As much as I hate grocery shopping, I had to go tonight. Running out of food, I got in my car and headed down to Hy-Vee. I live about two minutes from one of the Hy-Vees, yet work at one about 25 minutes away. If I really wanted to live a greener life and shed some fuel emissions, I guess I should transfer. Grocery shopping is something I don't enjoy surely because of my tenure at Hy-Vee. I spend enough hours in a grocery store every week. I digress.
Anyway, I need food. I'm out of anything remotely edible. I park my car, brave the biting wind and reach the front doors. Only then do I realize I do not have my reusable bags in hand. Do I go back to the car or take plastic sacks at the check out? Thinking specifically of this blog, I turn around and head to my car for my reusable bags. Pop open the trunk. Nothing. Check the back seat. Nada. Where are my reusable bags? They must be at home. Great.
Working at a grocery store, I handle a lot of bags. When I started way back in February 2008 most customers took plastic bags at the check outs. Those who preferred paper were usually either elderly people or younger, health conscious yuppies. Reusable bags were not very common. Now they are prevalent, maybe in part because they have gone down in price. Reusable bags are sometimes giveaways which makes them more tempting than shelling out $1.
At work last week one of managers, Matt, was making small talk with a customer. The customer causally asked how many people brought in reusable bags and Matt estimated that about a third do. This answer surprised me but as I thought about it, that figure seemed in the ballpark. When I first started at Hy-Vee, I remember thinking most of the customers who brought their own bags were kind of freaky. Especially those who brought in their ten-year-old gunny sacks that smelt of ass. But now BYOB (Bring Your Own Bag) is widely accepted. There are shelves of reusable bags for sale at each check out at my Hy-Vee.
And the whole paper vs. plastic debate could be a project of its own, but it reminds me of a figure I read in our Hy-Vee company magazine. I wish I could find it but I remember it said that the plastic bags are actually more eco-friendly than paper bags. The energy required to produce paper bags, from gathering the material and physical production, is greater than that required to make plastic bags. While both kinds of bags can be recycled, of course paper bags come from trees. Plastic bags come from oil. Still, it's interesting that plastic bags are more eco-friendly. I'd like to tell those hippies who prefer paper but they'd never believe me. I wish I still had that magazine. I will look up real facts and figures soon, I promise.
So where was I? I got off on several tangents. Oh right, tomorrow I should put my reusable bags in my car. And avoid another shopping trip.