I'm organising a funeral, and one of the ideas that has come up is for people to write memories on a balloon and let them go. However, I've also heard that they often end up in trees etc and are terrible for the environment.
Is there such a thing as environmentally safe balloons? Other suggestions are also welcome.
I've been to a funeral where the guests wrote their farewells on slips of paper, which were then anonymously read by an officiant before being placed in a large ceramic pot with a small fire. It was much better than the traditional "Would anyone like to say something" followed by uncomfortable silence. People were much more willing to write down their thoughts for someone else to read.
There's already a couple great suggestions offered here as alternatives to the harmful balloon idea. I just want to say thank you to OP for being thoughtful enough to ask the question in the first place. The world needs more people like you.
You can use bio-degradable balloons but there is no guarantee they will not end up strangling birds or rendering squirrels immobile.
Maybe something that could start degrading some hours after you release it? It might end up safely popped midair without ruining the lives of wildlife.
But let me just add: I think you should not do this at all. It's too risky to do with traditional balloons, and it might be hard to find these "real/verified" biodegradable balloons, plus no guarantee they actually do what the backside says.
and it might be hard to find these “real/verified” biodegradable balloons
Also, “biodegradable” often means “in recycling facilities in a controlled environment using special machines and processing” when it comes to “biodegradable plastics” and not “just throw them anywhere and nature will handle it”.
Barely related, but a lot of people don't know as much as they think they know about recycling. That symbol on the bottom of your plastic jugs, jars, etc that looks like the recycling symbol was the result of a campaign to intentionally mislead people into thinking that the containers are recyclable. Those symbols along with the number are identifiers for the types of plastic involved. Different recycling plants are equipped to process different materials, so I'm not saying that no plastic is recyclable, but you're probably best off just assuming that your plant can't handle your plastic. Why? Because if they can handle any plastic, it's probably just one or two of them and you'd need to ask them to be sure, and you'd need to wash away all the food particles and remove labels and adhesive. I've heard that failing to do this can contaminate other material which renders that stuff unrecyclable as well, but I'm not sure that's still true or ever was so don't @ me on that point lol. I'm also not sure about sorting, but that could be necessary too. And after all that, it's still very hard to recycle plastic, and you can probably only do it once or twice before it's not usable anymore.
So what should we do with our plastic? Easy. Stop buying it. Okay, not so easy, but you can choose aluminum or glass containers instead wherever you have the choice. Any reduction is an improvement. Going a step further, see if you can't reuse your plastic for something else before disposing. Once you've gotten a few uses out of it, then you can go through the process of recycling if it's possible. I'm no genius for suggesting that, btw. That's literally just what "reduce, reuse, recycle" is telling you to do. It's in that order for a reason!
TED Talk complete. Hopefully most of you already knew this, but this was for the handful of people who didn't know!
Another thing that I'm not seeing people mention is helium balloons wandering to places like power substations and/or power lines, causing outages or even fires/explosions depending.
I liked what someone else said about writing thoughts or stories and having them read anonymously.
The other comment touched on balloons so I had some other suggestions based on things that other cultures have done
Would lanterns be ok? They follow a similar principle, and they might be made of more biodegradable materials (paper lanterns). This isn't something I'm familiar with though
There's also the idea of setting something biodegradable 'to sail' on the water. Little paper boats with messages on them should be possible, and it would be easier to write something on them. You'd need a lake, and you'd need to check if the type of paper will dissolve, but it still feels better to me than balloons
Yeah… balloons end up in the sea and frequently turtles eat them thinking that their jellyfish. Dead sea turtles have been found stuffed full of plastic bags and balloons.
Paper lanterns end up setting things on fire far away.
Could you perhaps stop the magical disposable up-in-air thinking and do something else? Like write wishes on pieces of bark and hide them in a forest to break down harmlessly?
I haven't seen that in stores or online but also haven't looked. Should be possible to make i feel with the evolution of bioplastics.
An alternative is paper lanterns. I've seen versions that at least claim they're safe in that they can't start a forest fire. With the Chinese New Year coming up they should be easy to find.