf trousers belonging to Mr Pitt's slimmer days as well as some old frayed shirts. All this was destined for the community shop where they sell the clothes but also get money for 'rags' too. I had a broken mouse and and a broken iron destined for the small electricals collection bin in a nearby car park and I had my tub of plastic. Having cleared out my cupboard, the temptation to recycle the plastic was overwhelming and so out it went into the recycling box. I have the pictorial evidence to remind me.
Then I wondered: what would I use as resources for my next Dustbin Diet session? Time to start again on the plastic packaging box, I felt, and so I've been having a use it up week.
On Saturday, we munched our way through a packet of oatcakes that came in a Christmas hamper. On Sunday we used up some biscuits in a lovely lime cheesecake. We finished up a layer of a box of chocolates that had been hanging around a while, and we finished one layer of the cheese crackers we bought at Christmas. That was already quite a lot of plastic!
Then, I finished up an old packet of yeast that had got left behind in the back of a cupboard. (It still worked fine.) I emptied out a few things from their flimsy plastic packaging and put them into reusable storage jars. I also rounded up the bottles of various products such as shampoo and conditioner in the bathroom and finished them off this week, rinsing out the last dregs. In no time at all I have filled my plastic resources container ready for the next school!
But all that is plastic we already had, so what of our plastic free purchasing this year? I have to say, that as we are trying to live our lives as close to 'normally' as possible, we haven't managed to succeed in keeping our purchases 100% plastic free. I think we have managed to cut down significantly though.
Here's our single use plastic purchase list for the first four months of 2015.
The necessary stuff...
- 2 small plastic bubbles from the new batteries for our kitchen scales,
- plastic packaging from cat wormer and flea stuff,
- plastic packaging from various medicines.
The stuff we could have avoided if we had been more organised…
- 2 plastic lids from tetrapak orange juice when we decided we needed extra orange juice for a party (we normally buy orange juice from the milkman in reusable glass bottles).
- The plastic wrapping from three birthday cards when I didn't remember to buy suitable cards from our wonderful local charity cards (These are still plastic wrapped but I return the wrappers for reuse.)
Stuff we could have avoided but didn't notice or think about...
- 4 lots of plastic wrap from round wine bottle lids - while most of these seem to be metal, we haven't discriminated between those wrapped in plastic and those wrapped in metal.
- The very annoying bit of plastic that the person serving me in Oxford Covered Market wrapped my cheese in without me noticing, EVEN WHEN I HAD SPECIFICALLY ASKED HIM NOT TO!!!
Stuff that we could have avoided but cracked (i.e. the complete fails!)...
Junior daughter's list:
- the wrapping from a plastic punnet of grapes bought while out longer than expected
- plastic packaging from some flapjack - again while out and about and hungry without enough pre-planned snacks
- the plastic wrapping from a bag of apples
- the plastic wrapper from some 'honey barbecue wholegrain snacks'
- two plastic bags from clothes bought via Internet.
My list:
- the wrapping from some feta cheese when I'd promised to make a Greek salad for a shared buffet supper
Family shopping list:
- 1 plastic bag from Emmentaler cheese bought on holiday in Austria
- 1 large packet of crisps bought on holiday in Austria
Plastic brought in to the house by others…
- the flimsy plastic wrap from inside two boxes of cheese straws brought to a party
- 3 plastic punnets from olives brought to a party
- a small bit of cling film from something brought to a party
Other miscellaneous items that have appeared...
- a small pack of Galaxy Minstrels
- a large pack of M&Ms
- a small silver packet from some kind of biscuits
Who did they get munched by, I wonder?
And here it all is:
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Our 4 months' worth of plastic packaging. |
In addition to all this we've acquired:
- a small piece of bubble wrap which I'll keep for reuse
- various 2 litre plastic bottles from lemonade and coke and tonic water which we are going to use in the garden as cloches
- a plastic bag from the butchers when we couldn't resist buying their delicious pasties and hadn't come prepared with a container (we opened the bag really carefully so we can reuse it!)
- the plastic bag from a 2.5 kg bag of cat food which we are using to store all our plastic for the year
- two 10kg sacks from cat food - already used for garden purposes
- three tubs with lids from Philadelphia cheese washed and already reused several times for storage
So how have we avoided having much more plastic than this?
1. Quite a bit of home baking - we have so far made all our own bread, biscuits and even oat cakes and crisps.
2. Always taking our own bags and containers when out food shopping.
3. Buying from shops rather than the Internet and whenever possible buying second hand from charity shops.
4. Being organised about taking drinks, meals and snacks when out and about and particularly for Junior Daughter taking sufficient food to school in her own containers to avoid all the pre-packed plastic covered food available in the canteen.
5. Having a plentiful supply of peanuts, Japenese rice crackers, giant corn, and Bombay Mix all purchased in our own containers from either SESI or Whole Foods Market.
6. Cooking from scratch from fresh ingredients rather than buying pre-packed ready meals - but we have been doing this for years so that's just a habit we already have.
Conclusion? We could try harder but not a bad effort, dare I suggest?
Wednesday, 31 December 2014
Happy New Year!
If you've read my blog before, you might know that I love a New Year's Challenge. In 2013 I did a year of Swishing which changed my attitude to shopping completely. This year I pledged to buy no new books (except as birthday presents). I've managed far more trips to the library and got pretty organised about ordering books for collection - a great service that libraries provide. I've also given away 10 books each month - well - at least up until November. When I finish this blog post I'm going to select my final 10 books for 2014 and then contemplate whether I can possibly carry this on into 2015.
But even if I do carry on the book challenge, I always like to have a new challenge too. And next year will be, without doubt, the toughest yet…
Now why do I think it is going to be so hard?
Our lives are so full of plastic. It is everywhere we turn. In the last couple of months I've been really taking note about how much stuff we have that came here by means of plastic packaging. We use plastic all day, every day it seems. If we wanted to say that from the 1st of January to 31st December 2015 I would use nothing that involved plastic a whole lot of stuff would go to waste - and we don't do WASTE.
So what can we do to achieve our plastic free - zero waste lifestyle?
These are the Pitt family rules for our plastic free 2015:
1. Buy nothing new that has any plastic in it or around it.
2. Collect and weigh all recyclable plastic that arises from purchases already made in order to raise awareness of the plastic in our lives. We will recycle or keep this plastic for reuse.
3. Collect and weigh all non-recyclable plastic that arises from purchases already made. We will accumulate this and photograph it and hopefully see it diminish month by month.
I will hopefully be keeping you posted of our progress as we gradually eradicate single use plastic from our lives. If not then I'll be sharing a moan or two.
Can we do it? How long will it take to be single-use plastic free?
One month?
Six months?
A whole year?
We'll see. Bring on the 2015 challenge. Happy New Year!
But even if I do carry on the book challenge, I always like to have a new challenge too. And next year will be, without doubt, the toughest yet…
A year without single use plastic.
This is not something I've just dreamt up today… oh no. I, or rather we - the Pitt family - have been contemplating it for a while now. I think it was around October time that I first suggested the challenge to Mr Pitt. He was tucking in to a packet of crisps at the time. "Can't be done!" was the initial reaction. But then gradually came more and more comments like "We won't be buying anymore of these, then." Soon after that came Mr Pitt's home-made potato peel crisps.
We've been doing our bit for naked shopping for a while now, so we are well practiced at buying fruit and veg packaging free and in recent months I've discovered options for buying a whole range of goods packaging free. You can read more about this in previous blog posts.
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A fairly typical Pitt shop. |
So why are we doing it?
Firstly, we have been a 'Zero-Waste' household for quite a while now. It is many years since we had a rubbish bin in the house and because of that we always think of our 'rubbish' not as 'rubbish' but as 'resources' and as such we put what ever it is we have finished using into the appropriate place to be reused or recycled. We don't just 'throw away'.
But, over the years that I've been researching waste management and recycling for my books, and talks as well as my own family life, I've started to look more carefully at what I do and at what businesses and organisations do in terms of waste.
As I see it now, there are two schools of thought about Zero-waste. There's firstly the 'Zero-waste to land-fill' school of thought and that's what we've managed to achieve for many years now. But how? Well, there has for a long time been very little in Oxfordshire that doesn't get collected for recycling. The local council here even collect quite a lot of 'flyaway plastic' as long as it is clean and bagged up so that it doesn't fly away to pollute the countryside when they are collecting.
But there're still a few things that aren't recyclable - and guess what - these are all mainly plastic or plastic based packaging items. We have generally tried to avoid such items, but when we have had them, we have disposed of them by using them to light our wood burning stove and wood-fuelled cooker. Plastic is much better than paper at this task, doesn't stink like firelighters, but I don't know the full extent of the pollution it may be causing in the atmosphere.
The second school of thought is not just Zero-waste to landfill, but Zero waste at all. And that's where I want to be a year from now. I'm not wanting to demonise plastic completely, but it is responsible for a great deal of pollution on our lovely planet. Our oceans are full of the stuff and it is high time we did something about it. So I've taken a good look at what we consume, how we consume it and how we pass it on to its next purpose - whether that is to be reused, recycled, composted or burnt by us or by the local council at its new energy from waste plant. My conclusion is that to move from Zero-to landfill (we are 99.99% there) to being Zero Waste, it is the single use plastic that we have to say goodbye to.
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Home-made potato crisps |
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Home-made butternut squash crisps |
![]() |
Dry goods you can buy in your own containers at SESI, Oxford |
![]() |
Weighing out dried mango at SESI |
![]() |
My packaging free dry goods will come from SESI. It is easy to buy and store enough for three months. |
Our lives are so full of plastic. It is everywhere we turn. In the last couple of months I've been really taking note about how much stuff we have that came here by means of plastic packaging. We use plastic all day, every day it seems. If we wanted to say that from the 1st of January to 31st December 2015 I would use nothing that involved plastic a whole lot of stuff would go to waste - and we don't do WASTE.
So what can we do to achieve our plastic free - zero waste lifestyle?
These are the Pitt family rules for our plastic free 2015:
1. Buy nothing new that has any plastic in it or around it.
2. Collect and weigh all recyclable plastic that arises from purchases already made in order to raise awareness of the plastic in our lives. We will recycle or keep this plastic for reuse.
3. Collect and weigh all non-recyclable plastic that arises from purchases already made. We will accumulate this and photograph it and hopefully see it diminish month by month.
![]() |
A selection of oils and vinegars I can buy in my own containers |
![]() |
Locally made washing up liquid. I'll take my own bottles to refill. |
Can we do it? How long will it take to be single-use plastic free?
One month?
Six months?
A whole year?
We'll see. Bring on the 2015 challenge. Happy New Year!
Wednesday, 4 June 2014
Just how much plastic do we need in one bathroom?
I came across this campaign today run by The Story of Stuff.
http://act.storyofstuff.org/page/s/microbeads-5gyres?utm_source=SOSsocial&utm_medium=Facebook&utm_campaign=Microbeads-Natl
I had no idea until I read this that things like face cream might contain tiny beads of plastic. These plastic microbeads are abrasive and so are used as an exfoliant, to wash away the dead skin particles. Yes wash away. There lies the problem. These particles are, by design, made to be washed down the drain, which means they are going to end up as pollutants. Did no one think about that as a problem when they came up with the idea?
Our consumer culture is doing us no favours as well as harming the environment. People invent these things, without thinking through the consequences for the environment. That's why it is so important that we help the next generation to see the effect on the environment as being the most important part of any business or product. 'Do no harm' needs to be at the forefront of our minds as we find, develop and trial new things.
I hate the thought that many of us who care about the environment may have been using such harmful products without realising.
It makes me wary of buying any cosmetics.
At the beginning of this year my sister asked me to help her with a clear out of some cupboards. She said she'd 'got it down to three boxes of odds and ends' that she couldn't face going through and knew that she'd likely have put it all in the bin if she didn't have a zero waste sister! I sorted through the boxes and found homes for everything - mainly through reuse and recycling schemes run by charities.
But I did bring home a bag full of various cosmetic products - bottles of shampoo, conditioner, shower gel - some half full, some with just a small amount in. I did suggest to her that she could use these up and then recycle the bottles in the normal curb side recycling collection.
"But I've got a bathroom full of the stuff already!" she protested.
So I said I'd use it up myself. I used to think I was frugal about making sure I use every bit of a product, even rinsing out the bottle as the last use of it. The more you use up and the longer you make it last, the better - I think - as all these things take energy and raw materials to make and transport to the end user. But when I got back home and looked at what I had in my own bathroom, I was dismayed to realise just how many plastic bottles with varying amounts of content I had accumulated.
So, I made a pledge to not buy any more cosmetic products until I have nothing left. We're now in June, I've bought nothing, yet I still have a whole tub full of cosmetics. I may well get to the end of the year without buying any more, and when I do finish up my current stock and recycle all those plastic bottles, I'll be thinking very carefully about what I buy in future.
I don't know if the products I already have contain plastic within them. How do I find out if they do, I wonder? And if they do… what do I do with them?
All these cosmetics are staying in the plastic tub. They are coming out one product at a time and being used up before selecting the next one. I guess that means I can be careful to read what's in them (if I can read the tiny print) but what do I do if I don't like what I find? It seems I can make no difference now, having bought or acquired the stuff. It just goes to show how important it is that businesses are ethical and considerate in their research and development, because once something is made - it is sometimes too late to undo the harm.
http://act.storyofstuff.org/page/s/microbeads-5gyres?utm_source=SOSsocial&utm_medium=Facebook&utm_campaign=Microbeads-Natl
I had no idea until I read this that things like face cream might contain tiny beads of plastic. These plastic microbeads are abrasive and so are used as an exfoliant, to wash away the dead skin particles. Yes wash away. There lies the problem. These particles are, by design, made to be washed down the drain, which means they are going to end up as pollutants. Did no one think about that as a problem when they came up with the idea?
Our consumer culture is doing us no favours as well as harming the environment. People invent these things, without thinking through the consequences for the environment. That's why it is so important that we help the next generation to see the effect on the environment as being the most important part of any business or product. 'Do no harm' needs to be at the forefront of our minds as we find, develop and trial new things.
I hate the thought that many of us who care about the environment may have been using such harmful products without realising.
It makes me wary of buying any cosmetics.
At the beginning of this year my sister asked me to help her with a clear out of some cupboards. She said she'd 'got it down to three boxes of odds and ends' that she couldn't face going through and knew that she'd likely have put it all in the bin if she didn't have a zero waste sister! I sorted through the boxes and found homes for everything - mainly through reuse and recycling schemes run by charities.
But I did bring home a bag full of various cosmetic products - bottles of shampoo, conditioner, shower gel - some half full, some with just a small amount in. I did suggest to her that she could use these up and then recycle the bottles in the normal curb side recycling collection.
"But I've got a bathroom full of the stuff already!" she protested.
So I said I'd use it up myself. I used to think I was frugal about making sure I use every bit of a product, even rinsing out the bottle as the last use of it. The more you use up and the longer you make it last, the better - I think - as all these things take energy and raw materials to make and transport to the end user. But when I got back home and looked at what I had in my own bathroom, I was dismayed to realise just how many plastic bottles with varying amounts of content I had accumulated.
So, I made a pledge to not buy any more cosmetic products until I have nothing left. We're now in June, I've bought nothing, yet I still have a whole tub full of cosmetics. I may well get to the end of the year without buying any more, and when I do finish up my current stock and recycle all those plastic bottles, I'll be thinking very carefully about what I buy in future.
I don't know if the products I already have contain plastic within them. How do I find out if they do, I wonder? And if they do… what do I do with them?
All these cosmetics are staying in the plastic tub. They are coming out one product at a time and being used up before selecting the next one. I guess that means I can be careful to read what's in them (if I can read the tiny print) but what do I do if I don't like what I find? It seems I can make no difference now, having bought or acquired the stuff. It just goes to show how important it is that businesses are ethical and considerate in their research and development, because once something is made - it is sometimes too late to undo the harm.
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