As weird as this may be, I don't think that's totally nuts. I did a blog post on green burials (not the specific product you mentioned) and I think it, next to cremation is a great option. I am uneasy at the thought of being pumped full of toxic preserving chemicals and be buried in an ornate box that takes up land.
As for the product you mentioned, I think that's a bit of an overpriced gimmick. Natural burials can be done in something as simple (and cheap) as a cloth.
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As weird as this may be, I don't think that's totally nuts. I did a blog post on green burials (not the specific product you mentioned) and I think it, next to cremation is a great option. I am uneasy at the thought of being pumped full of toxic preserving chemicals and be buried in an ornate box that takes up land.
As for the product you mentioned, I think that's a bit of an overpriced gimmick. Natural burials can be done in something as simple (and cheap) as a cloth.
I was more about the fact they label it as a home burial kit. I can see being buried in a cemetery without the preservation chemicals, etc, but putting a dead body is one's garden (as one of the quotes described) is incredibly irresponsible, in my opinion. I'm not up on my history/post mortem education, but I'm pretty sure that has lead to serious diseases and epidemics in the past. Not to mention the fact that when the new homeowners decide to transplant some rose bushes, I don't really want to knocked on the forehead with a garden spade.
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I was more about the fact they label it as a home burial kit. I can see being buried in a cemetery without the preservation chemicals, etc, but putting a dead body is one's garden (as one of the quotes described) is incredibly irresponsible, in my opinion. I'm not up on my history/post mortem education, but I'm pretty sure that has lead to serious diseases and epidemics in the past. Not to mention the fact that when the new homeowners decide to transplant some rose bushes, I don't really want to knocked on the forehead with a garden spade.
Totally, lol. I think dead bodies should be given a place of sorts, lol. I def don't want rotting corpses in my bushes. HAHA
The places I saw were designated lands, just no non decomposable coffins.
Check out The Eco-Friendly Family, a Green Living Blog for eco-information and fun giveaways!
Re: Compost me
As weird as this may be, I don't think that's totally nuts. I did a blog post on green burials (not the specific product you mentioned) and I think it, next to cremation is a great option. I am uneasy at the thought of being pumped full of toxic preserving chemicals and be buried in an ornate box that takes up land.
As for the product you mentioned, I think that's a bit of an overpriced gimmick. Natural burials can be done in something as simple (and cheap) as a cloth.
Green Living Blog
for eco-information and fun giveaways!
I was more
about the fact they label it as a home burial kit. I can see being buried in a cemetery without the preservation chemicals, etc, but putting a dead body is one's garden (as one of the quotes described) is incredibly irresponsible, in my opinion. I'm not up on my history/post mortem education, but I'm pretty sure that has lead to serious diseases and epidemics in the past. Not to mention the fact that when the new homeowners decide to transplant some rose bushes, I don't really want to knocked on the forehead with a garden spade.
Totally, lol. I think dead bodies should be given a place of sorts, lol. I def don't want rotting corpses in my bushes. HAHA
The places I saw were designated lands, just no non decomposable coffins.
Green Living Blog
for eco-information and fun giveaways!
That I could live with, or not, as the case may be.
I totally noticed that, too... I've convinced myself it was completely photoshopped in.