Talk:Debbie Meyer Green Bags
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editI debated whether this topic was notable, but given that it is all over TV currently, and that a news station decided to do a segment on testing the product, I thought it was notable enough for a small article, and thought it would be a good public educational service to summarize the results of that newscast into an article here. I have tried to keep the article as NPOV as I can (I have no personal interest in the bags, other than a person who was considering buying them or not, and did some research) I am interested to see if people find other news agencies, etc who have tested the Green Bags, and post those results here as well. --Pordaria (talk) 20:47, 4 January 2008 (UTC)
It's good to know about these news reports but it would be good to get some actual science. Just saw this add and was glad to see the wiki page but without a method to this it's nothing more than Scopes.com --Gcilley (talk) 01:46, 4 August 2008 (UTC)i am doing a report on the molding bread and iam going to see if it works like it says.
I'd like to see more here about this subject. There are thousands of google references to this subject, but the information is all over the map -- very unfocused. Typically, this is where wikipedia can provide a great service, but obviously this article needs much more. As a suggestion, it would be helpful if simple usage data were provided, specifically, how does this product degrade with time. If there is an effect (i.e., ethylene gas absorbtion) does it diminish with washing the bag or simply over time, or both? Let me also say, from personal experience, that these bags do indeed work on some items. One notable one is broccoli. I have compared organic broccoli heads in sealed green bags vs. sealed ziploc bags. The latter begin to degrade -- rot or turn yellow -- in about a week and a half. In the green bags they look fresh after two weeks. It really is remarkable and makes me believe there must be something to the claims for the bags. roricka 16:58, 14 May 2009 (UTC)