Amazing number of microplastic particles found when plastic teabags are steeped:
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-49845940
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-49845940
Were there really tea bags that long ago? I don't remember them from my childhood 60 years ago. It was always loose leaf tea and teapots.Tea bags worked just fine for the 200 years before plastics.
Were there really tea bags that long ago? I don't remember them from my childhood 60 years ago. It was always loose leaf tea and teapots.
I've checked - there were teabags - made from fabric, first patented in 1903. Paper and plastic came in later.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_bag
Microplastics - Premium teabags leak billions of particles - study
I'm imagining all the chemicals and energy used to wash them... Doesn't sound like a good idea to me.They no longer use toilet paper; instead they use towels.
There was an article in the local paper recently about a family that is going green in a brown kind of way. They no longer use toilet paper; instead they use towels. My imagination won't even go there. Maybe one day it will have to
So what you're saying is don't eat dishes made from goat in Greece?
I'm imagining all the chemicals and energy used to wash them... Doesn't sound like a good idea to me.
Off the topic of nano particles still: I agree that anything involving chemicals is not a great idea at all. My first thought was a memory of my mother, red-faced, hot and sweaty, and very grumpy, stirring the boiling copper in our outside laundry. The sheets and towels were boiled to kill germs and to keep them white I believe, so I imagined this family living in the bush and reverting to these old fashioned ways. Boiling the towels once a week, in their case most likely using a bit of timber for fuel, probably wouldn't be so bad for the environment and could most likely more than offset the production, packaging and transport of toilet paper.
Coincidentally, I came across this informative article in The Guardian this morning. "Wee wipes" make environmental sense and I'm sure they will start to take off as the idea spreads.
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeand...toilet-towels-can-we-get-over-the-yuck-factor