3D printing the Pacific garbage patch, so the Atlantic can have one too.
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3D printing the Pacific garbage patch, so the Atlantic can have one too.

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Columbus in the Pacific Garbage Patch
Environmental Anxiety
I spend a lot of time focusing on all of the things that Iām not doing to save the earth. I look at the one plastic bag I got at Target because I forgot my reusable bag that day. I look at the plastic on my veggies that I purchased in a rush because I didnāt have time to go to multiple stores to find all of the unpackaged items I discovered during my 40 day plastic challenge. I agonize over the gift bag I bought for my nephews birthday present because I didnāt have a homemade fabric bag the right size for it. Iāve been falling deeper and deeper into a pool of environmental anxiety over this as I see articles saying we have so few years, so few months, until we are beyond the point of return and we set ourselves on a path of destruction that we cannot reverse.
So, now that Iāve also depressed you, I will tell you how Iāve been combatting the problem. I remind myself of the things I do every day, the things that have become so routine I forget that I made that change to do my part to save the world. I may not be doing everything, but Iām doing something. And that counts.
1. Reusable grocery bags for every grocery store visit
2. Loose leaf tea - no tea bags or boxes or packets
3. Washing my hair less - saving water, saving energy from water filtration, using less hair product overall
4. Turning off lights - My sister is so good at this and Iām fairly terrible at this, so Iāve been making more of an effort lately to only have lights on in the room Iām currently using
5. Glass Tupperware - I own only two plastic pieces of Tupperware. The rest are glass with plastic reusable lids
6. Less ziploc bags - I refuse to use ziplocs for daily things. Only for oddly shaped vegetable storage as needed. I use a slasher bag and a lunch sac for daily lunch items
7. Replaced plastic wrap with beeswax wraps. I havenāt used plastic wrap in two months
8. Washing and reusing aluminum foil, then recycling it. The only time I donāt try washing it is when I cook bacon. And lately Iāve stopped using it to make bacon, Iām just scrubbing the pan a little more.
9. Mason jars. Mason jars for everything. I brew my loose leaf tea in them, so Iām not buying plastic bottles of tea anymore, either.
10. Reusing packaging - every time I receive a package that contains stuffing/bubble wrap I bring that packaging to work so it gets a second life and gets used again when I ship items at work, rather than instantly throwing it away.
11. Composting. All vegetable/fruit/loose leaf tea goes into a bag in the freezer. That bag gets deposited into my friendās compost pile.
12. Glass jars. I have found glass options for most items I use, including mayo, which is notoriously stored in plastic. Thank you, Trader Joes!
13. Using silpat mats instead of parchment paper
15. Refusing to use plastic vegetable bags in the store. I carry my own reusable bags and if I donāt have enough bags I just dump stuff into my cart.
16. Responsible recycling. I clean everything to ensure that it does not contaminate the recycling system. I also research what can and cannot be recycled
17. I donate to environmental projects
18. I pick up trash everywhere and make sure it finds a home in a trash can
19. I add notes to online food orders saying āno silverwareā and I refuse straws when I can. I also have reusable straws at home
20. I have eliminated plastic from my dish washing routine. I use Swedish dishcloths, walnut scrubbies, and a compostable brush head and vegetable scrubber
21. I consume less meat than ever. And do my best to only purchase sustainably sourced, healthy meat. Or eat meat that I procure myself
22. Bar soap. I do not use body wash
23. Education. I educate myself and I do my best to educate others
24. I buy some items in bulk: cashews, popcorn kernels, seeds, spices, rice, noodles
And thatās all I can think of right now! But, I do feel better!
My entry for the Posters of Discontent contest. Itās about the Pacific Garbage Patch and how plastic makes up the majority of it. When the plastic degrades, animals can mistake it as plankton and eat it. The plastic builds up in their intestines, making them less hungry and unwilling to eat actual food, and they eventually starve to death. They essentially die from aĀ āplastic dietā.
My former professor from Willamette University dressed as the trash in our oceans and its effect on animals for Halloween.
Scariest costume of the year.

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Operation Nanobotās funding has run out for now, so the project is currently on hold- but hereās some bits from the art bible Iāve been putting together!
For those who are new, Operation Nanobot is a game intended to raise awareness about the Pacific Garbage Patch. You play as a small mechanical shrimp helping absorb plastic and destroy waste in the ocean. If you want to learn more about the game, you can see this older post.
ā Ā Niāihau Ā ā Ā ... Ā Ā The westernmost and seventh largest inhabited island in Hawaii. Ā Populated by only 170 people, this island still has a trash problem, compliments of the worldās floating plastic garbage which washes ashore on the windward side of the island.