Sunday, February 21, 2021

Environment and Us - One-time Plastic Usage

2020 Pandemic response meant reduced human activity & presence, which let Earth recuperate. Animals were roaming freely & plants were growing in abandoned places. But human response saw increased usage in one-time plastics and other things which became thrash after one-time usage. Like PPE masks, gloves and plastic bags.

Cloth masks with their use-n-wash & reuse again are cool alternatives to the use-n-throw blue masks. But there are other aspects which got left behind and should not be forgotten.

Individual actions


Shopping Bags

* Got the repeat-use thylas/jhoola/bags to cut down the one-time usage plastic-bags taking up all of the under-sink cabinet space. 
* Canvas bags for heavy duty grocery from Indian stores. Lighter fancy ones for Target, Aldi & others. 
* Have multiple bags in the car trunk. Once we haul groceries home, we are generally too tired to put them promptly back for next shopping trip. 
* Lockdown times was bit unsure about carrying personal bags to public stores. Most stores asked me to bag items on my own, which is fine. And for some that I was unsure, I left the bag in trunk & got groceries in the cart to the car, like the usual shopping in Costco/Sams. 
* Saved all the time from sorting bags to dump in designated spots. Saved space at home otherwise littered with plastic bags.
Purple mesh bags are purple onion bags from Costco/Sams. They are in great shape to use as is. White strip of labels need to be cut off; else the bar-code interferes with the cashiers scanning. In pre-pandemic world, got compliments from atleast 5 fellow shoppers. But I stopped using it on 2020 & am slowly getting back to it.  


My COMPOSTING adventure. 

* Got the black composting bin from City. I know a lot are available on Amazon. It’s placed in the backyard, close to veggie patch. 
* This winter I put up a bin on deck for a stop-gap arrangement. Filled it on daily basis and when snow melted on the path to outside bin, emptied it to larger bin. Our thrash-bag output is reduced to 1-2 per week. 
* Organic waste in in bags in the large bin, coz makes it easier to move the black-gold to the veggies patch. I got tired of shoveling it from the floor one summer.
* Earthworms - I never bought any. Only the ones we found while digging for regular garden work - those went in the organic waste bags.
* Smell is not a problem. In winter it’s all frozen. After defrost any smell is locked inside the bin. Once it turns black gold, there is no smell at all; just a hint of Mango & pineapples. 


Gardening tips:

* Rice & dal washed water straight to plants will yields immediate flowers. 
* Put banana peels (minus the end hard parts) & egg shells in blender & purée with water. Put it straight to potted plants or veggie patch. Heard the same with potato peels, but haven’t tried it. 
* Tidy cats boxes make great containers for veggie plants. I borrowed from a neighbor & planted creepers ( watermelon & butternut squash) & Malabar spinach. (White paint box container garden pic from Gardening FB group). The creepers would stay clean away from soil and I could move the containers anywhere I liked for sun.

 


Political muscle

Individual actions to recycle & reuse will improve that family’s lifestyle quality. But without support from infrastructure, even the best intentions see limited action. 
* Toronto & Bengaluru have city collection systems for separated organic waste; which all goes to a central composting facility. 
* Meanwhile entire Texas state does not have recycle at any spot. Imagine the amount of landfill being used just by plastic & paper. 
However, individuals act is limited by political guidance. Hence it's important to influence or be involved in the political direction of the city, state & country. 
This article captures this relationship in detail: “....without strict laws to curb carbon emissions, no individual’s choices matter all that much. For them, the most important action is political — to try to change the direction of national and global policies....” 

Likewise, once the world is back on its feet, I hope there are more measures strengthening & improving all aspects of these, while reducing burden on the environment.
  • medical waste disposal
  • landfill 
  • PPE manufacturing


Sunday, February 14, 2021

Office Pantry politics

Office pantry is quite a unique spot. 

Its a meeting spot. Some people gather & conduct an impromptu meeting, with complete specific details. Some gather to gossip about their office nemesis or boss or process. Then there are loners who glide in & out of pantry doing only what they came to do.

Layout wise it generally has a Scotsman water filter/cooler/dispenser. Vending machine for snacks or carbonated drinks. Refrigerator for office folks to store their lunches & other food, sometimes all week or month long. Few microwaves for office folks to heat their lunch or coffee or popcorn. Some pretty much do the cooking. Those ready-to-eat packages need 5-10 minutes of microwaving.

Sink is a major boiling point. Dirty cups or food crumbs left in sink are major trigger points. From time to time, some put up passive-aggressive notes.

Some deal with it in a funny way.

One time when 2 microwaves broke down, then the default solution is to walk up or down to the next floor & use theirs. A poster came up polling for "Guess When the New Microwave will come & win a Microwavable meal." Way to keep it interesting.

All that I am describing applies to North American offices. None of this would make it to a show like Office or any movies showing corporate offices. But this drama is too entertaining to be lost in space.

In the current remote working world, especially for those who have got out of college and started working, the absence of this spot is going to leave a vacuum in their work experience.