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Baling Twine
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<blockquote data-quote="Just Curious" data-source="post: 497981" data-attributes="member: 4712"><p>When I think about how long baling twine has been used, it seems to me that it could be made in some way that it becomes biodegradeable of at least edible*... </p><p>Kinda along the same lines as trap n skeet business, where the clay pigeons just become a suppliment to the earth much in the same way a fetilizer does...</p><p>* Well in retrospect, I guess it is edible... So I will clarify in that after ingestion, it will actually "Do a Body Good"</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Just Curious, post: 497981, member: 4712"] When I think about how long baling twine has been used, it seems to me that it could be made in some way that it becomes biodegradeable of at least edible*... Kinda along the same lines as trap n skeet business, where the clay pigeons just become a suppliment to the earth much in the same way a fetilizer does... * Well in retrospect, I guess it is edible... So I will clarify in that after ingestion, it will actually "Do a Body Good" [/QUOTE]
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