Monday, January 31, 2011

Bridal Fair

Yesterday we went to a bridal fair (Sheri and I are getting hitched :) ).  We got ambushed with plastic. We didn't even see it coming. We registered online ahead of time and when we got there we discovered that by doing so we had invited them to fill a plastic bag with plastic trinkets plastered with the names and contact info of various businesses that service the wedding industry. It's sort of like if somebody gave us (with the best of intentions) a bag of dead kittens that they'd just prepared especially for me. I can't get mad - they don't know any better, but I'm very disappointed and giving it back won't undo the damage.

The vast majority of our plastic consumption for the year is the result of that fair. We need a bigger box of shame.

Also, we can't find cat food without plastic so we had to buy that.

Other than that - our mission is going very well and hasn't been too difficult.

-Miles

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Breakthroughs in Shopping

Over the last couple days, we've sourced out some great plastic-wrap-free items: cheese (for real this time), nacho chips, more fast food, and also shampoo and deodorant.

Cheese we found at Gary's European Sausage and Deli. They wrapped it in paper for us, and even the tape is paper. We also got lunchmeat from them, which is pretty awesome. It makes the sammiches on the serve-yourself-buns we bought at Save-on Foods so much nicer.

At Fresh is Best, we can make arrangements to swing by with our own containers when they're making stuff, and they will fill them with products such as nacho chips, taco shells, and even salsas and dips. They even have a salsa that has no garlic in it, so Miles can enjoy this particular snack as well. It's tropical and it's delicious.

When we finished up Thursday's shopping spree, we went to Burger King for supper. There, we were allowed to fill our own glasses with their fountain pop, and the sandwiches are wrapped in wax paper (when you fold the paper, it leaves a little white line which gives the wax coating away).

Friday we went to Kelowna to the Lush Cosmetics store. There, we found shampoo bars, soap, deodorant, bubble bath, and bath bombs, plus a few other products, that had no wrapping at all. We bought shampoo, bubble bath, deodorant and a bath bomb, and received a small shampoo-bar-sized tin as part of a promotion. The deodorants we chose came in paper wrap since we didn't have enough separate containers on us for everything, and they put things in tiny paper bags for us as well. Apparently their head office is attempting to come up with a toothpaste solution as well, so I imagine we'll be checking back with them in a few months (when our shampoo runs out) for an update.

-Sheri (who smells even better now!)

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Community Support

When we started our research into this project, I don't think either of us thought we'd get as much help as we are getting from vendors around the city. I think we both thought this would be much more difficult than it is. Don't get me wrong; plastic is everywhere and being forced down our throats (literally and figuratively) everywhere, but where there are potential solutions, people are being very good about helping us out.

For instance, when we shop at Coopers, we can fill paper bags instead of plastic in the bulk section. We can also, we found out yesterday, bring our own containers to the deli, and so we can get meat and cheese this way (completely plastic-free dairy tally: ice cream sandwiches and deli cheese = 2; the plastic seal around the glass milk bottle tricked us). The cashiers are aware of our project (as we keep asking them what our boundaries are) and ask us how the project is going every time they see us, plastic-free, at the till.

At restaurants, waitresses have been helpful as well. At Boston Pizza, where we go for our cactus-cut fries fix, the dipping sauce (the crux of this appy) comes in a plastic cup, but the waitress told us it was ceramic and they washed them like any other dish, but then two minutes later, she told us she checked with the kitchen staff, who corrected her and told her it was plastic, but that they would happily serve it to us in a different, washable dish instead. She also served my smoothie without a straw and made sure we got no candies at the end of the meal.

Thank you, Kamloops, for supporting us in this project!

-Sheri

*UPDATE* We went to Coopers to capitalize on our new-found info, containers from home firmly in hand. The deli clerk was able to put our lunchmeat directly on their scale, but when shaving slices, she 'had to' use a small sheet of plastic to catch the meat from the slicer. She also told us they don't in fact slice cheese, so I guess we can cross that off as a viable dairy source, too. However, surely there's another deli someplace in town that can slice cheese for us and use our container as well.

Anything Worth Doing is Worth Overdoing

While we started out trying to avoid plastic in packaging, the longer we go the more we find ourselves saying no to products with any plastic in them.

For me, I think it's because I've been reading blogs and articles, and watching documentaries about plastic. It's not that I never did before but once we started forcing ourselves to be conscientious shoppers the information is no longer something I might as well forget since I can't do anything about it anyways. Instead of being helpless cogs in a system I disprove of, I'm now throwing my economic weight behind a sustainable future.I'm liking it.

-Miles

Friday, January 21, 2011

Irony

Yesterday we watched a documentary ("Tapped") about bottled water and its various ills. It covered the societal problems with water being legally 'stolen' from communities and, according to locals, causing drought conditions. It explained that bottled water is far less regulated and tends to be a bacteria laden cesspool of toxic chemicals. It covered the health problems people living near plastic manufacturing plants suffered from. Finally they covered how the plastic all ends up in the ocean and chokes the ecosystem.

At this point in the show we watched as Captain Charles Moore, an ocean researcher, collected samples of plastic from a beach. Ironically he put the samples into Ziploc bags. The stuff is so pervasive we take it for granted. This guy is a crusader for awareness of the damage that plastic consumption causes the ocean and there he is collecting samples in a bag that will probably end up in a gyre one day and hang out there killing fishes for a few hundred years.

-Miles

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle

Many people know the Three Rs of waste management: Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle. These are great foundations for responsible solutions to our ever increasing consumption habits. Many people also know that these fall into an order of preference, or hierarchy:

Reduce
Reuse
Recycle

To reduce our waste intake is clearly the best of the three, since it results in less waste being introduced into the system in the first place. Reusing is the next best, in that stuff has already been introduced to the world and now has continued use. Recycling is also good, but not as good as the other two, because in a way, it's waste, though in a way, it's also reusing, since we reuse the recycled material.

This project is, for us, all about reduction, and in a big way, specifically, of course, with regards to plastic. We are trying to eliminate it completely, in fact, but as you know, we are making the odd exception (where we cannot avoid buying plastic without harming our health) and we make the odd mistake as well (peek in our box of shame for examples).

For me, this project is about massive reduction in non-biodegradable substances (particularly plastic). The containers we buy during this project have so far included glass, metal, and paper. Paper, in particular, is something we are buying more of than we used to, but our volume of paper consumption is still far less than our plastic consumption used to be. Paper is biodegradable, and so we are not as fussed about consuming this as we are about plastic consumption, although we still understand that using paper means using trees. Trees are replenishable, after all, but we would still like to moderate how many we are responsible for killing. The paper bags that we use for buying bulk foods are often reusable as well. We buy the food in these bags and then take it home and transfer it to our reusable plastic containers, and then shake the bags out in case there are food particles in them. We write on the bags what was in them before, with the intent of reusing these bags for the same products again.

-Sheri

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Some Clarification

I thought I'd take some time to clarify what exactly our goals are; more specifically my goals, since Sheri might have a slightly different take on the project. We say we are eliminating our consumption of plastic packaging but that is not perfectly accurate. Really we are trying to avoid disposable plastic at the consumer level. For instance, we avoid straws at restaurants, Ziploc bags, and plastic wrap. We do not avoid products that have been shipped to stores in plastic packaging. This would not leave us many options and probably doesn't account for the bulk of the waste. 

We are hoping that by forcing ourselves off of plastic for a year we will, with help of friends and readers, find solutions that allow us to live conveniently with as little plastic waste as possible. We're also hoping that our Solution Exchange serves as a how-to manual for people who would like to reduce their ecological footprint but are too busy to dedicate a lot of time or effort to it.

So why are we picking on plastic when most of it can be recycled anyways? Recycling anything, with the exception of compost, is never good for the environment; it's only less bad that disposal. Recycling takes energy. Recycling plastic requires transport, breaking down, more transport, remolding, and more transport. Harmful chemicals are used and released into the air and then eventually inhaled or eaten (particularly by apex predators such as humans) every time a new plastic item is made. Also, plastic can only be recycled so many times before it is nothing but toxic waste. Plastic is wonderful useful stuff that opens up a world of possibilities for humanity but I believe it should be used in moderation and our regulatory agencies need a better understanding of the potential threats it poses.

Also, there are definitely some harmful chemical effects associated with plastic. I couldn't list all the toxic chemicals and their various harmful effects without making this a very dry read. You can go to this page at Answers.com if you'd like to learn more. The thing is that all the harms that plastics do are too small to care about by themselves but they accumulate over time. They accumulate not only in our bodies but in our eco-system. Plastics usually take around 450-1000 years to biodegrade. A piece of plastic can kill an animal or plant and then still be around to keep killing for up to another 1000 years. Multiply our individual consumptions by the growing population of the world during the period for which plastic will take to biodegrade and it starts to seem apocalyptic.

Fortunately, humans are smart and, I believe, we're totally capable of cleaning up our mess if we get our act together. Until we figure that out though, we can get our act together by minimizing our mess. We can do that by creating market pressure to reduce plastic packaging. If enough people ask for less plastic on their products, savvy business persons will oblige!

-Miles

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

No Milk for Miles

Two days ago we finally got some Gort's Milk in a glass bottle. We brought it home and I opened it up. I tore the plastic disposable seal off the lid and cursed because I realized there was a plastic disposable seal on the lid. Not only does this add to our box of shame, it means aside from powdered milk in the bulk section, we have no milk options available.

Very not cool.

- Miles

Thursday, January 6, 2011

A Dark Day for Plastic Abstinence

Yesterday we went on a quest to find the famed glass bottled milk of Gort renowned to be located at Heartland Foods. After an extensive search we found the address listed on the map; 709 Tagish. This turned out to be their old location. The nice people now located there redirected us to the new location on Tranquille.  Their new location is really well hidden.

Once inside we learned that while they do sell glass bottled milk, there was only one bottle in stock and it expired that day. We will return once it's been replenished.

Next we went grocery shopping. We needed a few ingredients for a dish Sheri wants to make; Chicken broth and cooking sherry. We bought canned broth. I've heard that some cans are lined with plastic. So far we are not letting that stop us unless we know a can is lined with plastic so we bought the canned broth. We couldn't buy cooking sherry because every bottle had plastic seals wrapped around the lid. We'll use a substitute but it's always disappointing when we can't find a product without plastic on it.

So far our day has been challenging and we've met with limited success - but it gets worse.

At this point we're running too far behind to make supper and we are hungry. We decided to go to Harold's. Restaurants are tricky. First they ambushed us with straws. We knew we should have mentioned it when we first arrived but we were both careless. Straws aren't really packaging by most definitions but they are just as disposable.

Next they stuck some toothpicks on Sheri's sammich. Wrapped around the toothpicks was a little cellophane decoration. I think this qualifies as packaging. Sheri disagrees. In either event we agree that both the straws and the toothpicks go against the principle of our endeavor.

Six days into year and we now have two dishonorable mentions for our box of shame. Three hundred and fifty-nine days to go.

-Miles

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Milk and Cheese

I have a lead on bottled milk and cheese! Gort's Gouda sells both at the Heartland Foods. I'd never heard of the place but it's in town. The cheese will have to be Gouda and we'll need to buy 4 kg if we want to get it sans plastic. We're going to check it out tomorrow.

-Miles

Grocery Shopping

Today we went grocery shopping for the first time during this project. We bought fruits and veggies, but we had to put the asparagus back because there were plastic tags affixed to every bundle. We went to our favorite fresh veggies store, but we didn't buy lettuce, which was on our list, because they were all wrapped in plastic as well. We went to the meat shop next door and they agreed to put our purchases in our reusable containers, which is pretty helpful for us.

For dairy products, we are severely restricted in what we can purchase, since almost every dairy product is packaged in plastic, but we did find ice cream sandwiches that are wrapped in paper and stored in cardboard boxes. I always knew ice cream sandwiches were my heroes. This is obviously a suboptimal solution, but it's a tasty suboptimal solution, so I'm happy enough for the time being anyways.

-Sheri

Monday, January 3, 2011

Kicking off the New Year

On New Year's Day, we decided to test our plastic-free boundaries by eating out. Since this is a holiday, most restaurants near us were closed, so we turned to fast food. We were pleased to find out that you can ask for your sandwich not to be placed in a plastic bag. Also, the paper wrap is waxed paper and the meat slices are separated in their sandwich trays with paper. We happily indulged and took our sandwiches home to enjoy.

I also spent copious amounts of time playing video games today. Depending on what kind of video games you play, this could be a problem, since most of them come in plastic cases these days because they are on discs that need some babying to prevent scratching. However, the game I delved into today was a digital download, so not only is there no plastic packaging, there's no packaging at all, because there's no item at all. Hello, future!

-Sheri

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Introduction

Hello, and welcome to our blog, where we chronicle our adventures through a consumer-driven society with a very interesting restriction on what we allow ourselves to purchase. We are not going to buy anything packaged in plastic this year, unless there is a health risk involved in eschewing a product altogether (such as medication). We have several goals with this project. We are doing this project:
  • to gain and create awareness of how pervasive plastic packaging has become.
  • to reduce our contribution to the fantastic and unnecessary amount of waste packaging creates.
  • to indirectly influence the amount of plastic being introduced into the landfills, and more importantly, into our world.
  • to lessen plastic contamination of our foods and beverages.
In preparation, we did a little bit of research and scouting to find out how we could still purchase the things we need and enjoy, without making a lot of sacrifices. Some things are more difficult to find than others, which simply means we need to try a little harder to find solutions that allow us the things we want to or need to have. We're not going to spill the beans on everything we've learned here in the introduction, but we will be sharing our knowledge a lot in other posts on this blog.

This is our journey.