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whoever come up with Plastic Packaging


Eddie

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Everything seems to arrive in plastic packaging, which is a impossibility to open without cutting your hands to pieces. They might as well wrap stuff in razor blades, whats wrong with a cardboard box, degradable and non lethal. 

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The Great Pacific garbage patch, also described as the Pacific trash vortex, is a gyre of marine debris particles in the central North Pacific Ocean located roughly between 135°W to 155°W and 35°N and 42°N.[1] The patch extends over an indeterminate area, with estimates ranging very widely depending on the degree of plastic concentration used to define the affected area.

The patch is characterized by exceptionally high relative concentrations of pelagic plastics, chemical sludge and other debris that have been trapped by the currents of the North Pacific Gyre.[2] Despite its enormous size and density (4 particles per cubic meter), the patch is not visible from satellite photography, nor is it necessarily detectable to casual boaters or divers in the area, as it consists primarily of a small increase in suspended, often microscopic particles in the upper water column.

Research has shown that this plastic marine debris affects at least 267 species worldwide and a few of the 267 species reside in the North Pacific Gyre

Have a nice day y'all.

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The Great Pacific garbage patch, also described as the Pacific trash vortex, is a gyre of marine debris particles in the central North Pacific Ocean located roughly between 135°W to 155°W and 35°N and 42°N.[1] The patch extends over an indeterminate area, with estimates ranging very widely depending on the degree of plastic concentration used to define the affected area.

The patch is characterized by exceptionally high relative concentrations of pelagic plastics, chemical sludge and other debris that have been trapped by the currents of the North Pacific Gyre.[2] Despite its enormous size and density (4 particles per cubic meter), the patch is not visible from satellite photography, nor is it necessarily detectable to casual boaters or divers in the area, as it consists primarily of a small increase in suspended, often microscopic particles in the upper water column.

Research has shown that this plastic marine debris affects at least 267 species worldwide and a few of the 267 species reside in the North Pacific Gyre

Have a nice day y'all.

We should send Frank on his boat to investigate. During winter storms.

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Everything seems to arrive in plastic packaging, which is a impossibility to open without cutting your hands to pieces. They might as well wrap stuff in razor blades, whats wrong with a cardboard box, degradable and non lethal. 

Fucking right, eddie. Especially those poxy blister packs, they're harder to get into than a lezzers knickers, and twice as dangerous. 

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Guest DingTheRioja

Those child proof medicine bottle plastic tops do my head in. Whereas bubble wrap, well, I could pop that all day long.

​Local car boot... bloke sells 100m roll of 50mm wide, £7... you'd be like a fuckiing crackhead in Columbia..!!

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The Great Pacific garbage patch, also described as the Pacific trash vortex, is a gyre of marine debris particles in the central North Pacific Ocean located roughly between 135°W to 155°W and 35°N and 42°N.[1] The patch extends over an indeterminate area, with estimates ranging very widely depending on the degree of plastic concentration used to define the affected area.

The patch is characterized by exceptionally high relative concentrations of pelagic plastics, chemical sludge and other debris that have been trapped by the currents of the North Pacific Gyre.[2] Despite its enormous size and density (4 particles per cubic meter), the patch is not visible from satellite photography, nor is it necessarily detectable to casual boaters or divers in the area, as it consists primarily of a small increase in suspended, often microscopic particles in the upper water column.

Research has shown that this plastic marine debris affects at least 267 species worldwide and a few of the 267 species reside in the North Pacific Gyre

Have a nice day y'all.


Sounds a better place to live than Edenbridge!

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Sounds a better place to live than Edenbridge!

​Dive in and you come out covered in microscopic plastic molecules, leaving this kind of thin shiny residue that Briny would probably get off on. The eco-system there has been fucked beyond recognition and the first plastic bag ever made will outlive every one of us.

Still, like you say, better than Edenbridge, so that's okay.

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