Recycling Milk Bags into Bed Mats 2011/12
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
click here for Toronto Area
There are pre-cut double strips available in Bells Corners & Barrhaven- contact Admin
Upcoming Workshops - Everyone Welcome (Free unless noted otherwise)
Orleans - Tue Feb 19 at 7pm at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 6255 Cumorah Drive. Informal gathering. Everyone of all ages welcome to join in the fun. Meet on the 3rd Tuesday of each month Orleans Milk Bag Project
Carling/Woodroffe - Wed Feb 20 at 9:30am 207 Woodroffe Ave at Woodroffe United Church in the Friendship Room. All are welcome.
Carling/Woodroffe - Wed Mar ?? at 7pm 207 Woodroffe Ave at Woodroffe United Church in the Chapel. Two workshops on the same day to meet different people's schedules.All are welcome.
Orleans - Tue Mar 19 at 7pm at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 6255 Cumorah Drive. Informal gathering. Everyone of all ages welcome to join in the fun. Meet on the 3rd Tuesday of each month Orleans Milk Bag Project
Carlington Area Group meets Monday-Friday 6pm-8:30pm 1400 Lepage Street in the Lounge (everyone welcome). Meet the Lounge Ladies
Kanata - Bridlewood Trails Retirement Center - every Fri 1:30pm 480 Brigitta Street (off Eagleson) 613-595-1116
Centertown - St Theresa's Church - Every Tues morning 10:30am 95 Somerset Street West 613-235-5119
Centertown - Good Companions Center - Every Tues afternoon 1-3pm 670 Albert Street. Regular gathering to make Mats & Totes. Please contact Linda at 613-236-0428 x270 for details. http://thegoodcompanions.ca/
Ottawa Far West - Town of Richmond Every 2nd Wed - next Wed Nov 30 1-3:30pm at the Youth Center 6179 Perth Street in Richmond. Informal gathering for sorting, cutting and crotcheting. Refreshments provided.
These washable, quick-dry bed mats provide an alternative to sleeping on the damp, hard ground. Medical teams in Haiti have found them invaluable. The milk bags can also be crocheted into Tote bags which are are used in the hospitals.
We use the colourful outer milk bag which holds the three smaller clear bags inside.
Would you like to learn how to be involved in this recycle project:
Collecting, Cutting, Rolling or Crocheting ?
Would you like to deliver Bags or Mats from Ottawa to Hamilton?
For more information on where to get milk bags or how to get started or to book a workshop leader for your group, contact:
Admin if you are in the Ottawa area or live outside of Ontario
Anne if you live in Ontario more than 150km away from Ottawa (705 878 4941)
Please roll your finished mat so that it is approx 1 meter roll
We have saved thousands of milkbags from landfill but there are still tonnes of plastic bags put in the garbage every week. Please bring yours to a nearby dropoff to be recycled into something useful. If it is stretchy then it can be recycled here. Many of our grocery stores have bins in the entryway. Some communities collect bags at the curb such as Arnprior, Athens, Brockville, Kingston and Rideau Lakes. Select the link above to learn more and find the closest depot to you.
For photos & info click here
Recent Workshops to help you find people in your area who already know how to make the mats
We have shipped 2690 mats from Ottawa! (with the help of the following people)
Bed mats to Haiti Nov 2010 = 22 (Barbara & Sheila)
Bed mats to Haiti Dec 12, 2010 = 26 (Marsha)
Bed mats to Haiti Dec 19, 2010 = 25 (Amber)
Bed mats to Haiti Jan 2011 = 27 (Graeme & Winnie)
Bed mats to Haiti Feb 2011 = 43 (Dave)
Bed mats to Haiti Mar 12, 2011 = 20 (Sandy)
Bed mats to Haiti Mar 19, 2011 = 53 (Dan)
Bed mats to Tanzania Mar 29, 2011 = 42 (Renee)
Bed mats to Haiti Apr 12, 2011 = 50 (George)
Bed mats to Haiti Apr 24, 2011 = 11 (Susan's friend)
Bed mats to Haiti Apr 25, 2011 = 40 (Cindy & Pat)
Bed mats to Haiti May 20, 2011 = 22 (Alison & Dave)
Bed mats to Haiti May 30 2011 = 71 (Harold Yule)
Bed mats to Haiti Jun 24 2011 = 36 (Norah & Tom)
Bed mats to Haiti Jun 25 2011 = 48 (Desna and Vernon Sulway)
Bed mats to Haiti Aug 2 2011 = 186 (Anne & Vic)
Bed mats to Haiti Aug 27 2011 = 20 (Barbara Eade)
Bed mats to Haiti Sept 9 2011 = 17 (Margaret & William)
Bed mats to Haiti Oct 9 2011 = 23 (Judith)
Bed mats to Haiti Nov 4 2011 = 61 (Judith)
Bed mats to Haiti Nov 18 2011 = 68 (Vicky)
Bed mats to Haiti Jan 4 2012 = 40 (Cassandra & helpful husband)
Bed mats to Haiti Jan 21 2012 = 18 (Norah's cousin)
Bed mats to Haiti Feb 4 2012 = 26 (Tim)
Bed mats to Haiti Feb 9 2012 = 50 (Jean & Reg)
Bed mats to Haiti Mar 8 2012 = 150 (Joan & Brian Hicks)
Bed mats to Haiti Mar 28 2012 = 135 (Des Garvey)
Bed mats to Haiti Apr 21 2012 = 44 (Tom Thistle & friend)
Bed mats to Haiti Apr 22 2012 = 22 (Norah)
Bed mats to Haiti May 2, 2012 = 42 (Margaret & William)
Bed mats to Haiti Jun 9, 2012 = 240 (James MacLaren)
Bed mats to Haiti Jun 27, 2012 = 112 (Jean & Reg Steele)
Bed mats to Haiti July 7, 2012 = 35 (Marion Rutledge)
Bed mats to Haiti July 9, 2012 = 19 (Pauline)
Bed mats to Haiti July 20, 2012 = 60 (Jean Newton)
Bed mats to Mexico Aug 20, 2012 = 5 (Nancy DeKelver)
Bed mats to CCFC Sept 29 2012 = 90 (Ian)
Bed mats to CCFC Oct 17, 2012 = 380 (Des Garvey)
Bed mats to CCFC Nov 2, 2012 = 40 (Desna & Vernon Sulway)
Bed mats to CCFC Nov 15, 2012 = 23 (Jean Newton)
Bed mats to CCFC Dec, 2012 = 46 (Nancy Yule)
Bed mats to DeJong Transport Jan 23, 2012 = 200 (Lydia & Mike Van Dyke)
Tote bags sent to Haiti = 346
Teddies in Bags sent to Haiti orphanage and Doctors without Borders - approx 472
I receive about 100 mats per month ready to go to the people who need them.
If you know anyone travelling to Mississauga or Cornwall willing to transport mats, please contact Admin
Congratulations and many thanks to everyone !!!
A rough estimate for Ottawa Area shows that in the last 12 months over 30 000 hours of work donated to this cause and over 500 000 milkbags saved from the landfill to be given a new life helping people.
The prefered method for rolling the mats for shipping is approx 3 feet or 1 meter wide roll.
Where do they go?
We have no funds so we send them by volunteers to charities who can use them as packing material with other Aid Supplies (food, medical supplies etc) and then distritubute them in 3rd world countries where they are most needed. Here are links to some of the groups who help us with shipping/distribution:
Canadian Food for Children http://www.overloadedstress.com/ccfc.html
NorthWest Haiti Christian Mission Canada http://www.nwhcm.ca/mats4haiti.htm
Nepean Outreach Now http://www.nepeanoutreach.com/
and others as they are needed
I often receive requests from people who would like to buy the tote bags. I can not sell what has been donated for the 3rd world, but if you would like to make mats to be sold in Ottawa, please let me know. The proceeds could be given to you or donated to your favourite charity or to help with transportation costs of the mats. contact Admin
Why?
- To help the environment by recycling plastic milk bags – give them a practical use while they take many years to decompose.
- To help people who are sleeping on the ground or on leaf/reed mats. It protects them from dampness, biting insects and the common ‘paper cuts’ from leaves/reeds. The sleeping mats are easy to wash/dry. There is a desperate need for the homeless in Haiti since the earthquake.
- To provide surgical beds for medical teams in makeshift hospitals. There is a desperate need in Haiti since the earthquake.
- To provide packing material for the Aid containers which are shipped to 3rd world countries.
- To provide other useful items like carry bags to 3rd world countries.
Who?
There is a province-wide network of more than 70 small groups who have been working on this project for about 6 years. The coordinator is Dianne Scott in Dunnville, Ontario. These groups include schools, churches, Scouts & Guides, seniors groups, crochet clubs etc.
A few of the local groups:
- Orleans (click for more info)
- The Ottawa Catholic School Board has several schools, administrators, teachers and students who have been working extremely hard at collecting, cutting and crocheting mats. They have donated over 50 mats this fall!
- Bells Corners United Church
- Beta Sigma Phi (Laureate Phi Chapter)
- Many schools (Katimavik ,Immaculata,Broadview, Castlefrank, Century, Chesterton, St Mark's, St Mary's, Longfields Davidson Heights Secondary School etc
- Riverside United Church
- Busy Hands (Brockville)
- Manotick (click for info)
- Aylmer (click for info)
- Lincoln Fields
- Lanark


How?
Step 1: Collect bag. Make sure it is clean. Lay flat
Step 2: Trim off both ends to make it into a tube with clean edges
Step 3: Cut into one long strip or cut into loops and string them together (width anywhere from 1inch to 2inch)
Step 4: Roll the plastic strips into a ball like yarn (or save in a bag)
Step 5: Use a size 7, 8, 9 or 10mm crochet hook. (size K, L, M, or N - not size 7 which is 4.5mm)
Chain stitch until 36" wide then single crochet until mat measures 60" long. For a child’s mat use 30” x 48”
Keep the tension very loose with nice big holes.
Hint: the plastic yarn is 'stickier' than regular yarn so crochet very loosely.
Note: There are some milk bags (Natrel brand) which say BioDegradable on them. Do not use these for the mats. Hopefully all milk bags will one day be BioDegradable, but in the meantime we can try to recycle the others into something useful. Also, I've been asked to use only milkbags for tropical countries
Hint: If you decide to collect bags, I recommend you ask people to lay them clean and flat in a box. This makes them much more compact for storing, transporting and cutting. It makes it easier to know how many you have (2inch thick is approx 125 bags).
Finger-crocheting and weaving are also options if you don't like using the hook.
Tote bags crocheted from milk bags are also desperately needed for the hospitals. Info and hints and patterns below (size approx 16"x16" or 30 stitches x 30 rows with a 9mm hook):
How they are used http://www.nwhcm.ca/oldsite/Gallery/Articles/MakingABag.htm
Tote bag Pattern plus hints http://chinterests.wordpress.com/
Tote bag pattern http://www.kaylaksthriftyways.com/basic-plarn-tote/
Tote bag pattern http://www.canadianliving.com/crafts/crochet/plastic_bag_craft_two_crocheted_tote_bags.php
If you are a crocheter or knitter who does not like working with the plastic yarn, you may be interested in making Teddies for Tragedies These bears are given by the Doctors without Borders to calm and comfort children before, during and after medical treatment. The teddies can be dropped off at 3955 Richmond Rd Ottawa (Bells Corners United Church) or mailed directly to Toronto. http://www.teddiesfortragedies.org/
Here are Links to videos and more information:
The strip width can be anywhere from 1 inch to 2 inches wide. Beginners usually prefer the narrower size.
The width does not have to be precise because the strips naturally roll up during the crochet process. Wider strips = thicker mat.
There are 2 methods for cutting the bags into plastic yarn strips both are widely used - can be seen in these videos:
1: Single strip (easier to crochet, harder to cut)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vqIZLoJXHas&feature=em-share_video_user (Danielle in Orleans)
http://wsuc.blogspot.com/2009/02/cutting-milk-bags-for-sleeping-mats.html
2. Double strip loops (harder to crochet, easier to cut)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mm51o9VSHj0&feature=em-share_video_user (Danielle in Orleans)
http://www.sudbury24.ca/media/2791/Creating_sleeping_mats_out_of_milk_bags/
Video how to cut and chain Milkbag Mats cut & chain.wmv
Video how to crochet Milkbag Mats crochet.wmv
Video crochet tips (eg how to keep edges even) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-XApr5zS88&feature=em-share_video_user
Video how to avoid knots http://wsuc.blogspot.com/2009/02/how-to-avoid-knots-when-crocheting.html
Francais: http://www.radio-canada.ca/regions/ottawa/2010/11/30/007-matelas-sacs-de-lait-haiti.shtml
Ottawa citizen: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/life/With+just+crochet+hook+help+Haiti/3827643/story.html
Ottawa EMC http://www.emcbarrhaven.ca/20101125/news/Milk+bags+transformed+into+bed+mats+for+Haitians
Milk bag project info with link to Instructions & FAQ http://www.nbbc.ca/index_milkbag.htm
Ottawa woman teaches Mat Making in Mexico
Slideshow of a mat travelling from Ontario to a new home in Haiti http://www.nwhcm.ca/oldsite/Gallery/MatPPT/MatPPT_1.htm
Missionaries taking mats to Haiti http://www.nwhcm.ca/mats4haiti.htm
Gr 5 & 6 at St Mary Catholic School http://www.yourottawaregion.com/news/article/917534--milk-bag-mats-help-homeless-haitians
Gr 7 class in Stratford news article http://www.stratfordbeaconherald.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2468776
Video of Montreal High school making mats MVI_4257.AVI
Gr 7&8 school in Grimsby http://www.google.ca/imgres?imgurl=http://media.mmgcommunity.topscms.com/images/e0/8f/e4f861be4670b2a99280e5ffa802.jpeg&imgrefurl=http://www.niagarathisweek.com/news/news/article/647452&usg=__i2Xvattnp_iluyYPBVOokr4FYjs=&h=267&w=400&sz=64&hl=en&start=16&itbs=1&tbnid=_FNwBUrQElTV0M:&tbnh=83&tbnw=124&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dmilk%2Bbag%2Bbed%2Bmats%26hl%3Den%26gbv%3D2%26tbs%3Disch:1
Article on Mat Making in Bradford http://www.google.ca/imgres?imgurl=http://bradford.gallery.siteseer.ca/cache/derivative/6/2/6200.dat&imgrefurl=http://www.bradfordtimes.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx%3Fe%3D2443788&usg=__bER-CytCdxDH1CUA6kbf1gCYSlA=&h=199&w=300&sz=19&hl=en&start=3&itbs=1&tbnid=5acnxkn-u8sxVM:&tbnh=77&tbnw=116&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dmilk%2Bbag%2Bbed%2Bmats%26hl%3Den%26gbv%3D2%26tbs%3Disch:1
Stories from a missionary who delivers mats to Haiti http://www.recorder.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2807264
Video on how to WEAVE a sleeping mat http://blip.tv/file/3303836
Photo Gallery - if you have a photo of your mat or your group making mats, you can send it it to Admin. Please note, this is the internet so send only what you want the world to see.

The Tote bags are given out at the hospitals and clinics containing basic essential items. Once the person leaves the hospital, the bags become multipurpose. They are used as diaper bags, market bags, school bags, etc...

further info contact: Admin
Visitors since Jan 1, 2011 
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