They’re the windsocks in the willows. The pennants in the pines. The streamers in the sycamores. It’s around this time of year that plastic bags in trees seem to be everywhere in Chicago. As I write this, I can see three plastic bags billowing beautifully in the breeze. After a long winter (or two or three) of being battered in the trees by cold and snow and ice and rain, the bags are often in tatters, shredded plastic clinging to a few small limbs. It’s a tribute to the brute force of Chicago winds that the bags ever do disappear from the trees.
Monday, January 11, 2010
Bag dad
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2 comments:
Good for you...I'd like to think I'd do the same thing. And I surely can understand the satisfaction of such a deed.
We're in the NYC area and feel the same way about the problem of bags in trees. In fact, we designed and patented a tool called the Bag Snagger to tackle the problem. People heard about it, so we started manufacturing them and have sold them to New York Parks & Recreation, Central Park and many other across the country. Our web site is http://www.bagsnaggers.com. You're welcome to get in touch with us anytime at info@bagsnaggers.com. By the way, I really like your nicknames for bags in trees like "streamers in the sycamores." We learned that in Ireland they're known as "witches' knickers." Regards, Bill McClelland
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