Mylar Balloons
Let's do a public service announcement today. While out for a walk in nature a couple months ago I saw a bunch of Mylar balloons a little off the trail. This is pretty common, especially in woods/meadows where they'll tangle up with plants.
While releasing these balloons may seem like an expression of freedom, the balloons do eventually come down. They (and other plastics) either don't biodegrade at all or else take extremely long periods of time to do so. And a surprising number of times, they (somehow) get mistaken for food and are eaten by animals, sometimes staying in their systems until they die.
If you're determined to use these balloons, please consider disposing of them without letting them fly away. You'll help the environment and help prevent people (like me) from getting scratched up trying to retrieve them out of the woods. (Even Big Balloon doesn't support releasing these balloons into the air.)
And really, once they deflate and land on earth again, they don't look all that festive either.
April 5, 2022 at Duke Farms |
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