
Jennifer Tobin, Whitby, ON
Most dental floss is made from nylon or Teflon and the thread is coated with waxes to ease your path to healthy gums. This super-strong thread won’t degrade so it shouldn’t be flushed down your toilet. It can contribute to a blockage in the pipe between the sewer and your home.
In some Canadian municipalities, discarded floss is also jamming pumps at sewage-treatment facilities.
Native Americans used yucca-leaf fibres to make dental floss, but today, manufacturers such as Radius are making natural flosses from silk that will biodegrade in a landfill and perhaps even in the compost in your yard.
Radius is available at Whole Foods locations in Canada and at health-food stores such as Choices Markets in Vancouver and the Lower Mainland. However, some environmentalists and animal-rights activists ask consumers not to buy flosses made from silk because silk production causes painful deaths for insects.
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Nothing biodegrades in a landfill, my friend. Very little anyway. Newsprint is one of the most readily biodegradable substances, and readable newspapers can be dug up from 50 years ago. The compost in your yard is a better bet. Your statement should read:
"natural flosses from silk that will biodegrade in the compost in your yard"
Good grief I think it's stupid to worry about floss anyway, it probably accounts for 0.0000001% of the total garbage stream.