You say this is gross, but, the few rich houses I been in, these rich houses often don’t have bags in their bins. They are emptied frequently enough. It boggled me when I noticed it in more than one house.
We have no plastic bags where I am, I went through the loss of the bathroom trash can bag. I tried paper bags, obviously no go, they are too big. That’s when I remembered, snd just went bagless. I clean my bathroom well enough, it’s fine really. I empty it 1-2 a week. If it looks gross rinse it out. That’s what their maids do.
Did I miss something? There are folks who use the flimsy plastic shopping bags for the kitchen can!?
Even with a plastic shopping bag ban, you still may purchase trash bags. …
While some folks can go the extra mile and manage their kitchen trash in other, non plastic ways, you certainly don’t have to.
I really, really enjoy, not seeing plastic shopping bags floating around on our streets. It’s been years of the ban, and you don’t see it on the streets like you use to. I’m really happy with the plastic bag ban in my state.
Two big changes for my home with the ban, learning to remember your bags for the grocer, and finding alternatives for the bathroom trash. Even got a square trash bin for my husband’s office that fits paper bags, but the kitchen trash is a different story.
It’s okay to take smaller steps towards a less plastic intensive home.
You say this is gross, but, the few rich houses I been in, these rich houses often don’t have bags in their bins. They are emptied frequently enough. It boggled me when I noticed it in more than one house.
We have no plastic bags where I am, I went through the loss of the bathroom trash can bag. I tried paper bags, obviously no go, they are too big. That’s when I remembered, snd just went bagless. I clean my bathroom well enough, it’s fine really. I empty it 1-2 a week. If it looks gross rinse it out. That’s what their maids do.
Bathroom trash is much different than kitchen
Did I miss something? There are folks who use the flimsy plastic shopping bags for the kitchen can!?
Even with a plastic shopping bag ban, you still may purchase trash bags. …
While some folks can go the extra mile and manage their kitchen trash in other, non plastic ways, you certainly don’t have to.
I really, really enjoy, not seeing plastic shopping bags floating around on our streets. It’s been years of the ban, and you don’t see it on the streets like you use to. I’m really happy with the plastic bag ban in my state.
Two big changes for my home with the ban, learning to remember your bags for the grocer, and finding alternatives for the bathroom trash. Even got a square trash bin for my husband’s office that fits paper bags, but the kitchen trash is a different story.
It’s okay to take smaller steps towards a less plastic intensive home.
Maybe you compost, so you’re not throwing away food garbage? Otherwise, it would start smelling almost immediately.