We only drink Yorkshire tea and they now use "plant-based" bags, so thankfully no plastic.
Good to hear. The plastic in tea bags came to prominence some years ago and I know that some manufacturers
said they would change.
We used to use loose tea but the "tea lady" who delivered it to my parents, who we collected it from, gave it up due to lack of demand.
I can see that. We buy our ordinary tea (Assam, Darjeeling, etc) from a supermarket and there is a large section of tea bags, with just half the bottom shelf for loose tea.
we have an unlimited supply of wood chippings from tree surgeons on our site. Would the chippings be ok for the brown layer?
Very much so.
I shred anything firm that goes into my compost and because of the nature of my garden that means I end up with more browns than greens and some of the browns are noticeable lumps. Also when I collect (c. 2 cubic metres of) leaves in the autumn I just sweep them together and gather them, so I end up with bits of wood in there.
Because of this I sieve both of these, with a 20mm sieve and at a later stage with a 10mm one. All the stuff that comes out is taken by someone who has a garden and an allotment, so lots of greens but not enough browns. She has been doing that for (5? 6? more?) years, so it obviously works for her.
Another example. A friend's garden was mostly lawn and she had several large piles of malodorous grass at the edges. She got a large dalek and her son & I loaded it with quite a bit of the grass and wood chipping at the same time (one doing the grass and the other doing the wood) so that it was reasonably well mixed.
To make it work best, I had shredded a load of wood and then run this through 20 & then 10 mm sieves to select only wood pieces that were quite small, thus maximising the surface area. I also suggested that he (the son) put a garden fork in and stir it once or twice a week, which he did.
A while (4? 6? weeks) later I was over there and my friend and I put the rest of the grass in. In that short time the previous material had basically all broken down and turned into nice dark compost. This was near ideal conditions, the grass was already pretty rotted, fine wood, well mixed, summer, turned quite a bit. So it won't work that well always but wood chipping will certainly do the job.