Tesco in Truro, Cornwall

Oh my days.  I am in such a state of plastic-induced horror I have verily harrumphed myself into something measurable only on the glasgow scale.

I have already exclaimed on facebook about the INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED DISCOUNTED LIMES that were all together in a tray.  Someone had bothered to bag and tag about 50 limes in those flimsy grocery bags to show their new price.  Well, thought I, they must be different prices.  NO!  Dear reader, hold onto your sandals for they were ALL the same price!

WHY NOT JUST PUT THEM ALL IN THE TRAY WITH ONE SIGN?!  Seriously, I know you want the barcode on them to differentiate them from other limes but a bag for EVERY lime?!  Take the financial hit and compost the blighters.  Give them away.  Stop being so bloody ridiculous and heartless.

ARRRRRGHHHHH.  The stupidity.  I was in a major hurry trying to avoid meltdown-mania from my increasingly rebellious brethren and only in the wretched store because they own the car park (next to where, incidentally, I am working on a stall highlighting the perils of plastic litter.  FML.)  I know supermarkets are not ideal places for planet conscious types and will always raise our ire in some way.  But the limes stopped me in my tracks.  Because a person DID this.  One of the people in that store.  They did this with their hands and their time and their mind.  And everyone else in that store thought it was OK with their minds.  Despite moaning children I tried to pick up a handful to take to customer services.  I wanted to say, ‘Do you think this is OK?!  This is NOT OK!  When you took my son round on your ‘farm to fork’ advertorial journey around your store with his Scout group, did you say about how you are smothering anything farmers try to grow in bloody plastic shit?  DID YOU?’

However, I was thwarted by the limes themselves – the stickers had all stuck together so they were all falling out in a ruddy great big lime train.  I must’ve looked super keen for those plastic-wrapped limes.  Not one would suffice.  I needed ALL of them!  Half price limes everyone!  They’re mine!

Anyway, I digress.  I did not go and holler hellup at customer services with all my limes in tow because I couldn’t carry them with the baby as well and they wouldn’t have given a monkey’s anyway.  So instead I thought, ‘I will send them an angry tweet’.  But my phone was out of battery.  No photo.  No tweet.

Now, if I had been in my right mind I would have bought all the limes and then bloody well boxed the lot (twitching at the post office lady who always asks me what is in my parcel because, obviously, I might be a cornish mum lady terrorist.  Though copme to think of it – is sending limes in an angry way to someone a terrorist act?) and sent it off to HQ with a terse note demanding significant demonstrations of remorse and promises to change.  Instead I blew my top quietly inside my mind and headed off to find some lettuce.

And the lettuce!  Oh, dear reader, the lettuce!  Rows and rows of wonderfully chilled bagged and chopped/shredded, washed ‘lettuce’.  It was a sanitised version of lettuce-like food on the aisle, all bagged up in stiff plastic.  And this wasn’t just the brands like florette who do fancy lettuces or rocket or whatever.  Tesco had bothered to chop up iceberg lettuce and seal it in a bag.  Iceberg lettuce.  The most banal, quotidian of lettuces that everyone knows how to prepare.  WHY?!  Honestly.  Kids are not going to have a clue about fruit and veg if it is like this.  They’ll think it is 3D printed all chopped up in a bag.  Potatoes come in packets and boxes frozen and half baked.  Carrots are called ‘batons’.  (Harrumph)

And so onto the avocados.  This was actually – hold onto your hats – pleasing!  They had job lots of avocados in really hard boxes for £3.  This is lovely and my dog has had the best afternoon trying to get her treats out of the box (not the avocados, dog treats).  It can be reused or composted.  Ideal.

And then onto trying to leave the store where I was faced with a veritable wall of discounted multipack bottles of water, wrapped together in plastic.  WHYYYYY?!  Why can’t they have a wall of reusable, funky bottles instead and a ReFill fountain?!!  Why bottled water?!  ARRRRRRRGGGGHHHHHH!  It is almost a cliche about bottled water we all know about it so much.  It costs 5000 times as much to buy a bottle of water as fill one up at home.  WTAF.

And this was in a whirlwind 20min max visit.  You then come out of the store to see the estuary at low tide, littered with plastic crap.

It hurts!  The bloody frustration and futility of it all!  There’s me on my stall about 200m away, trying to engage the public in understanding how important picking up litter is, trying to stop them dropping it and demonstrating the skanky perils of bottled water and plastic lids and packaging on our habitat and then…  and then…

…Tesco.

I am not a fan of Tesco right now.

 

How Life Has Changed…

OK so I started really thinking about all this in Octoberish last year.  I was struck by a Natural World documentary that I downloaded on Sky where a lovely lady in Hawaii laid out all the plastic she had picked up in an hour on her stretch of isolated paradise.  I remember that she had LOADS of:

Cotton buds

Toothbrushes

Roll-on deodorant balls

Straws

Nurdles

Blister packs from tablets

Bottles and bottles and bottles

Plastic bottle tops

I was really surprised by the deodorant, toothbrushes, straws and cotton buds…  It hadn’t occurred to me that these things were ruining the world.  It moved me so much, I think because I am a mum and because I LOVE the sea and beaches and live in Cornwall.  I see the rubbish around but never connected the dots.  This film made me realise that this problem was MY problem.  Not the local or county council’s, not the person who dropped the litter, not the sea-cleaners (sea cleaners?!) but mine.  And yours.  OURS.

And then it made me realise that this needed a change of what we consider normal behaviour.  Normal behaviour has become walking past rubbish because we know someone else will pick it up.  Normal behaviour has become about convenience and cheapness – single use plastic.  Normal behaviour has become about thinking that recycling works when actually it is riddled with systemic problems and a lack of financial viability.  When actually there is too much rubbish to be picked up and we need to start tidying up after ourselves again.  We need to be motivated to care!

I really liked changing how I did things.  All this time on and I happily use different products.  This has become normal for me and I am so pleased.  I think when you feel lost sometimes it is good to realise how far you have come.  And so:

In the kitchen

We got rid of our tassimo coffee pod machine 🙂  We make filter coffee instead.

I now use wooden washing up brushes with changeable, compostable wooden heads and natural bristles.

I use washable cotton cloths and have crocheted a few of my own with nubs on for funky style and super cleaning 😉

I use compostable safix pot scrubbers, made from coconut husk!  They are marvellous.

I compost my organic food scraps.

I refuse to buy fruit and veg in plastic bags.

I reuse jars and bottles.

I use beeswax wraps to cover and wrap food up in instead of clingfilm.

I use bicarb to clean!  I love it!

I have mugged up on recycling and realised I can recycle a LOT more than I did!

 

In the Bathroom

I have tried various different organic deodorants.  My favourite is from the Natural Deo Company.  Pricey but long lasting, actually works, comes in different scents and strengths and in a lovely glass pot.  I do not buy traditional deodorants any more – they smell toxic and have a weird residue.

I like bamboo toothbrushes.  I am looking for a bamboo head for my leccy toothbrush and need cheaper alternatives to keep my kids in brushes without going bust.  Work in progress.

I use soap instead of bottles of bodywash.

I use shampoo bars instead of shampoo in bottles.

I use my wonderful straight razor and lovely sharp razor blades instead of disposable razors or cartridge razors.

I use crocheted, washable cotton eye make up remover pads!  Totally organic, compostable and colourful – way nicer than a plastic bag of cotton wool balls!

I use crocheted, washable cotton face cleanser pads – ditto above.

I use crocheted, washable cotton flannels.

I use a compostable, organic konjac sponge for cleaning my face day and night.  It has built in cleansing properties so I use this instead of my beloved, super convenient but environmentally nasty facial wipes.

I use washable sanitary towels.  The tampon and sanitary towel industry is a plastic NIGHTMARE FYI.

I use hydrophil’s bamboo cotton buds.  Completely compostable.

I use cotton cloths for cleaning instead of bathroom wipes.

For the Kids

Balloon free zone in the main: although the biodegradable ones I used seem to have vanished in my compost bin!

We have reusable straws.

We have ice lolly molds.

I avoid fast fashion, cut knackered trousers into shorts and sew on funky patches 🙂

I use reusable nappies as much as possible on the baby.

I use reusable, cotton cloths to clean the baby’s bum instead of wipes.  I soak them in a solution of water, olive oil and either tea tree or lavender essential oil from Holland and Barrett.  These clean, moisturise and the essential oils provide an antibacterial clean!  AND they get muck off way better than smudgy wipes do 🙂  And your baby smells yummy.  BOOM.

I try and use bamboo toothbrushes but as my Man does this kind of shopping he tends to bring in normal toothbrushes.  What can I say (I harrumph).

I avoid packed lunches but if we do them I use old clothing for beeswax wraps (Mummy, look!  My sandwich is wrapped in stars!) and takeaway containers for sarnies etc.  I never buy individually wrapped chocolate bars or bags of crisps – I would rather buy one big bag/bar and portion it out into containers if I am going to do this.

They eat fruit by the bucketload (thank GOODNESS!)

I bake biscuits and cakes (at the moment!) so no problem with snacks etc.

I cook lots of food at home from scratch – I like cooking and my Mum cooked for us so it feels normal.  We don’t do ready meals.

We all have water bottles and take water out with us.  When you have a baby/toddler/kid you do this for them anyway so it is an easy habit.

I get them to bin rubbish if they see it around 🙂

 

For the Dog

Free pour dog treats from pets at home

Use poo bags sparingly – if she has gone off the path then am happy to leave it.  Poo is biodegradable – animals LOVE it.  Bags are not.  ‘Degradable’ dog poo bags will NOT become at one with the environment.  EVER.  Plastic is degradable.  In 400 years it will be in microscopic bits, I agree.  But I disagree that this is a good thing!  Degradable poo bags are a greenwashing campaign of nonsense that I would sincerely like to address with the manufacturers…

I have a big ol’ bone that is pulled out of the freezer for a new chomp nearly daily.  Keeps her very busy, cleans her teeth, relieves teething issues and boredom and isn’t vacuum packed or any other nonsense.

I can improve a lot on the packaging of daily food I get her.  As I have her over time I will get better at knowing these things 🙂

 

What a list!  So much more than I realised!  Am most pleased 🙂

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bicarbonate Of Soda

Oh my.  It has taken me a while to get here – we all know that natural cleaning/home guru types use bicarb to clean their homes – but I have finally made it.  I have had THE best time cleaning my house with the absolute beast of all cleaning agents: bicarbonate of soda.  I kid you not, it is, hands down, the EASIEST, most wonderfully efficient, cheapest and most lung- and skin-friendly way *ever* to clean one’s home.  I am so happy!  No eczema break-out awaiting here.  No slightly stinging knuckles.  No chemical induced wheezing (I had ‘Cillet-Bang lung’ once.  I cleaned a house we were moving out of very thoroughly with it and couldn’t breathe properly for about two weeks).  No worry about the kids being around or the windows closed while I scrubbed at the hob.

So what complicated procedure did I go through?  How does this mysterious chemical work?  Well, lean in dear friends.  I bought a kilo of bicarb off of Amazon for about a fiver.  I bought some grapefruit essential oil off of Amazon for £1.99.  THEN:

  • I sprinkled a teaspoon of bicarb onto a small plate
  • I added four drops of the essential oil
  • I dabbed my everso slightly damp cotton cloth into the mixture, getting a generous amount onto the cloth
  • I rubbed it on the grease…

And?!  AND?!  The grease came off in grubby little balls of greasy grub, revealing super non-greased, non-scratched metal underneath.  It was clean.

I was very excited at this discovery.  And still skeptical.  I literally, dear friends, did not believe my eyes.  So I got more bicarb and more essential oil and dabbed again and rubbed over the splashback/board/wotnot behind the oven.  I have tried cleaning this with Method.  I have tried cleaning this with Flash.  I have tried cleaning this with Sainsbury’s own kitchen cleaner.  I have tried Fairy kitchen cleaner.  I have tried leaving cleaner stuff on it.  I even tried a real live grapefruit.  What I have found is that they just smear grub around and make my cloth/grapefruit unpleasantly sticky with grease while not looking at all clean.  So this was, for me, the Test.  And *whispers* – it worked.

I KNOW!  WTAF.  I just rubbed my bicarb and few drops of grapefruity loveliness over it and the grease rolled into dried up little balls of grossness and plopped onto the hob.  No water, the grease does not respond well to being wet (oil and water don’t work together – which makes me wonder about the wet solutions I have been sold by companies (Unilever, am looking backatcha AGAIN) that stare into my eyes to tell me that they ‘cut through grease’ when they CAN’T because they are WET).  And if it is a sticky patch, rub the bicarb over it gently so it sticks on the top of it then go back after a few minutes and it comes off.  It dries the grease up and de-sticks it.

It is truly wonderful.  I also did the oven air vent like I was on some magical advert from the 90’s, cutting through the grease and having a dance while I did it.  And my kitchen smells grapefruity.  It is so pleasing!

I also did the hob which was unpleasant after a few days of cooking cakes, fish pies and roast dinners for Easter entertaining.  This time I sprinkled the bicarb directly onto the hob and left it a couple of moments then went to work on it with my cloth.  I couldnae believe my EYES.  The grease and general food grub reacted in the same way and rolled into dried up little balls.  In fact they were all so dry I vacuumed them up!  Then I went over it with a warm wet cloth and it has come up beautifully.

What else do I use it for?

  • I already use bicarb to sprinkle along the bottom of my bin to absorb smells and excess liquid that might leak.
  • I can also dab bicarb under my arms for the same purpose!
  • Half a cup of bicarb down the loo acts as a cleaning agent.
  • Half a cup of bicarb down a plughole followed by half a cup of vinegar works as a deodoriser and cleaner.
  • And a dab of bicarb on a cloth can be used to shine up your silver.  Or if you are me, your sink 😉  (As in shine up my stainless steel sink – not my silver sink!  I use brasso for that…  LOLZ).
  • Pop it in your wash with your clothes as a stain remover, whitener and brightener and fabric softener!  Half a cup in where your fabric softener normally goes and a bit less detergent and it does all these fancy things without chemicals.  I know, you don’t believe me.  It’s ok.  *try it* 🙂 Great info from thespruce.com about how baking soda works

It is AMAZING stuff.  I am in actual LOVE.  No plastic bottles.  No dispensers.  No locks on the cupboard door away from little fingers.  No chemicals.  And I have barely made a dent in my supplies.  Flash is £1.75 for a standard 500ml bottle from Sainsbury’s.  Bleach is £1.  Sink plughole unblocker is nasty stuff and about £3.  Airwick/Ambipur refills are over £3.50 and aim to reproduce ‘natural’ smells like white rose (personal favourite), vanilla or citrus.  But you can make your own with the essential oil you use when you clean your kitchen and it will de-smell your house anyway, or put some on a cotton wool ball behind the radiator 🙂  Fabric softeners are about £2 a bottle and fancy laundry detergent that keeps your clothes bright and stain-free are about £5 a kilo…

My supplies were £7 all-in with no after effects for either my humans or our habitat.  They are also just two items rather than six that total £15: kitchen cleaner, bleach, plughole unblocker (single use), airwick refills, fabric softener and fancy laundry detergent.

Excellent wonderment.

 

 

 

A Third Less Waste to Landfill?!

I spoke to the Husband last night and we were both shocked and amazed to realise that as a family of five we are now putting out just two bags of general waste a week 🙂  This is down from at least three, sometimes four!  So, since starting this journey something has changed in my house and I thought I might work out what it is 🙂

Principle changes:

  • Mugging up on recycling.

I thought that our council didn’t recycle things unless they were sparkly clean, didn’t recycle opaque plastics, didn’t recycle mixed materials (so plastic tabs on soy sauce bottles meant they contaminated the waste), didn’t recycle food packaging trays…  But they do!  They recycle all these things!  Now most of what we use goes in the recycling, rinsed out and squashed.  A bit of ‘co-mingling’ (LOVE that term) is fine so paper labels on tins and bottles is ok, as are plastic tabs.  I didn’t realise that Sainsburys recycle stretchy plastics like plastic carrier bags, bread bags (tip crumbs out), flimsy grocery bags…

  • Making a bit more effort.

I have made more of an effort to learn about recycling (boring) and because of my blog people tell me where I can recycle more stuff.  Lush cosmetics take bottle lids so I am collecting them in a jar on my windowsill (although I just found out the council take them too so…).  Pens can be taken to terracycle collection points where BIC buy them off charities and schools.  My husband’s special milk is in cartons with a plastic lid so I cut this lid out and recycle them now too.  I am going to get a bin for my recycling as the bag off the back door is filling so fast these days!

  • Shopping differently

I don’t rely on the Supermarket for my main shop any more, I get a family delivery box from the local farm shop instead.  I get meat, fish, dairy, fruit and veg and bread for a week for £70.  I top up with pantry goods from the supermarket as and when.  This food box comes free of so much packaging.  I bake a lot too so I am not buying so much nonsense in little non-recyclable wrapping!

  • Changing habits

I have changed!  I don’t buy store deodorant any more, I LOVE my deodorant balm too much to change.

I have invested in a job lot of bicarbonate of soda.  It cleans me, is a scouring agent for round the house AND absorbs stinks if you pop some in the bottom of your bin.  There are more uses, I am not quite there yet though.

I am using reusable nappies more.  I buy about one new one a month and have about 4/5 now.  I still use disposables but am not dependent on them – I have more than halved my use of them and don’t use nappy bags at all.  I use washable wipes and my own homemade concoction of tea tree essential oil, olive oil and water to clean bums :).

I have crocheted myself funky washable cotton body and face cloths and make up remover pads :).  They are incredibly effective at getting off my daily grub with a slight roughness for exfoliation.  So am not depending on face wipes any more.

We are using soap more than handwash around the house now too.  I got some soap trays and they are actually easier for the children to use than the handwash gels.

I have planted herbs and am working out how to grow vegetables (I have fingers of certain death in the garden but I am trying).

We have a compost bin in the garden and use it for all our scraps!

My husband has stopped buying convenience food in single use plastic.

I think these are the major differences we have made!  What I LOVE is the effect on the kids.  They pick up all these messages in their everyday lives and respecting where we live and the other animals we share our space with is part of this.  We’re not perfect – we are all a work in progress.  I have also realised that this time last year, with a 3 and not yet 1 year old at home, I doubt I would have had the headspace let alone time to do all this.

Changing habits is a big deal.  But I am so happy and so shocked at the visible effect it has had on the amount we send to landfill!  YAY!

The Big Think: Plastic Wrapping in Supermarkets

There are a couple of movements around my way where we are being called to demonstrate at a supermarket and shame them into stop using plastic packaging on their fruit and veg.

I have posted about this myself and am completely behind people who want to do this and behind any action that draws attention to the superfluous use of plastic packaging.

But I wonder if we are going about this the right way.  I have a grudge against wrapping tins of beans and tuna in swathes of plastic to market a reduced price ‘multi buy’ when I can as easily put four unplasticked tins in my trolley singly instead.  I resent buying avocados at a greatly inflated price because three of them are in a plastic packet while single ones are open.  I also resent ripe or ‘about to spoil’ avocados being inflated in price, like they are doing me a favour by selling me ripe ‘ready to eat’ fresh food.

However, there are methods behind the madness and so I think we could benefit from choosing a different way to shop.  What is this different way?  You may well ask!  Well, lean in!  *Shop locally at grocers and farmers markets.*  I KNOW!  Craziness!  Whodathunkit!  🙂  Well, sarcasm aside, I do think it is an idea that takes a while to germinate.  It takes planning and change.  We don’t like change!  For a lazy habitual shopper like me it is harder work than picketing a supermarket and blaming them for the poor choices I make in their store.  It takes some willpower and effort, but is very satisfying and *immediately* effective.

So, why do stores use plastic packaging.  A cucumber wrapped in plastic lasts for 3 days longer than one outside of it.  Plastic is a fantastic material – it is clean, protective and makes the food last longer.  We are an island and need to buy in substantial amounts of produce.  If we didn’t have our fresh food in plastic it would be moldy by the time it got into a store.  It would be bruised.  It might be smelly or sweaty or have bugs growing on it.  We wouldn’t buy it because that is just gross and it would be thrown away.  So plastic preserves the food and reduces food waste.  Food waste is dreadful.  It is unethical when we factor in the amount of food poverty in this country and a completely avoidable waste of money.  What else is with the plastic?

  • Avocados are cheaper in the plastic because they are cheaper for the store to buy because they will last longer.  When the stores buy naked avocados they are upping the amount of stock likely to be wasted when it ripens and hasn’t been bought.  This is offset by a higher price per avocado.
  • Lettuces and other soft leafy items bruise and wilt easily and need a plastic cover for a cushion while they travel.  This also protects them from moldering on contact with trays when sat out all day.
  • Soft fruit like strawberries and raspberries need to be in plastic because it means they get to move around and breathe while being transported.  A strawberry touching another strawberry goes moldy in an flash and us customers do NOT want that.  Fresh fruit does not last very long at all when it has been picked.

We can say that we are happy for nature to be nature and offer to forgive some mold here and there.  But this isn’t true and nor should it be.  We expect our food to be fresh and edible but not too fresh!  We do not want to smell bad smells of rotting food or see rotting food.  That would be disgusting!  And we definitely would not want to pay a premium for this service because the supermarkets have to offset the losses they make with waste by charging us more.  Think of what supermarkets are like:  they are bright, air conditioned, artificial and clinical places.  Why?  To make us feel ok and like we can trust the food.  No bugs here!  Why is this?  The supermarkets do not exist in a vacuum or as some kind of conspiracy against nature.  They want to make money and to do this they do have to please us in some way.  We feel we can trust this environment, trust our food and trust them – and by and large this is true.  We must remember that we are very fortunate to have access to this wonderful food.

So if it is impractical to expect supermarkets to ditch plastic and charge us more for fresh food what is to be done?

Instead of asking supermarkets to change how they use plastic to keep our island (us) in bounteous produce, maybe we should look to ourselves to change where we source our fresh food.  If we were to go to farmer’s markets and local grocers we would likely get food fresh because it didn’t travel far.  Minimal food miles = minimum acid rain bleaching coral in the oceans; minimal carbon dioxide puncturing holes in the ozone layer; happier, healthier oceans and ocean life.   YAY!  We would get food that isn’t in plastic, or if it is we can take it out and give it back to the stall holder to give to the farmers (they like this!).  YAY!  We would pay a reasonable price because the food wouldn’t have the premium price tag attached that supermarkets need to offset their huge potential food waste.  Thrice YAY!  Smaller shops are better shops.  Local is excellent.  This is plastic free living.  It is kind and conscious and thoughtful.

So there it is.  Don’t blame the supermarkets (not too much anyway!) for the way we shop and what we expect as customers.  Shop for your fresh fruit and veg somewhere else, somewhere local and fresh and plastic-free.  Take the time you could be picketing outside a supermarket to say hello to a local farmer or stallholder who has been trying to sell you a naked lettuce for YEARS.  🙂  🙂

Thank you for listening.

 

Thinking About: Plastic Packaging

Plastic packaging is a scourge of the single-use plastic world.  We hate it!  It is pointless and we want our fresh food to be naked, as nature intended.  They do it in Spain – why not here?

A Case Study:

A local farm shop to me here in Cornwall sells a lady’s homemade goats cheese.  It is vacuum packed in non-recyclable plastic.  Why?  Because it keeps fresher for longer and customers can see the product.  The lady is environmentally conscious and aware of customer’s increasingly wanting their fresh artisan cheese wrapped in paper rather than plastic and so, at some expense, this is what she does.  She sourced the new paper that would still protect the cheeses while travelling and keep them moist and fresh.  She sourced a printer for different labels that would stick the paper together, have her logo on it and the necessary info.

And sales plummeted.

Why?  Because customers couldn’t see the product anymore.  She vacuum-packed the cheese again and sales went back to normal.

I completely understand this and I bet you do too.  And then I realised that I tut away at vacuum packed cheeses *as I am buying them!*  I never really linked the fact that I was buying the product BECAUSE of the very thing that was making me tut!  It has never occured to me to buy non-vacuum-packed cheeses and now I make myself think about it, the answer that comes to mind is that I perceive nicely wrapped up cheese to be generally more expensive.  Whether this is true for everyone I don’t know but in my mind cheese pricing goes thus:

Vacuum packed cheese is cheapest

Cheese wrapped in opaque packaging is next cheapest

Paper-wrapped, portioned cheese is a pricy one-off purchase

Unwrapped cheese that you buy at the deli is way posh.  Christmas/Birthday/Party posh 😉

(NB: This analysis is not scientifically rigorous.)

Of course, we at the plastic-free team want people to buy the unwrapped cheese.  I confess that I don’t buy unwrapped cheese.  Ever!  It’s way too expensive and I find weights of things confusing (this is something I am learning about actually.  I now know, for example, that a person portion of meat is 100g so know to ask for 500g of mince or whatever.  I have no idea about apples or plums or mushrooms though.  Is this just me or something I look up and post about?!).   So cheese is one of those things that I know I have to deal with plastic-wise, because in my mind there is no affordable alternative yet.  I am an vacuum packed/opaque wrapping cheese fancier.  Consequently, I think our case-study lady was up against two issues at once: her product was hidden and so passed over for cheese that looked like cheese; and, according to the robust analysis above, it may have looked like it would be more expensive.  AND bear in mind that we are British, which means if you ask what something is or what it costs you absolutely must then buy it!  (Because not buying it after making the poor shopkeeper attend to you would be most rude.  Or make you look like you are being tight with your money.  Heaven forbid!)  And I do NOT want the lovely and caring artisan goats cheese lady to go under because she eschewed vacuum packed plastic.  That is, to put it mildly, not an ethical approach to this problem.

So what are we to do?!  Well, at this farm shop they say that you can take in your own tubs to fill with the amount of desired cheese and take it home.  This doesn’t sound unaffordable in the same way as deli experiences normally are.  It sounds practical and convenient.  Obviously we then run up against the problem of big brand marketing – cathedral city are not going to want to seem like another miscellaneous cheddar on the cheese wall of a shop.  But maybe they will have to deal.  Or maybe instead of Amazon ‘dash’ buttons in your home, you keep a tub with your favourite brand name stuck on it.  Or maybe if all supermarkets go plastic free then it wouldn’t be an issue.  Or maybe corporates could use compostable/biodegradable packaging instead.

Generally, I do think this is one issue that is out of our hands at the moment.  So if you want that vacuum packed cheese, get it.  It’s ok.  Maybe have a shufty at the wrapped ones though – they might not be expensive but actually simply be trying to go plastic-free.

Courage! 🙂

 

Don’t Throw the Plastic Baby Out with the Bathwater

Surfers Against Sewage have unleashed their phenomenally popular ‘plastic free coastlines’ initiative, with Community Leaders signing up all over the country to help make their area ‘plastic free’.  I am one of these Community Leaders in Truro, Cornwall.  But what does ‘plastic free’ actually mean and where is it heading?

This week has been very enlightening for me.  Speaking with Tor Amran from The Cornish Food Box Company in Truro I have learnt all about suppliers and stock; about the relationship between plastic, fresh produce and food waste; about the environmental footprint of glass vs plastic.  About the dairy industry on a local vs international commercial scale.  About delivery logistics, shops and consumer concentration levels.

I have been educated.  And this has posed a fantastic and discombobulating level of nuance to the discussion about ditching plastic.

Now, it must be re-iterated from the outset that ‘plastic free’ always refers to single-use, disposable plastic.  It firstly refers to things like:

Disposable coffee/juice/party cups

Plastic, chuckable cutlery

Styrofoam kebab/chippy boxes

*Unnecessary* plastic bags for groceries, nappies, dog poo

Drink cartons/pouches like fruit shoots and smoothies

Straws and straw wrappers

Boxes of individually wrapped chocolate

Plastic water bottles

Individually portioned condiments and milks

This is not an exhaustive list!  But it shows the types of things that we come across everyday.  These are challenging if you are dependent on takeaway food, lunchtime meal deals, that coffee on the train, your kids snacks, drinks and lunch box items.  However, I would argue that it isn’t difficult to stop doing a couple of these things.  Or swapping out individually portioned crisp packets and putting a handful in a tupperware box so you only use one packet in a week.  Or taking your travel mug on the train.  Or putting your kids drinks in a bottle instead of giving them cartons with straws.  Or saying no to a straw.  They are possible and not life-changing.  No-one would notice and think you’ve Gone Hippy.  These are the habits we focus on with ‘Plastic Free’ initiatives.

Then we have the second level of change, where we need a bit more of a commitment or challenge to what we may consider as ‘normal’.  This may be because the ideas are really new to us, or because we have to try a bit harder to find the product we want.  This includes:

Using a local veg box delivery company

Getting your milk delivered to your doorstep in glass bottles

Refusing fruit and veg that comes in disposable plastic

Refusing grocery bags and taking your own cotton ones instead

Swapping out plastic toothbrushes for bamboo ones

Swapping out plastic scrubbing brushes for wooden ones

Using shampoo bars instead of buying more plastic bottles

Using soap instead of handwash

Using a mooncup instead of sanitary pads or tampons

Using bamboo/wooden cotton buds instead of plastic ones

 

And the NEXT step?!  Well, this is more challenging again and actually rather exciting 🙂

Sourcing refill stations for water; coffee; shampoo; handwash; detergents.  Take your own pots and jars and fill away.  Weigh, then pay.

Sourcing repair shops or borrowing from a community ‘Library of Things’

Setting up a ‘community fridge’ to share food and stop food waste

Having an industrial grade (but small, they do exist!) community composter to compost packaging.

Using soapnuts for your washing machine instead of detergents!

Using paper tape instead of sellotape

Using string to tie a present with wrapping paper you made yourself

Use tissue paper

Using compostable teabags (yes, there is plastic in the seals of teabags!)

Home composting and veg growing

Cook and bake from scratch

Go to a grocer, butcher, baker

Using deodorant as a balm from a glass pot rather than from a roll-on, stick, rock or spray

Buy a proper, grown up metal razor and some razor blades for it (£30 all in for over a year’s supply) – this is for girls and boys!

Use a flannel washcloth and reusable cotton cloths instead of wipes or plastic shower puffs

Use washable nappies

Avoid plastic party stuff like the plague!

 

And then?!

Well, there is zero waste living.  This is an extraordinary endeavour to be commended, (See: the zero waster.com).  But is not where we are going here!  Not yet, anyway 😉

 

SAS and the #’Plastic Free Coastlines initiative are all about the first step.  But we are getting used this now and are asking questions of our suppliers.  Constant questions that pop up are:

  • Why is my milk in plastic and not glass bottles?
  • Should I use a milkman again?
  • Aren’t supermarkets the problem?
  • Why are cucumbers sheathed in plastic?
  • Why do we have to use plastic little grocery bags in stores?
  • Why do my local fruit and veg delivery service have salad in plastic bags?
  • Why do my strawberries and raspberries and tomatoes come in plastic trays?

 

So, as we aim to please, here are some answers:

Why is milk in plastic and not glass bottles?

Milk is in plastic because plastic is cheaper to produce, lighter to transport, is sterile and the bottles are recyclable.  Plastic bottles can be piled on top of each other and dropped and don’t need special crates so you can fit more into a transportable load.  Glass bottles have a much larger environmental footprint.  They are heavier (you can’t get two litres of milk in a glass bottle and expect to carry it to the car!); they are more expensive and more difficult to make; and they are difficult to transport.  They must be loaded carefully so they don’t fall and break and put in crates so they don’t jingle jangle and crack.

A single glass bottle costs around 70p wholesale.  If the bottle is not returned to the producer then that is money out of their pocket.  If it breaks, it is money.  If they have a deposit and return scheme that is creating a whole library-style ticketing and notification system that costs time and money.  It is also more costly to recycle.  Plastic, however, is negligible in cost and can be washed and re-used, re-purposed or sent to the council and easily recycled.

So, glass is not necessarily the thoughtful answer.  Suppliers are now considering using glass bottles again, not because it is the right thing to do but because it is what consumers are asking for.  But is it a good idea?  It is an awful lot of investment for a small producer to make and isn’t actually very convenient for us shoppers if we have to get four bottles to meet our typical 2l family bottle of milk.  It isn’t convenient for us to pay an extra 70p for every bottle we use, or have a deposit and return system for something as everyday as milk.  Carrying glass bottles to the supermarket is not going to please those who despair at having to use a travel mug for their starbucks fix.  I, for one, reckon this is a plastic habit we could keep if we were to a) re-use the bottles or b) make our plastic recycling system financially rewarding.

Should I use a milkman again?

Oooooh this is a tricky one.  Obviously we want to support our local dairy farmers and intrinsic to the idea behind delivered milk is that we are doing this while eschewing evil plastic.  We wake up to bottles on our doorstep and they are in lovely glass.

BUT…  as we have discussed, glass is not necessarily ‘better’ environmentally than plastic in this instance.  Also, because of the outlay of the glass and delivery costs delivered milk is really pricey (milkandmore charge £1.43/litre compared to £1 for local milk from Trewithen Dairies at my corner shop) and is being heavily romanticised with  imagery of cows at dusk, in rolling British fields, smiling farmers and glass bottles.  But what is the reality?   Muller bought milkandmore in December from Hill Crest Milkandmore are the biggest milk delivery company in the UK.  Hill Crest had declining sales and had decided to use plastic instead of glass as it has a lower environmental impact.  This was a thoughtful decision but it didn’t chime with customers.  Muller will be reversing this decision and selling their milk nationally in glass bottles – because it appeals to customer notions of the ‘good old days’ of locally sourced and delivered milk.  But this milk isn’t locally sourced, it comes from one of Muller’s huge corporate dairys, where cows are milked to excess and kept in sheds.  They are not roaming around the fields.  They also pay the LOWEST return to farmers of any large-scale buyer.  See this from Farming UK in January 2018. It says in no uncertain terms that Muller Corp must start paying its dairy farmers more as it: ‘slashed its price to farmers by a hefty 1.5p per litre for January, sparking fury in its producers.’

This is what is happening behind the scenes of your lovely little glass bottle delivery.  It is not realistic, it is romantic and not the answer.

So what shall we do?  Well, we cannot have poor local farmers driving from town to town, or paying anyone else to do this either.  It is prohibitively expensive and time consuming because, actually, not many people in each town/village have delivered milk.  OK.  So what about veg box delivery businesses – surely they will want to deliver milk in glass for us?  It’s really tricky.  If it’s what the customer wants, it is what they want too – even though they are aware of the point above.  However, they would need to buy the milk in the bottles from the farmer – they would then bear the brunt of any cost if bottles aren’t returned, or have to go around trying to collect them from whoever hasn’t sent them back yet.  This is too expensive.  As we saw above, glass is also heavier than plastic.  And local dairies are set up to put their milk in plastic bottles.

This responsibility is, I believe, not on the farmers or local suppliers.  Glass milk bottle deliveries from milkandmore play on a romantic gimmick that helps massive, unethical, cow and farmer-exploiting corps like Muller keep dairy farmers in a stranglehold while making huge amounts of money from your rose-tinted vision of farming and cows and fields and green grass and milkmaids and milk floats.  The problem, in this instance, is NOT that plastic is used in the first place, but that the bottles are not being: a) washed so they are contaminated; b) put out for recycling; c) recycled.

The government needs to help recycling plants recycle this plastic more by helping set up *more* plants, educating us on how to recycle, and helping us recycle more often.

Aren’t supermarkets the problem?

Oh yes, they definitely can be.  But they can also be enormous agents for positive change if they think it is what their customers’ want.  We can continue to be vocal and they will start to change their attitude to single-use disposable plastics.

Why are cucumbers sheathed in plastic?

Because they stay fresher for three whole extra days longer if they are in plastic.  They have to get the cucumbers from source (Europe) to Britain to the shop and then store them, display them and have them in our fridge for up to a week!  This is a delicate matter of timing and logistics for our island.  I would wager that putting plastic on the cucumbers has greater financial reward for our stores than otherwise, due to the amount of food waste there could be.  Now, they could time it and organise their supplies so they more neatly meet demand, or buy their cucumbers locally.  Would this be cheaper for us as consumers – would we embrace a more expensive alternative?  If you want it, seek it and buy it – local farmers markets and grocers would not have plastic ‘cumbers.  They will taste nicer, be far more fresher, be supporting your local farmer and have less of an environmental impact.  YAY!  But they may take a change in your shopping habits to source.

 

Why do we have to use plastic little grocery bags in stores?

WHYYYYYYY?  They don’t need to at all, they can stop this madness immediately.  We can do this buy not using them.  Take your own little market bags or have your fruit and veg loose or in a cardboard box stores have by the entrance 🙂

 

Why do my local fruit and veg delivery service have salad in plastic bags?

Salad is incredibly delicate.  Leaves and little beautiful salad flowers have an extremely short shelf life and wince at any handling.  They start to lose their green lustre immediately and the best way of stopping this from happening is to bag them up.  This also means they are portioned out so the farm can be paid per bag with minimum fuss; the leaves aren’t handled more than once; the plastic helps keep them fresh and transportable.

So what can we do?  Well, the answer is to try and use reusable or compostable packaging.  Reusable could be possible although the bags are not made to be hugely resiliant.  You want a thin bag so the leaves can be seen (we buy with our eyes, remember), be able to breathe and not get all hot, sweaty and start to rot.  Compostable bags are on the market and used more and more!  This is a great solution.  However, it is a nascent market and tricky at the moment because we need to use industrial-grade composters that have just the right conditions for the plastic to break down.  If they don’t break down properly then they become the Microplastics of Evil.   Eek.  These businesses, like vegware and earth-friendly foodware, are on the up and easily accessible.  The only issue is getting the packaging back to them so they can dispose of it for you before it gets into a bin.

Why do my strawberries and raspberries and tomatoes come in plastic trays?

Soft fruit is a nightmare to transport.  It is more delicate than you can imagine and bacteria travel at the speed of lightening from a fruit spot that is squished against another, so they molder.  By the time it comes from southern Europe to our island, from a store to our homes it is on a countdown as it is.  No-one wants to buy moldy fruit.  The plastic trays give the fruit just enough room to breathe and have enough space that they are not squished and likely to molder.  They mean the soft, delicate fruits can be stacked and manhandled and travel to your home in your bag and car.  They mean the fruit will last that bit longer in your fridge so you don’t cuss at the store 😉

So what are we to do?  Again, the answer lies in compostable packaging and/or better recycling education and facilities.

I think this essay shows that the issue of plastic is not that ALL plastic is evil or used in a superfluous, environment-bashing and animal-hating way.  Scratch the surface and you find bewildered suppliers, beleaguered producers and ruthless multinational corporations.  You find a struggle between businesses who are missing out because they want to make thoughtful financial and environmental decisions that might mean keeping plastic; businesses who use plastic because it is cheap and keeps their produce fresh and haven’t had reason to change their behaviours yet; and other businesses that want to make money from public demand that is not based in environmental reason but will make them look good.

As consumers we need to make decisions that effect positive change and this needs to be thoughtful, not an ill-considered knee-jerk reaction.  We musn’t throw the (plastic) baby out with the bathwater.  Glass milk bottles are a case in point.  They are expensive to make and so put financial pressure on the already squeezed independent producers we are so keen to support by using them.  Multi corps can get on board with this because they can price out independents and spin their cheap and nasty production methods.  Glass is not more environmentally sound than plastic – if the plastic can be, and is, recycled.  This post really hopes to help us make informed decisions and provide an alternative light on the blanket anti-plastic discourse that permeates the media at the moment.  Not all plastic is bad and not all plastic can be easily avoided.  I posted above the different levels of engagement we can have with plastic – stage one really is the major change facing us all, but as with everything not at once and not every one for everybody.

Courage comrades 🙂

Written with huge help and thanks to Tor Amran from the Cornish Food Box Company, Truro, Cornwall.

Scrubbing Brush!

Oh today is an exciting day in my Brave New World 🙂  My old scrubbing brush has given out so I have bought it some new bristles.

Bristles?!

YES!  You may remember that I swapped out my plastic washing up brush for a wooden one when I started this here mission.  Months later I now need to swap my first brush head and put my old one in the compost heap.

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WHAAAAAAT?!  Yes, my friends, it is compostable!  The wood and bristles are completely organic.

So I have my new brush with its new head 🙂  I have a spare head too, these cost me £1.95 from boubaloo.com.  Cheaper and nicer than new plastic ones from the supermarket!

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Here is the lovely brush.  You can see the metal prong at the end that you just slip around the new bristle head 🙂

You can also see a safix scrub pad!  Why these are not more known about I do not know – they are amazing!  They are easily available online and cost around £1.00 each.  This is the blurb on the back:

wp_20180219_11_30_07_pro.jpgExcuse my dreadful photography skills!  So, these pot scourers are made from coconut fibre!  They last for months, are kind to hands and air dry.  They are also completely home compostable.

Those horrible yellow and green foam sponges that we regularly use are:

  • in NO way degradable.  They will last for years and years until they break apart into little pieces and litter the environment as microplastic.  Every one of those sponges you have ever used still exists!  Somewhere, out there.
  • Horrible to feel – I can’t stand the scratchy foam feeling, turns my face inside out.
  • Unclean – once the grease is on them it doesn’t come off.  You need to scrub the scrubber!

Sad face.

SOOOOO get yourself these!  They seem to be made by one little company in India, using the husks of coconuts.  I’ll let you know how I get on, of course.

Laters!

Biodegradable? Sort of… Maybe… Compostable? Well, no. Welcome to Greenwashing.

It’s been a while – I apologise.  My family have been taken over by a virus of the most pernicious order.  The baby (well, toddler – I am in denial about her Growing Up) got infected and had to have antibiotics and I am feeling absurdly cheery considering the questionable state of my upper respiratory tract.

So, excuses out of the way, today I am keen to talk about greenwashing and in particular, the word ‘biodegradable’.  A wise old man introduced me to the term ‘greenwashing’ this week: Here dear reader, is the skinny on this discourse.  How I managed to miss this I do not know, but around 2009/2010 eco-brands were under fire for saying they were environmentally friendly/natural/plant-powered/eco products when, actually, they weren’t.  The complaints stood up and some brands changed the way they marketed their product so they, well, lied a little less.  More recently however, this issue has come to the fore again, and with the rise of anti-plastic movements and pro-eco buying habits it needs to be addressed.

A major issue is with claims that a product is ‘biodegradable’.  The Balance state that a biodegradable product should, ‘break down into natural materials in the environment without causing harm.’  When asked if their products are biodegradable Ecover say:

‘Yes. All the raw materials we use are biodegradable according to international standards’.

However, is has been found that Ecover products do leave traces of themselves in the natural environment and therefore are not, actually, completely biodegradable.  The key point in the debate is found in the phrase ‘according to international standards.’  Persil also claim to go above and beyond regulatory standards when it comes to their toxic non-bio products.  They justify using environmentally unfriendly chemicals in their washing detergents because you don’t need to wash the clothes twice!  This article in the Ecologist states that:

‘Big name brands, such as Unilever’s Persil, still use phosphonates. ‘Clearly with our laundry detergent it is important that the product washes effectively – otherwise the environmental impact is increased if clothes have to be rewashed – and that it works well at low temperatures,’ says Helen Fenwick, Unilever Sustainable Living Plan Manager. Fenwick says Unilever is committed to safety, as well as reducing the GHG impact from washing clothes. ‘Our formulation specialists use only internationally permitted ingredients and our long experience enables us to apply rigorous safety standards, which are sometimes higher than those set by the regulators,’ she says.’

Hmmmm.

If you look at the discourse it turns out that actually ‘biodegradable’ refers to the end state of a product (cleanly back to nature) and not the way it is broken down.  Biodegradable does NOT mean that it can be put in your compost.  Actually, it can mean that a product needs ‘extra biological help’ to break down sufficiently.  This can mean that we, as product users, may unwittingly be smearing product about our environments that will leave a lasting trace that is not environmentally friendly.  It also means, in the terms of a product like these wipes which claim loudly and proudly to be biodegradable, that consumers may be choosing to spend a bit more on a product that is eco – but where do I put it to biodegrade?  Not in the compost.  On their website they say that you can put their wipes, ‘in the bin or recycling’.  I am surprised they are encouraging the disposal of their eco-product into landfill and am curious as to what recycling these wipes are suitable for.  If the packaging is not recyclable, and the product itself is not compostable then…  what IS it?!  Method, however, do have wipes that are compostable (yay!).

So, what do they say?  Well, Ecover claim that:  ‘Our products are formulated for the lowest possible toxicity and the fastest biodegradability’.  Oh, fabulous!  Nooooo, wait.  It is so important to question what this means.  What is the benchmark for ‘lowest possible toxicity’ and ‘fastest biodegradability’?  Lowest possible according to what standards?  What is ‘fast’ for biodegradability?  Two days?  Years? Decades?  The assumption as a reader is to believe from these statements that they are doing their best.  They are setting industry standards.  No-one can have lower toxicity or faster biodegradability…

But that isn’t actually what they are saying, is it?  Or surely as eggs is eggs they would be saying exactly that.

In contrast, Method are more upfront about the level of success their products have, saying that their washing detergent is 98% biodegradable (www.methodproducts.co.uk).  For the consumer this may be enough but it still leaves one wanting.  We are also still faced with the unpalatable truth that these eco-products are coming to us in plastic.  Method are pleased that there bottles are 100% recycled and recyclable, but confess that we have to check local recycling facilities to see about the pump/spray nozzles.  Is this, then, an environmentally friendly product?  Interestingly, in California:

‘…it’s illegal to sell any plastic item, or any item with plastic packaging, that includes a label stating it’s “biodegradable,” “degradable,” “decomposable,” “compostable” or “marine degradable” (or any alternate form of those terms).’

I LOVE THIS!  They continue:

 ‘It’s also illegal in the state to sell a plastic product labeled “home compostable” (or some equivalent claim) unless the manufacturer holds a Vincotte OK Compost Home certificate. Vincotte is a Belgium-based inspection and certification organization.

Finally, the state bans the use of potentially misleading marketing terms, such as “environmentally friendly,” when they’re applied to plastic products and packaging.’

Wah!  Actual certification!  This State is informing consumers and preventing the possibility of greenwashing.  They don’t know they are being informed, it would just be normal to know the difference between biodegradable and compostable.  It would be normal to assume that a product in non-recyclable plastic packaging is not eco.  It is about basic standards and principles.  I want to be informed.  I want to know what degree of ‘biodegradable’ a product may be, I want to know if it is compostable.  Because in the UK I would put money on most people thinking that biodegradable is synonymous with compostable – and as we have seen, it really isn’t.  And green companies are relying on that assumption to market their product to us as being eco-friendly.

This, my friend, is greenwashing and it is very, very naughty.

 

 

Grocery Shopping #4

I write about grocery shopping the most, don’t I.  That and litter – picking!

Grocery shopping is becoming so political and frought.  I spent a really long time in Sainsburys yesterday looking at whether what I was about to buy was recyclable or not.  A lot of the ready-meal style sauce pouches are NOT (I don’t buy these anyway but wanted to see), including Jamie Oliver’s chickpea daal blardy bla healthy stuff (I do buy these… but not any more).

In fact (start rant here) I am getting really cheesed off with the amount of ‘healthy’ and ‘natural’ foodstuffs that are in plastic wrappers that are not recyclable and litter the streets.  The irony kills me.  Yay for nature!  Love the nature!  Love dates and goji berries, love chickpeas and lentils…  but, well, sod actual nature 🙂 🙂  I tweeted JO about his pouches but obviously got no response.  Feel free to do the same 😉  Nakd bars, Eat Natural bars – the wrappers are bloody everywhere, dropped by the well-to-do-in-a-rush.

So, pouches are nonsense but unfortunately, are also very fashionable.  Avocadoes yesterday where £1.10 singly or £1.40 in a pack of 3 in plastic 😦  ARG.  I wanted an avocado but could buy the single one at that price or the plastic multipack.  I have realised that, as cucumbers wrapped in plastic last 3 days longer than those without, in this instance maybe the plastic packaing makes the avocadoes last longer, therefore it will be cheaper than those that last less time because you can buy more of them with less wastage.  Although, saying that, if you sold the ones that are ripe and ready to eat cheaper then we would snap them up so…  Ok.  There is no excuse.  As per, I didn’t pack any of my fruit and veg in any plastic at all, just had it roaming around in my trolley.  The difference was that I didn’t feel bad or weird about it at all.  Next time I will get a small cardboard box from by the entrance and use that for my loose fruit and veg so it does roll around or spread onto my other shopping.  🙂  Jars of stuff and tins are good, I got lots of those.  I hunted for butter in recyclable packaging but no, it’s all in non-recyclable foil.  Why, I know not.  So I got margarine which can be recycled but isn’t as nice, or natural to eat.

I didn’t buy salad leaves in plastic packaging either, I bought some rocket seeds instead.  We shall see on that front though, green fingered I am not…  I am going to plant them in some UHT milk cartons!  Why not, eh.

Soooooo shopping was a pest.  Is funny though – because I have been doing my litter bladdy picking I have noticed how much litter is PURPLE.  Cadbury’s bladdy choccie bar foil everywhere.  And so it is making me feel cross when I see this purple packaging!  So I steered away from it yesterday.  It makes me mutter 😉  And Macdonalds stuff.  Just litters everywhere.

And, finally, speaking of my litter picking – Channel 4 news last night had an article about litter and the new litter picking brigades popping up.  Not surprisingly the council is keen to help provide these volunteers with their support and equipment.  TBH the council would be thanking their lucky stars – and their pennies.  In a society such as ours the council ought to be cleaning the streets not citizens.  It is a sign of a functioning and politically, socially and economically healthy society that the streets are clean of litter, debris, fly tipped nonsense and human effluent so diseases don’t spread via moulds, rats and riverways.  We pay council tax to ensure this doesn’t happen.  I do NOT look forward to eventually retiring to become a volunteer litter picker.

What can we do?

Well, I do welcome a change in attitude that sees litter as ‘our’ problem.  If you see it, pick it up.  I don’t want to get all hi-vis on everyone, or on a group of nice old people.  Just pick (sh)it up instead of walking past it.  Have the odd inland beach clean.  And write to your council to clean up!  Complain if the bin men are making more mess after they’ve been (ug, my village is gross after bin day, it just flies all over the road and is left by the, er, cleaners…  for the road sweepers?!)  At least the council could print a flyer or two asking people not to dump their rubbish on the floor.  Have an article in the local paper?  Add a couple of bins to new walkways?

It’s not rocket science.  We just need to start seeing it as our problem.  Remember, we are mucky humans.  We lived through an era where it was expected that people would clear up after us, but we can only drop so much before it starts to show.  My countryside is littered with shining, brightly coloured specks of micro-plastic.  We have to pick it up – just one bit each a day would change your world.

Be the change!