Showing posts with label Bamboo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bamboo. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 July 2020

Reusable bamboo facial pads to reduce waste and plastic use


EverEco reusable bamboo facial pads (photo J May)


These soft, reusable bamboo facial pads by EverEco can be washed in the bag provided. Having these reduces the waste of throwaway pads and the use of plastic packaging. In addition, bamboo is an easily replaced fibre as it is a very fast growing plant.

EverEco has many different sustainable products which can be viewed here and ordered online: https://evereco.com.au/.

Tuesday, 25 September 2018

Sustainable tissues made from bamboo and sugarcane fibres

Tree-free No Issues tissues (Photo Julie May)

With bamboo being the fastest growing plant in the world, therefore easily replaced, and sugarcane fibre being a plentiful waste product, why not make more use of these sustainable products?

No Issues, an Australian company, is doing this by making soft, strong facial tissues out of bamboo and sugarcane fibres. Millions of trees worldwide are cut down each year for paper. No Issues is providing these sustainable paper tissues tree-free thus saving trees for our children’s children.

No Issues tissues are available in Australia at Coles, Woolworths, IGA, Foodland and Clarins.

Reference: https://www.noissues.com.au/about-us
See also: Can we replace plastic or steel with bamboo products?

Tuesday, 24 July 2018

Can we replace plastic or steel with bamboo products?

A bamboo tray at the Eden Project, Cornwall, UK. (photo Julie May)

There are over a thousand species of bamboo (Gigantocholoa), a primitive grass growing in a variety of forms from tiny dwarfs to towering tropical giants. The tropical giant bamboo (Dendrocalamus asper) is the fastest growing plant on the planet, recorded growing 1.2m skywards in 24 hours! Not only does bamboo grow fast, it begins growing again immediately after harvesting. A sustainable product easily replaced.

Gigantocholoa is a tropical to subtropical plant. The distribution of bamboo in general ranges from 50°N of Sakhalin in north Japan to 47°S in Chile. It occurs in altitudes up to 4,000m, from the warm humid tropics to the cold areas of northern Japan.

Common Uses:
  • Bamboo is one of the most versatile plants on earth, useful for its lightweight strength, which comes from its hollow stems, for its ease of working and for its simple beauty.
  • It is used by half the world’s people in thousands of products from huge skyscraper scaffolding to tiny gramophone needles and from slide rules to skins of aeroplanes. It can be used to start a cooking fire in a wet rainforest and its ashes can be used to polish jewels and manufacture electric batteries. It has made bicycles, windmills, musical instruments, kitchen utensils, paper, clothing, scales and walls strong enough to resist flood and tide, and bridges up to 260m long in China.
  • Bamboo is suited to low-technology processing, as well as industrial manufacturing techniques. It is an ideal building material for low-cost, low-impact, earthquake-resistant housing projects.
  • Within its stem walls short, tough fibres sit in a resilient softer matrix providing nature’s version of fibreglass. It has great tensile strength, splits straight and is very hard. You can grow your own house from bamboo every five years.
  • The young shoots of Gigantocholoa are eaten as a vegetable.
Read more: Bamboo. The Eden Project: https://www.edenproject.com/learn/for-everyone/plant-profiles/bamboo