Beekeeper Annette Duckworth in a plea for us to think about bees when we shop

Can we please have biodegradable plastic.
As a member of the 
        British Bee Keepers Association, I receive a monthly magazine, wrapped 
        in plastic.
        Beekeeping is a delightfully old-fashioned world. But to their immense 
        credit, the BBKA have got their act together and have changed to a biodegradable 
        plastic wrapper for the magazine.
        I struggle these days doing the supermarket shop. EVERYTHING comes in 
        plastic wrapping, NONE of which can be recycled. Only hard plastic can 
        be recycled, NOT standard PLASTIC BAGS of any sort. They will float around 
        the world for hundreds of years to come.
        But what do we find? You cannot buy potatoes or carrots without plastic. 
        Even loose vegetables must be put in a plastic bag to be weighed. I have 
        tried keeping them loose to avoid the bag and my carrots roll down the 
        conveyor belt to the annoyance of the cashier.
        Could we have PAPER bags for loose veg? And can we have biodegradable 
        plastic around the bagged vegetables? 
        Why not?
        They won’t biodegrade by the time we get them home.
        We Chiswick folk should boycott Sainsburys and Waitrose until they do 
        something.
        We can use the markets.
        And why does the Sainsburys deli package ALL their meat in POLYSTYRENE?
        Totally unrecyclable.
        I have asked and asked.
        Managers please LISTEN.
        If the BBKA can manage to use biodegradable plastic, WHY can these huge 
        supermarkets not make the change?
 And while 
        I am in print, may I make a plea to us all, to please have mercy on our 
        precious street trees this summer.
        Reducing the canopy to nothing; removing ANY tree that is not dead or 
        dangerous is extremely short sighted. Think of the world our children 
        and grandchildren must live in. 
Every tree 
        removed is a nail in the coffin of our bees. Trees feed bees big time 
        because the are BIG. They are the biggest source of food for our bees 
        because they are BIG. Spare our LIME trees and ACACIA trees especially. 
        And Sycamores, Chestnuts, Maples and Aulders. All the insect pollinated 
        trees especially. They were planted by people who understood the natural 
        world. Every big city in Europe had these trees because people used to 
        know about bee keeping and valued their trees. When they are gone they 
        are gone. The Council have dammed all Limes and Acacias and big trees 
        in general and will not replace them.
        
Annette 
        Duckworth 
      
May 4, 2019