Will Brown wrote:They trashed our street, too. This isn't the first time.
What really irks me is that those plastic bags are, I'm told, petroleum based, so we are using valuable natural resources to create trash. And as they apparently take forever to degrade, they end up harming my landscaping, fish and wildlife.
Some cities have banned them. I'd like to see Lakewood do that, but when we go grocery shopping and I ask for paper only, my wife demands that they use both paper and plastic; her reasoning is that she needs the plastic bags to put recyclables out for pickup.
Will, to tell you the truth, we have two dogs that assist us in reusing those plastic bags.
Composting dog poop really isn't very effective unless you have about 8 dogs or so I read. There are systems that are supposed to work like little doggie septic systems but they don't work when the ground is frozen. I'm guessing our neighbors might not be too thrilled, either because I probably wouldn't have the time to do what it takes to keep the compost smelling good.
I would like to find some sort of bag that isn't paper and that won't instantly decompose when... less than dry but that would decompose in a short time. I wouldn't mind of the newspapers were delivered in those.
I know that pet stores sell bags to pick up poop, but it doesn't seem sensible for me to purchase something that I already get for free.
I would also assume for folks who get the newspaper in a bag and can't find another use for them, that you might ask your carrier if you could give them back to be reused.