Daily Deliberate Changes & Featured posts & Resolution Strategies: Live a Greener Life & environmental attention 22 Apr 2008 03:20 pm
Happy Earth Day!! My Own Review of Reusable Grocery Bags
I’ve seen these done several places…a few newspapers and People magazine…comparisons of various reusable bags available on the market. None of them included the BEST bag though so I’m writing my own about my favorite bag and why I think it’s better than the others. If a week’s groceries takes 10 bags (and that’s modest, because they usually double bag), that is 40-50 a month, or between 520 and 600 bags a year FOR ONE FAMILY. It’s nigh impossible to find enough recycling sources for that many bags and a sickening use of energy and waste production. So bring on the reusable bags!!!!
I saw these little cuties in the store the other night…seemed like a good option for throwing in my purse so I’d always have on hand, not unlike the Bummi Bag I used to carry for cloth diapers and wet spills when I had babies. They are cheap (5/each) and lightweight. The website says they make sure the China-production is fair labor/fair wage. They are nylon and can hold 20 lbs. Favorite selling point? Their small size when balled up. I think I’d use these in place of a baggie…but not a grocery bag.
Ecobags, offering The Green Bag: The Ecobags site offers several kinds of bags but for grocery bag purposes, I’ll focus on The Green Bag. It’s made from polypropylene and has a flat bottom. At just a couple of bucks a piece, they are cheap. I actually don’t trust the price….the adage, “you get what you pay for” comes to mind. I need durability!! This bag may be great for a jam… just getting a few things at the store and one’s available for an impulse buy at the check out stand; I may buy one knowing I’d use it at least a few more times. But given time to think about it, I think I’d rule this out as potential clutter, not being strong enough to go the distance.
Envirosax: Oooo!!! What a pretty site! And pretty bags too! My first reaction to these bags is that I wish the straps were longer! They’d make cute messenger bags (what I use for a side-carry purse)! They cost 8.50/bag and there are a few styles currently out of stock. I do wish it were a bit more obvious on the site what the product construction is, where it’s made, and how much they can carry. That bottom seam-design seems like it would strain. But these bags are going to speak to a certain kind of customer and more power to them!
Australian site offering organic cotton and hemp bags. Oy! Pretty cool….but alas, they are Australian and that intimidates me about ordering overseas. I would definitely look for their cool designs while in my health food store. And they DO have long enough handles to be side-carry. One thing….I think I’d use this as a typical tote and not as a grocery bag because they are too hippy-cool to gunk up weekly shopping.
The Use-Again Bag: So…full disclosure…my mom owns this venture. But I LOVE these bags and bein’ her kid
doesn’t keep me from getting to talk about them! The are 100% American made. Come in great colors. Nylon…so they can be balled up, folded up, washed, dried, and they’ll still be great looking and lightweight. The handles are super strong (can hold up to 60lbs for those one-trippers out there!) and have hooks on the insides so they fit into the brackets that the store baggers use.
They are pretty, durable, compact, strong…they are the total package in reusable grocery bag design. And they aren’t expensive either…10/apiece and with durability that exceeds expectations. A supply of these bags will last and go the distance with families who buy a lot of groceries. We’ve used them for overnight travel totes, quick trips to the store (they fold small and fit in a purse easily), trips to bulk warehouses, and the get used every week for the regular grocery runs.
But whatever bag you use, make the switch away from plastic!! This is one way, we ALL can have an immediate impact on our environment…for the better!





on 22 Apr 2008 at 5:36 pm 1.carrie said …
I love the use-again bags I bought a while ago. I bought three, and plan to get more soon. I try to keep them in the car or van, along with the Sam’s Club insulated bags, so they are there whenever I go to the store Even with only three I have definitely cut back on the number of plastic bags I’m bringing home.
Carrie
on 22 Apr 2008 at 9:23 pm 2.Sherry Mullinix said …
I love the use-again bags as well but also just found Ecologie Bags, a Texas-based company, which has colorful reusable bags too and they’re really affordable. They’re $2.50 each on http://www.ecologiebags.com.
on 22 Apr 2008 at 10:42 pm 3.Cathy Tomlinson said …
Another satisified customer here. I ordered the Use Again Bags after reading about them in one of your blogs. They are very sturdy, beautiful colors and they hold a lot. At $10 each they are a great bargain!!
on 23 Apr 2008 at 7:53 am 4.gina said …
Hey Tia-
I just checked out these bags, they are very cool! I wonder why they are making some out of polypropylene-um, that’s PLASTIC!!! Kind of defeats the purpose! Your mom’s looks like the obvious choice:-)
on 23 Apr 2008 at 8:27 am 5.Anh said …
Against my wishes, my wife made me buy the reusable bags from Publix. And, I have to admit, they’re great!
glad i found you, tia. i’m new to the blogosphere…but what fun it is!
on 30 Apr 2008 at 1:59 pm 6.AnnMarie said …
Ummm…you do realize that nylon is a plastic, don’t you? So any nylon bags are still plastic bags!
Go canvas.
on 01 May 2008 at 9:21 am 7.Tia Graham said …
Ann-Marie, Nylon is a synthetic but it’s not “plastic” per se. While all natural fibers for everything is a nice ideal, I’ve found lots of places in life where a synthetic is useful and sometimes, better for the job. A canvas bag in this instance would be much heavier, bulkier and also more expensive to make.
on 02 Jul 2008 at 12:42 pm 8.Cindy Atmar said …
The idea behind reusable bags is not the fabric that is used to make them, but the fact that they are reusable so you’re taking plastic bags (hundreds of them each year per family) out of the eco-system. Polypropylene is recyclable so after their useful life of approximately two years, the bags can be recycled. Nylon ones can’t but polypropylene ones like the Ecologie Bags mentioned above can. And canvas gets dirty and is heavy before you even load any groceries into them.