are bags strong and thick enough to reuse
are bags strong and thick enough to reuse
are bags strong and thick enough to reuse
One can buy biodegradable plastic at Amazon. Amazon offers one enough variety to choose from with products from different prices. Amazon made this in such a way one can find one they're looking for.
If it is strong or thick enough, plastic can deflect bullets.
Yes, and actually that is just the plastic shopping bags that get thrown away in there. There is more plastic than that.
Plastic bags rip to easily and it is way better to use a reusable bags! If you think about it then there is know reason to use plastic bags! They hurt the environment, they rip easily and when you go to the store they store like puts only two things in them! Well anyways if you go to chicobags.com and buy a chico bag they hold up to25 Pounds, unlike the plastic bags! Plastic bags are nothing but trouble,so get some echo friendly bags.
wrappers on many foods are plastic for durability and handling. Paper would not be strong enough.
It's cheap, strong enough, doesn't rot or rust and easy to manufacture. Plastic in bikes isn't that common, it's generally not rigid/strong enough. Good for things like fenders though.
Sorry, 'strong power glue' doesn't tell us enough, -Name your glue -
Biodegradable means it'll be able to separate enough to become beneficial to the earth rather than harmful (non-biodegradable).
Any hard plastic figure with limited rotating limbs will be strong enough for use and abuse outdoors.
BIODEGRADABLE: The waste that breaks down easily by the action of some micro-organism (i.e. bacteria) and also can break down in a non-poisonous form. Biodegradable waste will eventually break down and become part of the earth and soil, like food scraps and paper. Non-biodegradable waste will NOT break down (or won't for many many years). Examples are plastics, metal and glass. Some dangerous chemicals and toxins are also non-biodegradable, as are plastic grocery bags, Styrofoam (polystyrene), and other similar materials. Non-biodegradable can be misleading, as often the subject that this term is associated with is organic matter and organic matter always decays so it is biodegradable. This term was principally created to help improve public awareness of responsible recycling. Plastic is classed as non-biodegradable but certain types of plastic decay at faster rates than others: a plastic milk bottle container purchased from a supermarket may take anything from 5 to 20 years in the environment to become brittle enough to be destroyed by the elements. Other types of thicker plastic may take 100-500 years or more to fully decay but in the timespan of the history of the world that is just a blink of the eye.