Here’s how to give new life to old grocery bags (if you’re still opting for plastic rather than bringing your own reusable totes to the store!):
· Shelter young plants. For weather protection for your flower and vegetable seedlings, push four sticks into the soil around each plant, so that the ends stick up a couple of inches above the foliage. Then pull a plastic grocery bag down over the sticks and anchor the bottom with stones.
· Discourage critters. Most wild animals will flee from the sound of human voices. So turn on a battery-powered radio to an all-talk station at low volume, slide the radio inside a plastic grocery bag, tie it closed, and set the bag among your at-risk plants. Chances are, critters will scurry in a hurry.
· Make scarecrows. Collect a bunch of plastic grocery bags—the more colorful, the better. Fill them with air, tie them shut, and fasten them securely to the top of stakes about 5 to 6 feet tall. Push the stakes into the ground throughout your garden in a random pattern. When the bags bob in the breeze, the birds won’t like it one bit!
Even after you’ve used a plastic grocery bag a few times, there could be a lot of life left in it. In fact, if you tuck that bag into a recycling bin at the supermarket, it will be processed into wood-polymer lumber that’s used for making hardworking structures like boardwalks, nature trails, decks, and outdoor furniture.
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