Posts Tagged ‘recycling’

9
Jun/10
3

Another Sad Sign of our Society

I received an email tonight that just saddens me because of the potential implications it has on our society.

The email describes a new issue posing a significant risk, where individuals use empty soda bottles and common household items to make bombs out of empty plastic soda bottles.  Then they put these bottles into folks’ mailboxes or leave them on people’s lawns.  The unsuspecting person sees an empty bottle on their lawn, picks it up to properly discard or recycle it, and it explodes.   The chemicals inside heated to a boiling point, and cause severe thermal and chemical burns, likely to the hands and face, and the explosion can take off fingers.

We teach our kids to be litter conscious, and if they see things on the ground, to pick them up and recycle the things that shouldn’t be discarded.  The kids I know at our school and in our boy scout troop get this message repeatedly, and have become accustomed to seeing things laying around and picking them up.

Now what do we tell them to do.  Do we simply leave all litter and bottles on the ground for fear that what looks like an empty soda bottle with a little soda left in it is actually a bomb?  How do we re-train our kids to ensure they don’t have one of these explode on them?  I know for myself I don’t want to even touch one again after reading the article and viewing the video.

Think about the implications this likely will have on our environment, recycling, and our safety.  Just sad.

What can be done so individuals stop ruining our society and our way of life?

Here’s the link to the story and video:

http://www.snopes.com/crime/warnings/bottlebomb.asp

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19
Jan/10
1

Recycling – Things I Didn’t Know

I am amazed at the things I have learned in the past year while attending Boy Scout trips and outings.

Recently our pack traveled to the recycling museum, where we were provided a tour of the recycling plant.  Our town puts all recyclable items into one container, and the plant sorts it all out.  Really cool!

What I didn’t know was that I was recycling things improperly, causing them more work than needed.  As with my previous post, I thought I would pass along what I learned, seeing that every adult on the trip did pretty much what I did with recycling.

Plastic bottles and containing #1 and #2 are what they want, currently.  Soon they will be able to process all plastic items #1 through #7.

Caps are bad.  They are made from a composition of plastics, and are therefore not recyclable.  The caps need to be removed and discarded separate from the recycling.

Same for jars – no caps allowed.  Even though them are often metal, they are a composite and not a pure metal, and most have a wax or plastic seal in them.  Caps get discarded.

Cans, lids to cans, flip tops (soda cans) – all accepted.  Paper, of any kind, all accepted.  For every cube of recycled paper they create (and they create many every day), they save seventeen (17) trees.  On our tour we observed hundreds of these cubes awaiting train transport to Canada for re-use.

I am looking forward to the day we can put all plastics into the bin (as I have been doing unknowingly) so that we can better preserve our environment and natural resources.

CRRA Recycling Museum in Hartford, Connecticut – I highly recommend visiting them, especially if you have kids.

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