Hearing so many tales of double-bagging and separate bags, I thought I'd share how things are done in Finland. Suffice it to say, double-bagging is just not done here, for reasons that will shortly become obvious.
Available at most checkouts are several types of bags. There are very small free bags, which are the same type used in the fruit & veg aisle, on a roll in the bagging area. Meanwhile under the conveyor, there are stacks of much larger and more sturdy bags of several kinds: standard plastic bags, paper bags, and biodegradable plastic bags. Each of these more sturdy types costs between €0.18 and €0.20, depending on precisely which store is involved. There are also even more sturdy types available for €0.90 or more, possibly made of cloth.
Nearly everyone uses the standard plastic bags - I don't think I've ever seen anyone use paper or biodegradable-plastic bags here - and many people re-use them. I don't often see the more expensive bags used either. To explain how this is feasible, here are a couple of illustrations:


That is a single "standard" plastic bag, containing over 7kg (about 15.5 pounds) of shopping - basically as much as I can comfortably carry in one hand for a substantial distance - which I've just carried home. The bag wasn't new that day, did not need to be supported underneath, and can still be used to carry such loads for the foreseeable future. It is, in short, completely awesome.
Rumours that these bags outperform most condoms on the market in bag-stretching competitions (yes, Finland has many very strange national sports) remain unfortunately unsubstantiated - but halfway plausible.
There is one good use for the small free bags in this context - they can be used to separate items that should not be together. Ready meals tend to distort and leak if put under pressure, and the free bags can contain that. This means that the free bags' lack of weight or volume carrying ability is not a problem, since they then go inside the standard bags - and they are only used for the sensitive items, not for everything.
Available at most checkouts are several types of bags. There are very small free bags, which are the same type used in the fruit & veg aisle, on a roll in the bagging area. Meanwhile under the conveyor, there are stacks of much larger and more sturdy bags of several kinds: standard plastic bags, paper bags, and biodegradable plastic bags. Each of these more sturdy types costs between €0.18 and €0.20, depending on precisely which store is involved. There are also even more sturdy types available for €0.90 or more, possibly made of cloth.
Nearly everyone uses the standard plastic bags - I don't think I've ever seen anyone use paper or biodegradable-plastic bags here - and many people re-use them. I don't often see the more expensive bags used either. To explain how this is feasible, here are a couple of illustrations:


That is a single "standard" plastic bag, containing over 7kg (about 15.5 pounds) of shopping - basically as much as I can comfortably carry in one hand for a substantial distance - which I've just carried home. The bag wasn't new that day, did not need to be supported underneath, and can still be used to carry such loads for the foreseeable future. It is, in short, completely awesome.
Rumours that these bags outperform most condoms on the market in bag-stretching competitions (yes, Finland has many very strange national sports) remain unfortunately unsubstantiated - but halfway plausible.
There is one good use for the small free bags in this context - they can be used to separate items that should not be together. Ready meals tend to distort and leak if put under pressure, and the free bags can contain that. This means that the free bags' lack of weight or volume carrying ability is not a problem, since they then go inside the standard bags - and they are only used for the sensitive items, not for everything.
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