Archive for Downsizer For an ethical approach to consumption
 


       Downsizer Forum Index -> Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
Penny

Skip Diving Hits An All Time High (Or Low)

I have been fuming over the past few days at the stuff that gets chucked out in our shopping arcade. All the shopkeepers use a crusher to get rid of their rubbish. The rubbish is stacked around the side of it, until the bloke who sorts it out puts a load in the crusher.

Earlier this week, I stopped someone getting rid of a perfectly good suitcase - the label had fallen off Confused

But today took the biscuit. I retrieved the following:

A non stick wok
A large non stick fying pan
A non stick baking sheet
A chopping board with herb chopper
Two stainless steel saucepans with clear lids
A stainless steel steamer
Two small non stick saucepans
Various Utensils.

All of these were top quality (sort of fifty to hundred pound types), and just slightly scratched, or out a bit out of shape - and they were about to be crushed!!!!!!!

Could they not give them to charity shops or something???? angry9

Well I can!!!!

Very angry small person!!!!!!!
jema

Evil or Very Mad

I bet homes chuck out tons of good cooking gear as well.

How many people do you know who will colour coordinate their cookware, which probably barely gets used anyway Rolling Eyes
Bernie66

Re: Skip Diving Hits An All Time High (Or Low)

Penny wrote:
I have been fuming over the past few days at the stuff that gets chucked out in our shopping arcade. All the shopkeepers use a crusher to get rid of their rubbish. The rubbish is stacked around the side of it, until the bloke who sorts it out puts a load in the crusher.

Earlier this week, I stopped someone getting rid of a perfectly good suitcase - the label had fallen off Confused

But today took the biscuit. I retrieved the following:

A non stick wok
A large non stick fying pan
A non stick baking sheet
A chopping board with herb chopper
Two stainless steel saucepans with clear lids
A stainless steel steamer
Two small non stick saucepans
Various Utensils.

All of these were top quality (sort of fifty to hundred pound types), and just slightly scratched, or out a bit out of shape - and they were about to be crushed!!!!!!!

Could they not give them to charity shops or something???? angry9

Well I can!!!!

Very angry small person!!!!!!!


I am truly proud of you, a woman after my own heart.
Sarah D

Where we are, the things like this get taken down to the tip and set pout on tables for recycling - ie othr folks visiting the tip can buy the stuff for hardly anything. Le Creuset for 40p a pan, anyone? That's where I get mine, and the casseroles, and the honey extracotr, and numerous/hundreds of other useful items. People take them there knowing there is a very large chance of them being bought and given a second life by someone who buys them.
Every council should do this.
Penny

Sarah D wrote:
Where we are, the things like this get taken down to the tip and set pout on tables for recycling - ie othr folks visiting the tip can buy the stuff for hardly anything. Le Creuset for 40p a pan, anyone? That's where I get mine, and the casseroles, and the honey extracotr, and numerous/hundreds of other useful items. People take them there knowing there is a very large chance of them being bought and given a second life by someone who buys them.
Every council should do this.


What a fantastic idea, I'll be onto my council tomorrow!!
2steps

don't blame you Penny, good for you for saving them Smile a few months ago I got a perfectly good quilt and 4 pillows from a skip. They'd been rolled up and put into plastic bags before being thrown out Rolling Eyes given them a good wash and there great. my son has claimed the quilt as its a double an dhe can roll himself up in it Laughing
Penny

I think what made this even worse, was that the stuff was brand new! Just not quite good enough to sell in one of the shops. (I'm keeping the steamer - it's wonderful Embarassed )
2steps

and why not? Very Happy really irritatesme when people will only buy perfect items. I remember when I was a kid my mum wouldn't buy a tin if it was dented or she dropped it. I always remember thinking, 'who cares we throw the tin away anyway!'
Jonnyboy

Sarah D wrote:
Where we are, the things like this get taken down to the tip and set pout on tables for recycling - ie othr folks visiting the tip can buy the stuff for hardly anything. Le Creuset for 40p a pan, anyone? That's where I get mine, and the casseroles, and the honey extracotr, and numerous/hundreds of other useful items. People take them there knowing there is a very large chance of them being bought and given a second life by someone who buys them.
Every council should do this.


See, that's a really well thought out idea. Do you know how your council came about it, and do they advertise it? I'd love to post e-mail a link to my local council. But failing that a letter in my local rag might do it.
JB

It's not just that people throw out good stuff it's also that there is a reluctance for people to buy second hand goods. I've been unable to sell things second hand even for give away prices and unable to buy things second hand because everybody else knows there is no market for second hand goods.
gil

Must get onto my local/regional council, though the main tip is in conjunction with a landfill site, and not like any urban 'tip' I've ever visited.

If there is 'no market for secondhand goods', that explains their shortage. Most of what I have is secondhand, but I haven't had any really good finds for quite a while. Skips in posh / upcoming areas can be really good - in the last few years, I've had a sofa, a carpet, a kitchen cupboard and a large wicker laundry basket. Size of vehicle and solo skip-diving limited what could be taken : I had to leave behind perfectly good timber, doors, etc.

I've also wondered why charity shops are not as good as they used to be. My theory was that the quality of clothing had gone down, so when clothes were knackered, they really were. But then folk seem to chuck stuff out much more readily these days, so that shouldn't apply.
dpack

i tat or second hand shop almost everything .yesterday i got a new pair of warmwear rohan trousers for 50 pence .my collection of silk shirts <£3 each usually>is ridiculous .over the years i have carpeted acres from skips . shopfitters skips provide loads of quality materials for art or doing up the house, i dont use a vehicle which is a good thing cos if i did i would need a steptoe type yard .be careful to test electrical goods .the other side of this is if i no longer need something i often put it outside with a take me home and use me note , very quick usually . the one i most regret was the £20000 worth of robinson &cornish kitchen units , that some fool dropped conrete lintels through them is beyond me ,it would have been no bother to stack them and sell them even, who would do that to enough perfect units to fit out 3 smallish kitchens.hey ho ,bleaching serviceable food is out of order as well .i think some shops give todays date food to hostels and night shelters etc .
tawny owl

JB wrote:
It's not just that people throw out good stuff it's also that there is a reluctance for people to buy second hand goods. I've been unable to sell things second hand even for give away prices and unable to buy things second hand because everybody else knows there is no market for second hand goods.


I can't see how that can be (unless you live in a particularly fussy neighbourhood) - I was reading just the other day that the price of second-hand goods has gone up, because of car boot sales and particularly ebay.
jema

tawny owl wrote:
JB wrote:
It's not just that people throw out good stuff it's also that there is a reluctance for people to buy second hand goods. I've been unable to sell things second hand even for give away prices and unable to buy things second hand because everybody else knows there is no market for second hand goods.


I can't see how that can be (unless you live in a particularly fussy neighbourhood) - I was reading just the other day that the price of second-hand goods has gone up, because of car boot sales and particularly ebay.


dunno myself I think there are a lot of mixed signals out there.

But then there is always what people say they do and what they actually do do. Amipest recounted to me how some of her friends parents wouldn't stoop as low as to shop as ASDA on snob grounds, but she spotted at a party the sort of ASDA value ranges
sausage rolls etc puke_r that no one on here would touch with a barge pole.
tawny owl

jema wrote:
[dunno myself I think there are a lot of mixed signals out there. But then there is always what people say they do and what they actually do do. Amipest recounted to me how some of her friends parents wouldn't stoop as low as to shop as ASDA on snob grounds, but she spotted at a party the sort of ASDA value ranges
sausage rolls etc puke_r that no one on here would touch with a barge pole.


Oh, I know what you mean - I know someone who won't shop at Aldi or Lidl because 'poor people shop there'. Rolling Eyes
Lozzie

Sarah D wrote:
Where we are, the things like this get taken down to the tip and set pout on tables for recycling - ie othr folks visiting the tip can buy the stuff for hardly anything. Le Creuset for 40p a pan, anyone? That's where I get mine, and the casseroles, and the honey extracotr, and numerous/hundreds of other useful items. People take them there knowing there is a very large chance of them being bought and given a second life by someone who buys them.
Every council should do this.


Hi Sarah - where in Dorset are you? Bournemouth tip used to do this up until about a year ago. Everyone round here was gutted.
gil

dpack wrote:
.my collection of silk shirts <£3 each usually>is ridiculous .


aha ! another Downsizer with a shirt collection Smile and silk, too.

not practical for working outdoors in though.
pricey

I know Christchurch tip does it , also Lymington do it on a very large scale, got a fork + spade £3 nearly new.

Steve
dpack

oh yes they are . smooth , dry , wicking ,tough , rot resistant ,strong , non alergenic and some are dpm and styleish . jungle or arctic , silk is the best base layer i have ever used . if it is good enough for an insects baby it is good enough for me Very Happy they wash easyily, they last for 3 months unchanged in wet wood land ,insect proof (mostly)..you can step out of the bushes after some time and people think "oh , well dressed "as a natural fibre for rope , cloth , are there any ands ? i cant fault it for what it is best at .if you ever need to wear a wet shirt make sure its a silk one Cool .ps they seem to repel critters and reduce body odour to a minimum . party animal or extreme geography , SILK RULES .
       Downsizer Forum Index -> Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
Page 1 of 1
You must set the ad_network_ads_377.txt file to be writable (check file name as well).