The blog formerly known as   Fake Plastic Fish

December 3, 2008

Holiday No Plastic Packaging Challenge

Have you seen Amy Gates’s No Plastic Holiday Challenge at Crunchy Domestic Goddess? It warms my heart when other bloggers get on the no-plastic bandwagon. If you haven’t already, please click the link to take the pledge and read her article. Then come back here (yes, come back!) for ideas about how to de-plastic the packaging for your plastic-free gifts. It doesn’t help to buy a beautiful handmade plastic-free gift from an Etsy seller, only to have them send it to you smothered in bubble wrap or inside a box covered in plastic tape.

Plastic packaging is just the kind of disposable material that is making its way to the North Pacific Gyre. (Isn’t it ironic that a material that lasts forever in the environment is so often made into single-use disposable products?)

So what can we do about it?

1) Give gifts that require no packaging at all: gift certificates for services, meals, theater tickets, other experiences. Gifts of time. Teach a skill. Cook a meal. Babysit. These kinds of gifts help bring people together without adding to the waste already choking our planet. In fact, I just realized tonight that I work for a very green company at this time of year. We provide elder care and childcare services. What a great gift that would make. (I sent my idea to the marketing department tonight. Hope it’s not too late!)

2) When purchasing ingredients for homemade treats in the store, try to shop where goods are sold in bulk bins and you can bring your own cloth produce bags, stainless steel containers, or glass jars instead of taking new plastic bags. Think of giving solid soaps and shampoos instead of liquids in plastic bottles. Skip most produce bags altogether. For larger items, they are unnecessary.

3) When ordering gifts online, request zero plastic and Styrofoam packaging specifically. I do this all the time when dealing with online sellers, and if they can’t accommodate me, I don’t order from them. When I do receive plastic packaging, I’ll sometimes simply mail it back to the vendor with a nice note asking them to rethink their packaging policies. (Or carry it across town on my bike.)

I’ve been criticized in the past for the added fuel costs of sending packaging back to sellers. But I believe that the fuel cost pales in comparison to the amount of energy and resources that can be saved through bringing awareness to the issue of plastic packaging. And receiving back their own packaging gives sellers a clearer message than a simple email.

4)Reuse packaging when shipping gifts away from home. Or use mailers made from post-consumer recycled paper fiber. For example, Jiffy Padded Mailers are filled with post-consumer paper fiber instead of plastic bubbles, as are Caremail recycled paper mailing supplies, which I saw recently on the shelf at Office Max.

5) Don’t forget the tape. Plastic packing tape is not the only option. Choose paper packing tape when necessary, and use it sparingly. Most people use way more tape than they need. (Although, yesterday at the post office, I was told I had not used enough tape and was forced to add plastic priority mail tape to the edges of a box I was shipping, so be sure you know how much is required beforehand.)

6) Find ways to wrap gifts without paper or tape. Many people are enjoying sewing their own cloth gift bags that are reused year after year. If you don’t want to sew your own, Lisa at Retro Housewife has a list of sources. Another cloth option is Furoshiki, a Japanese style of cloth wrap that requires no paper. And if you do want to use paper (preferably reused or recycled), try this method I figured out last year to wrap gifts without tape!

7) Be gracious and don’t stress. We are all human and doing the best we can. At this time of year, most of us will end up with some plastic packaging we didn’t anticipate, usually from well-meaning people who love us. Thank them for their gifts and then find a way to reuse the plastic. Me? I’m going to send out an e-mail to my friends and family (probably tomorrow) with a polite, plastic-free gift request. I may even publish it here. And once that’s done, I’ll accept whatever comes with gratitude. Because isn’t that what this time of year is supposed to be about in the first place?

3 Responses to “Holiday No Plastic Packaging Challenge”

  1. Anna, I welcome relevant links. I look forward to reading your post on re-using credit cards. Thanks for thinking of this issue.

    Beth

  2. Hi Karen. I actually use the cloth bags more for bulk bin purchases than for produce. In the fridge, we have all sorts of ways for keeping things fresh. Some work well in a container of water. Some do well in a bowl. I keep very few things in bags once I get them home.

    And I do still reuse a plastic bag for bread. I buy bread either without any packaging (from the bakery, put into my cloth bag) or in a paper bag. Then, when I get home, I put the cloth or paper bag inside a reused plastic grocery bag. It’s the only way I’ve found to keep it from getting hard.

    I think you’re idea is fine. Wrapping your produce in a tea towel and then putting that into a plastic bag that you reuse again and again serves the purpose of keeping you from needing new plastic bags and also keeps your food from coming into contact with the pastic. Seems okay to me.

  3. Hey Hayley, first of all, make sure you really can just install Photoshop from your friends’ disk. NOT that I am encouraging you to do anything illegal! But I also had a friend who tried to “borrow” Photoshop from someone else, and it wouldn’t work on her computer. Photoshop sounds like a great gift to ask for.

    Tracing back your ancestry to the 1400’s is impressive. My dad has one of our lines back nearly that far I believe. I should know, but I never really got into it.

    It’s hard for me to suggest things for you because I don’t know what you like. I do know you’re a really smart kid. What about an iTunes gift card (or is that not tangible enough for them?) That way, you can not only download music but also audiobooks, which is one of my favorite ways to “read” these days.

    Anyone else have ideas for gifts for smart environmentally-aware teenagers whose parents want to give them physical presents?