originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
I've been running into plastic versions of the wax capsule which, if they don't sport the romance that cork defenders claim for corks, have been much less messy, if at all.
Sure, they are a lot easier to open than the hard wax, but it is somewhat clueless on the part of organic/natural producers, given the massive negative environmental impact of plastics.
Definitely negative. As is chopping down oak trees to make new barrels (too bad we can't claim negative impact for skinning oak trees alive to make romantic corks). But I continue to eat meat (sigh), so double standards apply.
I had always thought that cork was a renewable natural resource, just one that took decades. On the meat front, it is all a matter of degree with goats and sheep generally less resource intensive. When I could eat meat I always bought it directly from farms where I knew exactly how the animals were raised and what they were fed. 100% grass-fed is best rather than feed-lot beef, which has a massively negative environmental impact.