Twinnings tea bags penetrable by mold
I had a box of Twinnings tea bags sitting for ~6 months or so in a very humid room. The room was unoccupied and neglected over winter so windows were not opened (thus zero ventilation, so the room became a mold factory). Every Twinnings tea bag is individually wrapped in plastic-lined paper. It’s annoying because that stuff cannot be recycled.
I thought perhaps it’s fair enough to prioritize health, safety and tea freshness above recycling. But when mold covered most items in that humid room, every single tea bag got moldy on the inside. I’m a bit surprised it could propagate right through apparently well-sealed plastic. These tea bags have 4 wavey heat-sealing grooves around them, implying four points of failure. There was only a small amount of mold visible inside the box, and it just looked like sparse dust on the outside of the packets.
So what’s going on here? Is it shitty plastic that’s so thin it cannot do the job it’s intended to serve? If yes, then what’s the point? Is it just an illusion to fool consumers into thinking they are getting tea packaged for freshness? Is this an example of crappy design, or asshole design?