See My First Grader Save the Earth…from Juice Pouches!

by Katie on February 6, 2012

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The following post is from Katie of Kitchen Stewardship:

terracycle

Open mouth, insert…juice boxes?

Sometimes I say things without thinking.

We’d been at my son’s new school for about a month when I visited for the Christmas party. (And yes, they did actually call it a Christmas party in a public school. Kind of refreshing, I thought.)

The kids were all starting to clean up and throw away their Capri Sun juice pouches, when my green consciousness kicked in. It was like a no-waste reflex, a gut reaction that couldn’t be stopped.

“Did you know those can be recycled?” I blurted out to the teacher. “I can look into how to do it…I’ll take them home.”

Open mouth, insert foot. Foot tastes like juice.

A month later, I find myself the coordinator for the Terracycle juice pouch collection project for the entire K-4 school.

Luckily, the rewards are good: both the school and the earth benefit.

Terracycle recycles and re-purposes foil juice pouches of all brands and pays the school two cents per pouch.

Our job (my 6-year-old son is my team member!) will be to collect the pouches from the cafeteria, and when we reach one thousand, we can request a postage-paid shipping label from Terracycle and send them in. (The rules just changed, however, and we only get one cent per pouch unless our shipment includes 5,000+ pouches. Phew.)

It’s been quite gratifying to see so visually how much waste we can save from being trashed each week.

Week One:

source: Kitchen Stewardship

Week Two:

source: Kitchen Stewardship

If you’re looking for a way to teach your child a little eco-conscious activism, I highly recommend looking into Terracycle. Juice pouches aren’t the only thing they collect, either.

Here’s all we had to do:

1. Register an account online. This took 5-10 minutes.

2. Get the principal’s approval. My son’s teacher is 100% behind me, so that was painless and quick via email.

3. Make a box. This was a good craft project for the whole family and took about half an hour to an hour. One could easily just buy a plastic tub, too, but I am a fervent repurposer…

source: Kitchen Stewardship

source: Kitchen Stewardship

source: Kitchen Stewardship

4. Type up a sign for the box. My job, 15 minutes.

5. Type a letter of explanation for the parent newsletter and communicate with the principal:

It’s always great to get a 2-for-1 deal, especially when it helps our kids and supports Brown Elementary. Our school can get two benefits with one simple action: recycling drink pouches (such as Capri Sun) will earn money for Brown AND help save the Earth by reducing waste in our landfills.

There’s a new box in the cafe for collections – please encourage your child(ren) to put any brand of drink pouches (the foil kind, not drink boxes) in the box. Removing the straw first will be a big help. If you send in juice pouches for classroom parties, help remind the teacher to send a student down to the cafe with the empties.

Thank you so much for participating! You can see more info at terracycle.com.

6. Collect the pouches. I pick up the kids one day a week anyway; so, we’ve been grabbing the pouches at that time. Our box has been just the right size!

7. Here’s the hard part, and the job we haven’t done yet: counting the pouches. The Terracycle website tells us that 1,000 pouches weighs about nine pounds, so I’m pretty tempted to just go that route. Maybe we’ll count the first 100 just to see what one hundred looks like, and then go by weight.

What are YOU going to do?

Whether you can find a Terracycle “brigade” to coordinate or not, set a goal to raise the green consciousness of your children in any way you can. It brought joy to my heart to hear my son pushing me, “Come on, Mom, we gotta get that box done – I see kids throwing away the juice pouches every day and it’s such waste!”

He was pretty pumped that the first day we collected, after only four days of the program being school-wide, the box was full. Saving the earth can be pretty exciting.

I’m just hoping that I don’t taste juicy foot in my mouth when we get to the whole “storing up five thousand juice pouches” part. Good thing we have a 2-car garage now!

Can you think of a way to help your child’s school (or your workplace) be more eco-friendly?

Katie Kimball is a mom of three who spends a ton of time in the kitchen making real food with whole ingredients and then blogs about her successes and failures at Kitchen Stewardship. She believes everything in life is a gift from God and should be taken care of wisely.

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  • http://joyceandnorm.wordpress.com Joyce and Norm

    I didn’t know you can recycle those. My girls don’t have a school to collect for, but I can definitely pass on this info. I did something similar at church once when I saw that there were no recycle bins. Then, I ended up having to take all the paper home to recycle. =p Luckily, it was a small church. And I was also put in charge of collecting the ink cartridges for recycling too. Not too bad, just had to collect 50 of them to turn in each time.

  • Linda

    Do you have to have 1000 before you can send them in?! I’ve started collected ours at home/school lunches(we drink Honest Kids). I just thought you could send whatever you collect.

    • Sarah Hofhine

      You can send smaller amounts in but you don’t get any money for your charity.  You can also now send in boxes of mixed waste streams (mix your cell phones, kashi cereal boxes, juice boxes, etc) but you only get 1 cent per item instead of the usual 2.  Check Terracycle out, it’s very cool!

    • http://twitter.com/kitchenstew Katie Kimball

      Linda,
      Sarah is right on; all the info is at the Terracycle site, too.

  • April

    My first son went to kindergarten at a public school for 6 weeks before we decided to homeschool instead.  It was a culture clash, for sure.  He would come home and tell me he didn’t know what to do with his apple cores because he couldn’t find the compost bucket in the cafeteria… things to think about.  :)

  • http://profiles.google.com/kdfgreene Kristina Greene

    Good for you!  I started TerraCycle in my town in May 2010.  We have raised over $4700 so far.  It is so amazing to see the excitement in children.  We collect 8 items, including the juice pouches.  If you need any advice or have questions, please feel free to contact me.  You don’t have to take out the straws and Terracycle goes by weight when determining the number of pouches in your shipment – so definitely make sure it weighs enough.  Good luck!

    • http://twitter.com/kitchenstew Katie Kimball

      Holy cow, that figure is absolutely inspiring! Thank you for sharing!! :) Katie

  • http://www.frugalfreebiesanddeals.com/ Frugal Jen

    happy to say my girls school already does Terracycle!!

  • Kristin

    This is great Katie! Our school does TerraCycle too and my kids have extended family members collecting for us too. It’s great to see what we can divert from the landfills!

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  • http://www.adventuresinthriftland.blogspot.com Laura’s Last Ditch

    Part of me likes this, but part hates it. I think it could make people feel less guilty about using single-serving packages, and I think it would be better to teach kids to avoid these sorts of things entirely. Reduce/Reuse is so far superior to Recycle.

    • http://lifeyourway.net Mandi @ Life…Your Way

      I think that’s definitely a valid point, Laura — but since we can’t change the practices of everyone around us, I love how Katie’s family is making a difference by collecting the things that might otherwise be thrown away, don’t you?

  • Pingback: How to Raise a Child “Green” with the Power of Words

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