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Thrifty and Green Liners for WastebasketsLynn from Chico, CA Feedback About This Post:RE: Thrifty and Green Liners for WastebasketsUse your daily newspaper to line your wastebasket. Use 2 or 3 layers. We used to do this before plastic bags were introduced. If you don't get a daily newspaper, beg some from your neighbour or from your friends. Post By Irene (Guest Post) RE: Thrifty and Green Liners for WastebasketsWhat about using an old pillowcase....or if you sew, take old sheets and make them to fit your cans...then they are even washable! Post By Terri in Fla. (Guest Post) RE: Thrifty and Green Liners for Wastebaskets
I use totes for groceries that I either bought in the grocery store or made myself. Post by tymyshoe RE: Thrifty and Green Liners for Wastebasketsi like to get the paper bags from the grocery store and then use those as trash bags all by themselves. Post by niftyjessy RE: Thrifty and Green Liners for Wastebasketsif you can't eliminate your use of plastic bags you could at least cut down by only putting wet/messy trash in a single can! I think it's better to recycle everything that there is available recycling for and use cereal bags and such for the trash! Post By Patricia Reed (Guest Post) RE: Thrifty and Green Liners for WastebasketsYou can custom-make bags for your wastebasket out of a couple sheets of newspaper. Tape them together or learn a little origami to fold them so they won't come apart. You can also use a paper grocery bag as a pattern. Post by Jantoo RE: Thrifty and Green Liners for Wastebaskets
Here in CA where I live not only do we have recycling for paper and bottles (you can throw in your grocery plastic bags too!!) but we also have compost recycling! We hardly have anything to throw away, except for dirty diapers from the baby I nanny, kitty litter (which I switched to dumping into paper lunch sacks instead of plastic grocery bags) and whatever my husband throws away (he's not into the recycling food waste stuff). We can even throw away the paper plates, kleenex, paper towels, and pizza boxes, it's great!!!! Post by michawnpita RE: Thrifty and Green Liners for Wastebaskets
i agree with the point about not really needing a liner. Post by maryjane72 RE: Thrifty and Green Liners for WastebasketsI use paper lunch sacks in the bathroom and bedroom waste baskets. Post By Louise Z (Guest Post) RE: Thrifty and Green Liners for WastebasketsLoooog time ago, when I was a bride. we only had cloth shopping bags; no plastic, no paper. And all our wastecans were metal. Soooooooo, we first waxed the wastecan, then recycled our newspapers by lining the cans with them. The more industrious of us would sew newspaper bags with the sewing machine. Put more layers of paper on the bottom. You can put a cereal box, styrofoam meat tray or egg carton to catch drips and strenghten the bottom. Post By Camilla (Guest Post) RE: Thrifty and Green Liners for WastebasketsI don't even use liners in my bathrooms or bedroom trash as I don't usually have messy things to put in them. If you really want some sort of liner, paper bags are actully better to use. Plastic bags are a petroleum product and we don't want to add to our dependency. Most paper bags from the grocery are at least 50% recycled paper, so they aren't as bad as plastic. I really would see if you need liners at all, you may find out when you look at the garbage that goes into the cans that you don't really need a liner. Post By Jessica from Jersey (Guest Post) |
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