- heavy plastic bins or totes - No Frills sold heavy plastic grocery bins for $5. I think we have five of them. They out perform cardboard in that they are reusable without breaking down or collapsing if they get wet. They are stackable so we keep 2 or 3 in the vehicles for larger grocery purchases. We have several larger totes for bulk purchases like meats.
- reusable cloth shopping bags - We have tons of these! They are used for anywhere we are shopping not just the grocery store. At first some stores didn't like this but now they are catching on that plastic shopping bags are no longer in vogue.
- nix shopping bags entirely - Quite often I walk to the grocery or hardware store. If buying only a few items, I get just what will fit in my backpack. If buying a bit more, a bring the collapsible tag-a-long shopping cart. If running into a store for one or two items, I simply decline any bag and carry as is. When we were getting ready for moving last year, I purposely used cardboard boxes from the grocery store for groceries that then could be recycled to pack our belongings for the move.
- produce hampers - A Canadian produce hamper holds 5/8 of a bushel. Most are made of heavy plastic. We have several of these because we pick our own, frequent fruit and vegetable stands and get tomatoes in bulk from a relative. These sturdy hard plastic hampers can double as smaller rubbish bins or a child's dirty clothes hamper and they can be used to cart groceries into the house. We keep a couple in each vehicle.
Garden Gnome
©2006-2012
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