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U.K. Refuseniks & Bloggers

U.K. based plastic free refuseniks. Very useful blogs, passionate people and great resources.

In the UK, living plastic free is a very ad hoc kind of process. While other countries may have bulk buy chain stores where you buy your basic staples loose, in the UK this is not the case. Instead we have to scurry around sourcing some plastic free rice from Khadims and tracking down  a local bakers, some of us might be lucky enough to still have a market and maybe a washing up liquid refill site but it is by no means guaranteed. Generally speaking, recommendations for a plastic free lifestyle in the U.K. tend to be site specific. While I might have sourced olive oil refills in Todmorden that’s no use to folks in Lincoln.
So the more people prepared to write about and share their experiences of living #plasticfree in their own town the better. The plastic free U.K. directory was created to promote this information.
It’s easy to submit a piece. Write about your plastic free finds in a post and I will publish your entry in the directory, credited (of course), with whatever links you choose to share.
If you blog, you can  write an  introduction to your website. Job done.

No posts found.

Others that I know Of

Allotment Recipes.

Have  a look at this very good blog based in the Leighton buzzard area www.allotmentrecipes.wordpress.com

Rosies Ecoblog U.K.

“The second school of thought is not just Zero-waste to landfill, but Zero waste at all.” Well said and this means of course going plastic-trash free. Follow her on her year with out plastic, with kids! Yikes!

More?

If you know of any that should be on the list please add the details in the comments section. Or submit an entry for the directory.

Worldwide

Find links to other bloggers in other countries here.

Campaigns, Projects & Social Media

There are more links to campaigners, blogger and anti-plastic projects here

The Plastic-free U.K. Directory

Showcasies U.K. based  business, people and organisations that are plastic aware, in their own words….
Sadly I don’t have time to cover all the great people and businesses out there… and I always feel a little shy about write ups. Suppose I miss the point. So I ask people to contribute their own posts. The only provisos are that you have to be U.K. based and of course it has to have a rubbish element. Not necessarily anti-plastic but certainly plastic problem aware.

Hodmedods – British Grown Beans, Grains & Pulses

Did you now you can get homegrown British beans, lentils (soon) and even Quinoa. Many of them organically grown…. Introducing ...
Read More

Find more #plasticfree projects listed in the Plastic Free U.K. Directory homepage
Or by category….

By category

Business & Social Enterprises

U.K. based enterprises that provide plastic free/reduced products and services. These people state plastic/packaging reduction as part of their business ethos. Find them here.

Arts & Education

Educating, entertaining and exhibiting for a plastic free world!

 

 

 

Blog Map

Welcome to our blog and out plastic boycott.  The blog is organised under the following headings. For more links explore  the sidebar.
Pease note this is a work in progress….be kind…

Welcome

Us & The Boycot

About us how we started blogging and why the boycott

Our plastic waste audit and a cunning plan to cut plastic.
The plastic we boycott Including sneaky plastics you may not know about.
The Plastic We Use You will only get the Dyson when you pry it from my cold dead hands.
Not in my bin – When determining if something is plastic free read more HERE
Plastics that cut plastic here
Alternative compostable plastic products
Because you cant cut it all…
The plastic food we eat
The plastic booze (and some great alternatives), here.

Why we dont recycle.
Not in my bin – When determining if something is plastic free read more HERE

Our plastic free year can be found HERE

AboutThe Blog
Blog history & Stats
Disclaimer.
How the blog is written and why you shouldn’t trust us

Come And Join Us
Write for us. See our writers guide HERE
See our guest posts how you can help build the best database.

Got a fantastic business or plasticfree project? Send us a write up for the P-f U.K. Directory. More information HERE

As Seen In Publications and blogs that have featured us.

Eat My Stats
To see how big our blog is you can read up on our hits and hopes here
Live Compostably
Over 350 compostable, plasticfree or at least massively plastic reduced substitutes for hundreds of unnecessary plastic products.
Links & Projects –links to other plastic free people, the U.K. directory and out other projects

About Plastic

Everything you need to know about plastic and somethings you wish you didn’t
About Plastic Index 
What Is Plastic
Definitions
Types Of Plastic
Plastic Lifespan

Disposing Of Plastic – An Introduction

By Topic
Landfill
Recycling and Reusing An Introduction
Plastic to Energy

  • Gasification – resulting in a gas (!)
  • Pyrolysis – plastic to fuel
  • Thermal depolymerization (TDP) – plastic to fuel
    Bad Plastic

    Introduction
    Waste Statistics – a big collection of reports and statistics




  • Cut Plastic

    Start here with some superfast ways to cut your plastic trash
    Sneaky Plastics – but beware of these plastics in places you might not have known about

    Plastic Free Products

    The easiest way to find a #plasticfree alternative in our huge database of products is to use the search function

    By Category
    Everything from food to watering cans to clothes
    Cleaning up.
    Disposables & Reusables & Refills Here
    Food and Drink from alcohol to zucchinis, supermarkets to making this is  your guide to eating plastic free
    Bags & Packaging – how to get your loose foods homes.
    Loose food  shops selling loose, food that normally comes plastic packaged ie rice, pasta and salt.
    How to start The three levels of plastic free food
    Cookbook  – how to cook!
    General  stuff that multitasks or is difficult to categorise
    Homemade sometimes if you want plastic free you just got to make it!
    High Days & Celebrations Index – with links to posts on 
    Home and house related
    Garden – come and hang out in our virtual potting shed  or have a go at  composting. 
    Office – need a plastic free rubber? Give us a try!
    Wo/m/animal People & Animals
    Wardrobe Index
    Personal Care Products
    animals & pets

    Lifestyle

    By Task
    Want to know how to wash up plastic free? Can’t be bothered looking through the A-Z index?
    Check out these work sheets.

    Buy shops
    Loose Food FillSupermarkets & Chainstores 
    West Yorkshire
    U.K shops for other people

    Make Index

    Composting – It’s the future

    Travel

    Back on the Road
    How to back pack plastic free

    Links & Projects      Illustrations

    Index
    Gallery Our dirty pictures
    The Plastic-free U.K. Directory
    of UK-based groups, organisations businesses and individuals who are responding to the problems presented by the misuse of plastic.
    Plastic Free People, Projects & Campaigns
    Businesses & social enterprises
    Charities & non-proffits
    Media, arts & education
    Plastic Refusenik & Zero wasters

    Projects
    The Fair Share Fabric Project  using only my global share of fibres & fabrics.
    Homesteading – home-made products
    Composting – the only way to deal with trash. Which means all trash should be compostable eading us to
    The Campaign For Real Litter

    Partnering
    Plastic Free July
    Waste Less Live More Week
    Zero Waste Week

    Good to Know Information about science, green issues and other related subjects

    Us & The Boycott

    Us
    Who & Why
    Our plastic waste
    Plastic we boycott
    Plastic we use
    Blog history & Stats the different places we have been hosted, moving to a self hosted site and some number crunching.

    The Blog Index
    As Seen In – publications that have featured us
    Blog Map – This page
    All Blog Posts A very big list of everything
    Stay In Touch – contact details

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    BPA

    Bisphenol A or BPA is it is known to its chums is used in

    • some thermal paper products such as till receipts.
    • the epoxy plastic liners found in many cans and tins,
    • polycarbonate plastics used to make hard plastic for CDs, cell phones, car parts, medical devices, safety goggles
    • Plastic microwave oven ware, eating utensils and  bottles (including baby bottles).
    • Plastics  labelled with the number “7” identification code. HOWEVER not all plastics labelled with the number “7” contain BPA. The number “7” code is assigned to the “Other” category, which includes all plastics not otherwise assigned to categories 1-6.

    The chemical was invented in the 1930s during the search for synthetic estrogens.  Diethylstilbestrol was found to be a more powerful estrogen, so bisphenol A was put to other uses. It was polymerized to form polycarbonate plastic and used to make a wide range of products including those listed above.

    Over the years there have been an increasing number of claims that the polymer  is not stable. That, over time, BPA breaks down over time and releases hormones into whatever product it comes into contact with.  Research has indeed proved that  BPA can leach into food from the epoxy linings in cans or from polycarbonate bottles, and that the rate increases if the containers are heated i.e. babies bottle being sterilised or a tin being heated.

    However additional studies are now suggesting that the ingestion of leached BPA could be harmful. In March 1998 for example a study in Environmental Health Perspectives (EHP) found that BPA simulates the action of estrogen when tested in human breast cancer cells. A more recent study published in EHP shows a significant decrease of testosterone in male rats exposed to low levels of BPA. The study concludes that the new data is significant enough to evaluate the risk of human exposure to BPA.

    BPA is now considered by many to be  a hormone disruptor, a chemical that alters the body’s normal hormonal activity.

    In the last 10-15 years that concerns have been raised over its safety, particularly during pregnancy and for young babies.

    In April 2008, the United States Department of Health and Human Services expressed concerns about it.

    The Canadian government have just banned listed it a toxic substance and banned it from being used in baby bottles.

    The following chart was taken from the very informative and interesting Wikkipedia article but you can find the same information all over the internet

    Low dose exposure in animals

    Dose (µg/kg/day) Effects (measured in studies of mice or rats,descriptions (in quotes) are from Environmental Working Group)[104][105] Study Year
    0.025 “Permanent changes to genital tract” 2005[106]
    0.025 “Changes in breast tissue that predispose cells to hormones and carcinogens” 2005[107]
    1 long-term adverse reproductive and carcinogenic effects 2009[76]
    2 “increased prostate weight 30%” 1997[108]
    2 “lower bodyweight, increase of anogenital distance in both genders, signs of early puberty and longer estrus.” 2002[109]
    2.4 “Decline in testicular testosterone” 2004[110]
    2.5 “Breast cells predisposed to cancer” 2007[111]
    10 “Prostate cells more sensitive to hormones and cancer” 2006[112]
    10 “Decreased maternal behaviors” 2002[113]
    30 “Reversed the normal sex differences in brain structure and behavior” 2003[114]
    50 Adverse neurological effects occur in non-human primates 2008[44]
    50 Disrupts ovarian development 2009[77]

     

    So why the hell is BPA still being used  you might ask – between  nervously checking your genital tract and belting the kids.

    ‘BPA is such an easy chemical to make and it’s so useful,’ explains Tamara Galloway, a professor in ecotoxicology at the University of Exeter, UK.  ‘It is made from very cheap ingredients – acetone and phenol – and it makes a nice, clear, rigid polycarbonate and is really useful for making epoxy resins. ” Via Chemistry World .

    According toPlasticsEurope, an association representing European plastic manufacturers, polycarbonate technology contributed €37 billion to the EU in 2007. And they state that more than 550,000 jobs in the EU depend – either directly or indirectly – on the production and use of polycarbonate. Via Chemistry World .

    Also the science is by no means conclusive. It has become something of a cause with consumer and green groups who are vociferous in their opposition. Media  reporting tends to concentrate on the negative aspects of any new reports. Yet several scientific panels, including the European Union’s Scientific Committee on Food, the National Toxicology Program and the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis, have all concluded that the claims that low doses of BPA affect human health have not (yet ), been substantiated. While accepting that animal testing has produced adverse results they can find no concrete evidence that humans will react the same way.

    And even if they do, the amounts of BPA we ingest are so minimal as to be negligible.

    In Europe, the tolerable daily intake for BPA is set at 0.05 milligrams per kilogram of body weight. This value is an estimate of the amount of a substance that can be ingested daily over a lifetime without appreciable risk. The figure was calculated in 2006 by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), who at the same time stated that intakes of BPA through food and drink, for adults and children, were well below this value.Via Chemistry World .

    The current U.S. human exposure limit set by the EPA is 50 µg/kg/day.

    Which means, as the BPA industry’s voice over at to bishenol-a.org puts it

    “Based on the results of the SPI study, the estimated dietary intake of BPA from can coatings is less than 0.00011 milligrams per kilogram body weight per day. This level is more than 450 times lower than the maximum acceptable or “reference” dose for BPA of 0.05 milligrams per kilogram body weight per day established by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.”

    Which means an adult would have to eat  230 kilograms  of canned food and beverages every day of their life to exceed the safe level of BPA set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

    As the toxicologists love to say – it’s not the poison but the dose…..

    However, what is certain  is that  BPA is a $6 billion plus global industry. According to the National Institute of Health, approximately 940,000 tons of BPA are produced in the U.S. per year. About 21% is used in epoxy resins and most of the rest goes to polycarbonate.

    want to know more – this is another good read.

    You can find reports, studies and media scares on BPA here

    More bad BPA news

    Could sterilising plastic bottles in hot water do more harm than good? Scott Belcher and his colleagues at the University of Cincinnati in Ohio have found that polycarbonate plastic bottles release up to 55 times more bisphenol A (BPA) after they’ve been washed in boiling water.

    BPA is found in many plastic food and drink containers and has been linked to breast and prostate cancer. Because they are often reused, Belcher wanted to test whether old containers leached BPA into their contents faster than new ones. His team filled new and used polycarbonate plastic bottles with water and kept them at room temperature for a week. They found that the rate of BPA release into the water by new and used bottles was an average of 0.49 nanograms an hour.

    But when the team mimicked sterilisation by filling the bottles with boiling water and leaving them to cool, they found that the average rate of BPA release jumped to 18.67 nanograms per hour. This continued even after the bottles had cooled and been rinsed out (Toxicology LettersDOI: 10.1016/j.toxlet.2007.11.001).

    While the levels of released BPA fall within safe limits as currently defined by the European Food Safety Authority, Belcher suggests switching to bottles made of high-density polyethylene as a precaution.

    As reported in new scientist

    Meanwhile Canada has already banned BPA in babaies bottles an American lawmakers are discussing banning BPA in childrens food products

    More

    “As staunch supporters of the anti-BPA campaign we were very pleased to see coverage in the British media last Friday of a new report linking BPA to breast cancer. The Daily Mail and the BBC both featured articles about Professor Anna Soto, an expert in cancer development ar the University of Ulster, who has recently carried out research on BPA . She is warning that BPA can trigger toxins which lead to cancer after discovering that foetal and neonatal exposure to the chemical increases the likelihood of development of malignant tumours later in life.

    To read this artice in full including up to date reports from the BBC go to baby born free of baby born free feeding bottles. to quote the website “BornFree’s award winning leak proof BPA-Free baby bottles come in plastic (PES) or glass and feature an anti-colic vent designed for comfortable and safe feeding.”

    More

    In 1998, Dr. Patricia Hunt of Case Western University in Ohio discovered that damaged or worn or warm plastics made from polycarbonate resin can leach biphenyl. She is still studying the subject. You can read about her here….

    More

    Interesting article here

    Teeguarden says that pM levels of BPA ought not to be a concern for us. This is because if the hypothesis that BPA causes harm by mimicking oestrogen is correct, then the dose of the chemical your average person receives everyday is 100 to 10,000 times lower than those needed to activate the hormone receptors. He also makes the point that the term ‘low dose’ has become somewhat debased in the BPA literature. When he looked at 130 animal studies using that term, the vast majority used BPA levels many times higher than a person would ever encounter in their diet. He says that this is more than just an academic point as it has contributed to confusion among toxicologists, epidemiologists and the general public.

    More

    B.P.A. Soup thats gross.

    Heinz ‘committed’ to cutting health scare chemical BPA | News | The Grocer.

    I am so glad I boycott tin cans

    More

    Find out more about BPA “here

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    Trimmings & Fixings

    Zips & Fastenings

    Metal trouser hooks and eyes can be bought loose from trimmings shops on Leeds Kirkgate Market, Covered Market City Center
    Huge press studs on cardboard backing Leeds Kirkgate Market, Covered Market City Center.

    Ribbons Lace

    You can get organic 100 % cotton lace here

    And more here https://jamestailoring.co.uk/product-category/haberdashery/lace/

    FINE FRENCH COTTON LACE BORDER

    ID: 12244Fine French Cotton Lace Border. Width 60mm. 90% Cotton/10% Polyamide. https://www.macculloch-wallis.co.uk/p/12244/cotton-lace-trims/mw/fine-french-cotton-lace-border

    And lace like this  guipure style lace trim  100% certified organic cotton https://www.embroidered-lace.com/sale-10515379-embroidered-guipure-venice-lace-trims-organic-cotton-lace-trimming-for-chemises.html

    Lancaster & Cornish Ribbons like this…. This bias cut feather weight habotai silk is super soft and drapy.  The silk is dyed with natural plant dyes in our Cornwall studio.

    Or real silk ribbons hand hand died in Scotland using natural dies made from plants grown in the garden WANT SOME!!!!!! Not bought any myself but I bet you could get them in plastic free packaging if you asked. They seems a very nice business.

    A bit from the website

    I have started to produce hand dyed ribbon using the plants and flowers grown at Mill Pond Flower Farm. We are very fortunate in having a wide variety of mostly native trees and plants with the addition of flowers grown for sale. This gives a great store of material that can be used in dying fabrics and can give a range of colours. The effect of using natural dyes is to give a softness and depth of colour that changes with the light, blending effortlessly with other fabrics and hues.

    Buy here

    On Amazon – you can see a selection here

    More

    Find lots more plastic free sewing aids and fabrics HERE

    See The clothes I have made here

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    Hankerchiefs

    Snot rags! Ughhh….. Remember the old days when you had a hanky tucked up your sleeve or even in the hem of your knickers, your home-made knitted knickers that is?  Long gone are the clammy times of snot rags, hurrah for the disposable tissue….

    Unless of course you care for trees, don’t like waste and won’t use plastic.

    I fall into all of those categories so I don’t buy plastic packed throwaway paper hankies but I must admit the idea of using cloth made me squirm. Still needs must and I bought a whole load of  reusable fabric, washable handkerchiefs from  Huddersfield Market

    and then some more from Organic Alley.
    She  sells organic, fair trade cotton hankies. She also  has a whole load of info on why you are a  better person for using reusables and how  cotton hankies are not at all nasty….really.
    I have been using mine for ages and they are a lot more comfortable than paper – not so scratchy on the nose. lighter on the environment and really useful for all sorts of other things too. Try them you will be amazed.

    Which Hankie

    Handkerchiefs come in all different weights of cotton and sizes.
    Heavy cotton are good for big blows with lots of snot but harder to wash. And of course they are bulkier.
    Light weight cotton hankies are good for day to day sniffles and wiping and are easier to carry, wash and dry.
    Men’s handkerchiefs are usually bigger than ladies.
    Small handkerchiefs are good for one or two blows. Big ones can see more service.
    Patterned handkerchiefs don’t show up the stains.

    Using Your Hankies
    Get lots of small hankies, use them for a couple of blows then in the laundry. Use like a papper tissue rather than keeping them in your knicker leg for ages. It also depends (and I don’t want to get to specific here) on the quality of the mucas. Thick and green and its back to disposables!

    Other Uses
    Handkerchiefs can be used as little bags
    As a headscarf (get a larger size!)
    neckerchief
    And a dust mask.

    Disposable Tissues
    NB Do be careful when you buy a box of tissues. They often come with a plastic collar. You can find plastic free boxes here. Or you could just use loo roll in compostable packaging.

    Buying Elsewhere

    If you cant get then locally, you could try these from Amazon. Please do read our disclaimer for more info about buying from Amazon

    12 Pack Ladies 100% Cotton Plain White Handkerchiefs With Satin Stripe Border Samuel Windsor Luxury 100% Cotton Handkerchiefs - 12 Pack. Samuel Windsor Luxury 100% Cotton Handkerchiefs Check Stripe - 12 Pack.
    12 Pack Ladies 100% Cotton Plain White Hand…
    £10.49
    Samuel Windsor Luxury 100% Cotton Handkerch…
    £15.00
    Samuel Windsor Luxury 100% Cotton Handkerch…
    £10.00
    Samuel Windsor Luxury 100% Cotton Handkerchiefs - 12 Pack. 12 Pack Of Womens/Ladies 100% Cotton Dyed Handkerchiefs With A Satin Border, Assorted Colours
    Samuel Windsor Luxury 100% Cotton Handkerch…
    £10.00
    12 Pack Of Womens/Ladies 100% Cotton Dyed H…
    £7.99
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    Watering Cans for young and old (and rich)

    Take a look at this beauty – my  galvanised watering can with removable brass rose. Looks good and lasts forever. Comes with absolutely no plastic bits and no packaging at all. It holds 9 litres – 2 gallons which is big enough to matter but light enough to carry when filled with water.

    Rose

    The brass rose can be unscrewed and this is a very important feature. Put the rose on and water can be sprinkled over seedlings or delicate plants a necessary but slow process. Take the rose off and water can be poured in a stream which is great for soaking plants at the roots. A removable rose means it can be cleaned when bits of soil and residue block the holes. Without this feature your can will eventually clog up.

    Finally the rose can be replaced when knackered. Interchangeable roses can also be bought resulting in ever finer sprays.

    Haws Cans

    Haws also do a metal watering. It is the Rolls Royce of metal watering cans with a price tag to match. These too have interchangeable roses

    Kiddies Cans £5.25  

    Made by Garden Angels these cans are as classy as you would expect from these guys. They are metal watering can with enamelled finish and will last much longer than plastic counterparts. They don’t have removable roses but in all fairness they are more for fun then real work. They come in pink or blue – I don’t know why. Plastic and packaging free they

    Sadly they have plastic handles and come wrapped in a plastic bag.

    Buy

    All the above can be bought on line or from local hard wear shops and some B&Q stores.

    If you have trouble finding them,  you can get them here (along with a lot of other plastic free garden supplies), from  Amazon  You can read our Amazon policy here.

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    Fruit dried

    Tricky but not impossible.

    The Nut Shop Leeds Market offers a wide range of nuts and dried fruit, even loose sprinkles for cakes. By weight. Details HERE

    Loose Food

    If you cannot get to Leeds you can try
    Wholefood Market a supermarket chain
    Or see if there is a loose food shop near you. As the plastic movement grows more shops are selling naked food; stuff that that normally comes plastic packaged ie rice, Some sell dried fruit. Heres a list of towns with shops selling loose food.

    Buy Online

    But loose food shops are still few and far between, Don’t despair. It is possible to buy food online loose and plasticfree. You can even use your own cotton produce bags for some things. READ MORE HERE.

    More

    find other fruit here.

    Supermarkets & Chainstores
    Because sometimes we have to shop there and yes you can get plastic free and zero waste stuff. Read  our supermarket reviews here.

    If you want to buy loose, you will need to take your own reusable packaging – produce bags, tupperware even compostable disposables. You can find them here.

    Feel guilty buying plastic packed food? So do we but sometimes you have to so we apply the special treats rule. read more about the three levels of plastic free food

    See all our food posts via the food index

    N.B.

    lines changes, products get removed. For more information why not ask the Plastic Is Rubbish FB group for updates. They are a great source of tidbits, personal experience and the latest news. Why not join them and share the plastic free love x

    And before you go…

    If you have found the #plasticfree information useful, please consider supporting us. It all goes to financing the project.

    Buy Me a Coffee at ko-fi.com

    SaveSave

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    Plant Labels

    Busy digging over the garden and planting up next years crop in the allotment and I find myself:

    • Turning over a new seed bed to find ugly plastic markers polluting the soil:
    • Uncovering plastic plant markers relating to some kind of plant but all the text has disappeared:
    • Hoeing away and cut through another perennial;
    • Plant up some lettuces in lovely rustic pot which I don’t want to sully with nasty looking plastic plant markers
    • Planting up rows of seedlings and not wanting to use plastic markers because of – well -all of the above:

    So I have bought some wooden monster-size, lolly-pop stick. NB The normal size lolly pop sticks are too small. I tried them but couldn’t read them.  Actually I couldn’t even see them and so another peony died.
    These big boys come in at 150mm length x 19mm width x 1.8mm giving me plenty of room to write on and if I use a permanent writer, the writing lasts as long as the marker.

    I can also use pencil which doesnt last as long but is plastic free.

    If they get dug into the soil no problem they will biodegrade and feed next years spuds.

    They look much nicer in my pots and allotment.

    Where to get them?

    You can buy these from craft stores on-line but they often come in little plastic bags. To ensure I got these plastic free I had to buy in bulk so they came in a box rather than a bag. I searched for medical spatulas on ebay.

    If you have trouble finding them,  you can get them here (along with a lot of other plastic free garden supplies), from  Amazon.  

    One of the real joys of buying #plasticfree is sourcing the stuff in local shops. However sometime you have to buy on line and if I don’t know of anywhere else I tend to end up recommending Amazon. I know and I don’t like what they do either but t I have always found Amazons service to be good, the recommendations are for second party sellers and the packaging usually compostable.

    You can read our full policy here

    Tongue Depressor, 6-inch, 11/16 No Splinter, Birch, NonSterile (Pack of 100) Karter Scientific 212T2 Paper Pot Maker & Accessories Gift Set - Great Gardeners Gift Giant Paper Potter
    Tongue Depressor, 6-inch, 11/16 No Splinter…
    £4.99
    Paper Pot Maker & Accessories Gift Set …
    £11.99
    Giant Paper Potter
    £11.00

     

     

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    Nail Brush

    Check out these wooden and natural bristle nail brushes from Wilkinsons – a bargain at 59p.

    If they don’t do them any more you can buy a pricier version from Ethical Superstore from Natural Collection

    Natural Collection has been supporting sustainable production, ethical innovation and green ideas since 1999. Their range is an ecologically considered collection, which highlights the importance of consumer choice in the belief that we all have huge power and responsibility to change the world according to what we choose to purchase.

    The Natural Collection range is produced in harmony with the natural world, harnessing nature’s benefits without exploiting her resources. They believe in responsible manufacture, from the gathering of environmentally friendly organic and recycled materials, right through to considerations of later recyclability and biodegradability.

     

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    Frozen Food Loose

    Pain Au Chocolat –

    home bake Pain Au Raisen –

    Home Bake Yorkshire Puds

    Fruits of the forest and other soft fruits

    Roast veg – peppers to potatoes

    Uncooked Vegetables – Peas!!!

    Fish Cakes

    Just some of the frozen stuff sold loose at Emly Moor Farm Shop.

    Here is the company who supply them – Field Fare. They supply shops nationwide. There is a postcode locator here which tells you where your nearest retailer is.

    The Emley Moor shop doesn’t stock the full range, but it will give you an idea of what’s available.

    Heres how it works. Using the little scoop you shovel what you want into the bags provided. Of course the bags provided are plastic but take your own bio bags (corn starch bags – made from vegetables they are fully compostable)  and the plastic bag problem is solved. Bio bags are fine to use in the freezer.

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    domestic waste created in the US in 2008

    Material Weight Generated Weight Recovered Recovery as Percent of Generation
    Paper and paperboard 77.42 42.94 55.5%
    Glass 12.15 2.81 23.1%
    Metals
    Steel 15.68 5.29 33.7%
    Aluminum 3.41 0.72 21.1%
    Other nonferrous metals 1.76 1.21 68.8%
    Total metals 20.85 7.22 34.6%
    Plastics 30.05 2.12 7.1%
    Rubber and leather 7.41 1.06 14.3%
    Textiles 12.37 1.89 15.3%
    Wood 16.39 1.58 9.6%
    Other materials 4.50 1.15 25.6%
    Total materials in products 181.14 60.77 33.5%
    Other wastes
    Food, other 31.79 0.80 2.5%
    Yard trimmings 32.90 21.30 64.7%
    Miscellaneous inorganic wastes 3.78 Negligible Negligible
    Total other wastes 68.47 22.10 32.3%
    Total municipal solid waste 249.61 82.87 33.2%

    Taken from  http://www.epa.gov/epawaste/inforesources/index.htm