" /> The world according to me....: March 2005 Archives

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March 21, 2005

Foggy beach


Yesterday, I was on the beach in Emerald Isle, NC, and took this photo of the transfer pipe of the channel dredging/nourishment project (see here). I couldn't help wonder what new visitors or tourists might think of this when the first walk out on the beach and see this mysterious pipeline running off into the distance. Sure enough, a little while later a young couple asked me what the heck the pipe was for. "Renourishment," I said. "They are dredging sand from the inlet in the west and transferring it to the beach over in the east." They wondered if it cost a lot of money (yes) and also what it looked like at the end of the pipe. So, for anyone who wonders what the discharge area of a nourishment project might look like, here is a photo, also taken yesterday

March 19, 2005

Bag offense


When I brought canvas shopping bags with me into a grocery store in western North Carolina last year, little did I know that I would offend the check-out person. Apparently, she was insulted that I didn't want to put my purchases in their disposable plastic bags. My colleague, Sue Cameron, had warned me that she also has encountered similar resistance when she uses her string bags at the store. What I find amazing is that more people don't try to reduce their use of disposable plastic bags. Plastic waste is a huge problem around the world, and plastic bags account for a large portion of it. Sure, you can recycle plastic shopping bags, but something like 80% of all disposable bags are unaccounted for. They are either in landfill sites or blowing free somewhere. You can estimate the impact of your own plastic bag consumption with the Bag-O-Meter. It doesn't take much to reduce consumption of these plastic bags. Last year, in Australia, a national "Plastic Bag Famine" campaign was mounted and participants reduced their plastic bag consumption by 70%. This year, the country of Eritrea banned the use of disposable plastic bags. You can also help reduce this waste by bringing your own stury carrying containers (string or canvas bags, reusuable plastic tote boxes, a backpack, a basket, etc.) when you shop at the grocery store. You might run into a little resistance, as some people working the check-out lines are insulted when you use your own bags, but don't let that dissuade you. Just this week, I was asked "What's wrong with our bags," when I started putting my things in my canvas bags. I was getting ready to explain how I am trying to reduce waste, when another cashier cut in with the following remark: "Those plastic bags are a terrible waste and they often end up choking birds and turtles." A little support goes a long way.