Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
Tea bags that rot down in compost
On Thu, 9 Sep 2010 16:02:49 +0100, (Peter
James) wrote: I've just spread the contents of the compost bin on my vegetable garden and find that the Typhoo tea bags that were put into the compost haven't rotted down. Can anyone recommend a tea bag that will rot down in the compost. Typhoo tea bags seem to leave a fine plastic net behind them. Peter Have you written to Typhoo to ask them if they will change the bags? -- http://www.bra-and-pants.com http://www.holidayunder100.co.uk |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
Tea bags that rot down in compost
On 12/09/2010 11:55, mogga wrote:
On Thu, 9 Sep 2010 16:02:49 +0100, (Peter James) wrote: I've just spread the contents of the compost bin on my vegetable garden and find that the Typhoo tea bags that were put into the compost haven't rotted down. Can anyone recommend a tea bag that will rot down in the compost. Typhoo tea bags seem to leave a fine plastic net behind them. Peter Have you written to Typhoo to ask them if they will change the bags? I does seem odd that in these days of encouraging the use of biodegradable materials that some manufacturers are going backwards in this respect. -- David in Normandy. To e-mail you must include the password FROG on the subject line, or it will be automatically deleted by a filter and not reach my inbox. |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
Tea bags that rot down in compost
Timothy Murphy wrote:
I think most civilised people drink loose leaf tea in Bodum glass infusers. Oh, I loved our bodum infuser, but after 2 catastrophic middle of the night infuser-suicides, we've given up and gone back to a pot. :-( (they /really/ make a mess when they launch themselves from a high shelf, especially, it seems, at 3am. I think it's to do with the location of the moon and its effect on gravity!) |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
Tea bags that rot down in compost
Gordon H wrote:
I have a couple of Bodum coffee infusers, now you have me wondering whether they could be used for tea... The tea infuser is a different beast to the coffee infuser. |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
Tea bags that rot down in compost
In message , mogga
wrote Have you written to Typhoo to ask them if they will change the bags? You would be better off writing to the supermarket asking why their supplies are not going "green". -- Alan news2009 {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
#21
|
|||
|
|||
Tea bags that rot down in compost
|
#22
|
|||
|
|||
Tea bags that rot down in compost
Christina Websell wrote:
snipped Well, mine don't. I spread the contents of my compost bin on my allotment on Thursday, and was dismayed to find that there were thousands of Typhoo tea bags on the surface, the contents rotted down, the outer bags present. They had been in the compost for up to 1 year. So the seach for a tea bag that provides a good cup of tea, and rots down continues. Ah, but no chicken poo in the compost? No wonder it doesn't rot g No teabags refuse to rot in my compost heap. OK, then I'l try chicken poo. It sells for £3.50 a bag here in Cornwall. It's that or change the tea bags, and I do enjoy Typhoo. Peter -- He spoke with a certain what-is-it in his voice, and I could see that, if not actually disgruntled, he was far from being gruntled. P.G. Wodehouse 1881 -1975 |
#23
|
|||
|
|||
Tea bags that rot down in compost
In message , Peter
James wrote OK, then I'l try chicken poo. It sells for £3.50 a bag here in Cornwall. £3.50 per bag! That's a very expensive way of producing one cup of an alternative hot drink. -- Alan news2009 {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
#24
|
|||
|
|||
Tea bags that rot down in compost
On 12/09/2010 17:02, Alan wrote:
In message , Peter James wrote OK, then I'l try chicken poo. It sells for £3.50 a bag here in Cornwall. £3.50 per bag! That's a very expensive way of producing one cup of an alternative hot drink. I bet they don't sell much of that chicken cup-a-soup! ;-) -- David in Normandy. To e-mail you must include the password FROG on the subject line, or it will be automatically deleted by a filter and not reach my inbox. |
#25
|
|||
|
|||
Tea bags that rot down in compost
Alan wrote:
In message , Peter James wrote OK, then I'l try chicken poo. It sells for £3.50 a bag here in Cornwall. £3.50 per bag! That's a very expensive way of producing one cup of an alternative hot drink. Well, it would last a long time though. -- Mike. |
#26
|
|||
|
|||
Tea bags that rot down in compost
In message , Alan
writes In message , Peter James wrote OK, then I'l try chicken poo. It sells for £3.50 a bag here in Cornwall. £3.50 per bag! That's a very expensive way of producing one cup of an alternative hot drink. And the taste is too strong for me... -- Gordon H Remove "invalid" to reply |
#27
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
__________________
getstats - A society in which our lives and choices are enriched by an understanding of statistics. Go to www.getstats.org.uk for more information |
#28
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
I was in the habit on discarding tea bags into my compost bin, I also found that even after a year they had not broken down. I now dry said tea bags, rip them open and save the leaves in a container. The bags I discard to the rubbish bin, I think that they must be using some form of synthetic mesh. What worries me is that we don't know what it is made from, what worries me more is that we are drinking tea which may not be safe for human consumption!!! uriel13 |
#29
|
|||
|
|||
Tea bags that rot down in compost
"Alan" wrote in message ... In message , mogga wrote Have you written to Typhoo to ask them if they will change the bags? You would be better off writing to the supermarket asking why their supplies are not going "green". -- Both these ideas are good. Typhoo should definitely be asked about why their tea bag*bags" do not rot down in an ordinary compost heap. They may reply wriggling about the issue. I've recently become concerned about what I feed my cat because ingredients in cat/dog food that were sourced in China killed many pets in the USA from kidney failure because it was contaminated with melamine to enhance the protein content when it was tested. So why not ask them about their sources? I did, and received reassurance that nothing in his food was sourced from China. Not so for his treats that were manufactured by Bob Martin. They were unable to identify where exactly the ingredients came from, and fiddled around by repeated e-mails that said "we are committed to the health of.." I take that as a no, then. They have no idea, and all the treats are in the bin. news2009 {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
#30
|
|||
|
|||
Tea bags that rot down in compost
Timothy Murphy wrote:
Alan wrote: Surely you buy tea based on the quality of the tea and not the bag they put it in? http://www.guardian.co.uk/environmen...biodegradeable I think most civilised people drink loose leaf tea in Bodum glass infusers. Better for the palate and better for the garden. Sadly it is becoming steadily more difficult to find loose leaf tea in supermarkets. You might have to get the stuff by mail order - I'm lucky, I can drop in on ilkinson's (and another tea/coffee merchant in Norwich) - the only teabags I have in the house are used ones I've scrounged from fiends and rellies. I dry them (to entertain the neighbours?) on my washing line, then, when I feel like some mustard and cress, us them as mini growbags. /Owners of bitches, note:/ TAAAW, if you get bald patches in your lawn, sowing them with grass seed and patching the spots when the grass ha sprouted deprives the sparrows of the seed. -- Rusty |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
How do you get pond plants to rot down on the compost heap | Gardening | |||
compost "tea bags" | Australia | |||
rot rot rot | Orchids | |||
Tea Leaves Down Sink Or Compost / Garden ? | United Kingdom | |||
Tea Leaves Down Sink Or Compost / Garden ? | United Kingdom |