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Big hairy deal…

 

photo credit to www.matteroftrust.org

photo credit to www.matteroftrust.org

Here’s an innovative approach to ‘reduce, reuse, recycle.’ Hair stylist Phil McCrory noticed how quickly otters’ fur absorbed oil during the Exxon Valdez disaster. After testing how much oil clippings from his hair salon could absorb, he created the oil remediation mat, marketed as OttiMat. He discovered that a machine designed to make carpet pads worked well to make the hair mats. McCrory teamed with the environmentally-driven Matter of Trust and began production. These mats are used to clean up oil spills, including the one that deposited 58,000 gallons into the San Francisco Bay in 2007. They can be wrung out and reused many times, the oil being disposed of safely.

In addition, McCrory had been saving clippings for a while for clients who used the hair in their gardens. After seeing a four-year-old rose bush that had never bloomed grow 15 feet and sport a profusion of blossoms, Smart Grow was born. This can be used as a soil amendment, buried near the base of the plant, or as a mulch on top of the soil to deter weeds. Either (or both) of these reduces the use of chemical fertilizers and herbicides. Making plants healthier reduces their susceptibility to pests of all kinds (weeds, disease, insects, etc.), so you likely will cut down on your total pesticide applications overall. A Florida nursery tested the product on 200,000 container plants (half with, half without). In one weeding cycle, their results showed only 19,000 lb. of weeds in the plants with Smart Grow, as opposed to 88,000 lb of weeds in the ones without! The cost was nearly $33,000 more to manually weed the plants without Smart Grow, and even with all that weeding, more than 2000 lbs. of herbicide were applied.

According to one source, the Ottimats and Smart Grow products are sold through a parent company, World Response Group. WRG estimates that in the US alone, 60 million pounds of human hair go to landfills each year. Hair decomposes very slowly, so it stays there for quite some time. Not only human hair is diverted from landfills when used in McCrory’s products, though, according to a separate source which states that other natural fibres are accepted as well – dog fur from groomers, horse hair, waste wool, even nylon stockings that can be filled with hair and used to contain spills.

This is an inventive way to repurpose waste products, reducing landfill contributions by millions of pounds every year while providing an effective way to clean damaging oil spills (2600 worldwide last year, according to WRG).

To take it a step further, oyster mushrooms are now being used to consume the oil after it’s absorbed. Then the hair mats can be reused as nontoxic compost. To quote Jeremy Elton Jacquot of TreeHugger.com, “It’s always nice to see people use their heads – hair and all.”

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5 comments to Big hairy deal…

  • Hello,

    My name is Bill Hawthorne, and I represent maacenter.org, a leading web resource for asbestos exposure and mesothelioma cancer information. Our organization is dedicated to increasing awareness of the terrible health consequences of asbestos exposure through the distribution of the best informational materials and public outreach efforts.

    I found your site through a search and decided to contact you because of its high environmental and green presence which is extremely important in our movement. Your viewers are extremely savvy and motivated. The promotion of how buildings should now be built using sustainable green products to avoid asbestos and mesothelioma as well as the awareness of past buildings and preventative steps in avoiding asbestos exposure are extremely important. My goal is to get a resource link on your site/blog or even to provide a guest posting to be placed.

    I look forward to hearing from you. Please feel free to check out our website at http://www.maacenter.org. Thank you for your time and consideration.

    Bill

  • Marg

    That’s an awesome post! I had no idea that human hair would be that useful.. someone should start a hair recycling biz and collect the hair waste from hair salons.

  • This is a great resource, useful for anybody interested in this topic.

  • Nothing beats finding some useful information, for my research, keep em coming.

  • The employment of asbestos fiber is against the law but a majority of houses predating the particular prohibit have got galore quantities coating the walls as well as ceilings for a fire resistant heat retaining material. Several different kinds of asbestos fiber are viewed rather harmless when in tact however when it turns into damaged or maybe actually starts to grow older; it could possibly release dangerous fibres in to the air causing lethal illnesses which includes Mesothelioma or Asbestosis.

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