This video was hard to script. I hope it will be informative and encourages people to recycle, without being alarmist. It’s also possible no one will watch it…Either way, feedback is welcome and keep brewing better coffee :)
@@craftcoffeespot will share this video sometime in the future as I’m planning to post a pro recycling video. I would appreciate a follow and I hope to tag you.
Honestly I wouldn’t even ship out your left over coffee pods if they were made out of aluminum, you can just take them to your local metal recycler, similar to aluminum cans and radiators and such. That would save on the fuel and time for fedex or UPS, whichever would ship them.
This video was hard to script. I hope it will be informative and encourages people to recycle, without being alarmist. It’s also possible no one will watch it…Either way, feedback is welcome and keep brewing better coffee :)
Great video. I support recycling and compost my used coffee grounds. I don’t use pods but great to know for those who do use them. 👌
Thanks for the feedback. I hope this is informative and encourages people to recycle.
@@craftcoffeespot will share this video sometime in the future as I’m planning to post a pro recycling video. I would appreciate a follow and I hope to tag you.
@@thecryingbabycafe Done. Feel free to reach out, as I'm happy to discuss more too.
@@craftcoffeespotgreat. Thank you. Looking forward to be in touch again.
Videos like this are very important. Thank you for putting this out there.
You're welcome. Thank you for the feedback!
Honestly I wouldn’t even ship out your left over coffee pods if they were made out of aluminum, you can just take them to your local metal recycler, similar to aluminum cans and radiators and such. That would save on the fuel and time for fedex or UPS, whichever would ship them.
Will they separate coffee from the pod? That’s the biggest issue with recycling these things, and why Nespresso program is helpful.
@@craftcoffeespot no, you would have to just empty the old coffee yourself