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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#41
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On 24/03/2018 06:15, ARW wrote:
On 23/03/2018 14:48, dennis@home wrote: I frequently fill the 240l recycling bin every week. The smaller landfill bin is about 25% full after a week. The food waste bin is full most weeks. It really is waste like peelings, etc. Every one has different recycling bins depending on where they live. There also seems to be quite a variation in what classifications of stuff each bin will take. Our recyclables bin is quite flexible - glass, plastic, card, paper, tins etc. It now takes the bulk of the stuff that gets put out. (when the scheme first started they could not handle things like window envelopes, but now apparently those are ok as well). -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#42
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On 24/03/2018 16:32, John Rumm wrote:
The only snag is, I could probably fill it half a dozen times just with grass clippings! Grass clippings will compact to a least a sixth of the volume by themselves within a few days in the summer. -- mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
#43
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On 24/03/2018 16:16, dennis@home wrote:
On 24/03/2018 06:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 24/03/18 06:15, ARW wrote: On 23/03/2018 14:48, dennis@home wrote: I frequently fill the 240l recycling bin every week. The smaller landfill bin is about 25% full after a week. The food waste bin is full most weeks. It really is waste like peelings, etc. Every one has different recycling bins depending on where they live. I have 4 wheelie bins and supposedly one bag (due to be phased out as they blow away). I have no food recycle bin. Dennis is as usual socially oppressive. More cr@p from TNP. I now think everything TNP says is cr@p and probably lies apart from his insults. A total arsehole in every way. All I said is what I do and made no mention of others. We all know that different councils do different things, even my council does different things in some areas of the borough. TBH in this case I cannot find a reason to call you a **** ![]() -- Adam |
#44
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On 24/03/18 17:07, ARW wrote:
On 24/03/2018 16:16, dennis@home wrote: On 24/03/2018 06:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 24/03/18 06:15, ARW wrote: On 23/03/2018 14:48, dennis@home wrote: I frequently fill the 240l recycling bin every week. The smaller landfill bin is about 25% full after a week. The food waste bin is full most weeks. It really is waste like peelings, etc. Every one has different recycling bins depending on where they live. I have 4 wheelie bins and supposedly one bag (due to be phased out as they blow away). I have no food recycle bin. Dennis is as usual socially oppressive. More cr@p from TNP. I now think everything TNP says is cr@p and probably lies apart from his insults. A total arsehole in every way. All I said is what I do and made no mention of others. We all know that different councils do different things, even my council does different things in some areas of the borough. TBH in this case I cannot find a reason to call you a **** ![]() I feel your frustration. |
#45
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On 24/03/2018 17:47, Richard wrote:
On 24/03/18 17:07, ARW wrote: On 24/03/2018 16:16, dennis@home wrote: On 24/03/2018 06:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 24/03/18 06:15, ARW wrote: On 23/03/2018 14:48, dennis@home wrote: I frequently fill the 240l recycling bin every week. The smaller landfill bin is about 25% full after a week. The food waste bin is full most weeks. It really is waste like peelings, etc. Every one has different recycling bins depending on where they live. I have 4 wheelie bins and supposedly one bag (due to be phased out as they blow away). I have no food recycle bin. Dennis is as usual socially oppressive. More cr@p from TNP. I now think everything TNP says is cr@p and probably lies apart from his insults. A total arsehole in every way. All I said is what I do and made no mention of others. We all know that different councils do different things, even my council does different things in some areas of the borough. TBH in this case I cannot find a reason to call you a **** ![]() I feel your frustration. But it's not going to be long before I am allowed to/will do is it? -- Adam |
#46
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On 3/24/2018 12:39 PM, John Rumm wrote:
There also seems to be quite a variation in what classifications of stuff each bin will take. Our recyclables bin is quite flexible - glass, plastic, card, paper, tins etc. It now takes the bulk of the stuff that gets put out. (when the scheme first started they could not handle things like window envelopes, but now apparently those are ok as well). We have just two bins - one for landfill, the other for paper, tins, and plastic. Alternate week pickup. Most other stuff has to be taken to the local recycling place. The council will pick up a maximum of three large items, booked and paid in advance - freezers, furniture, etc. Last time I used that service it cost about GBP17. No garden waste bins, but it's a rural area and most people have compost bins/piles. |
#47
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On 24/03/18 17:07, ARW wrote:
On 24/03/2018 16:16, dennis@home wrote: On 24/03/2018 06:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 24/03/18 06:15, ARW wrote: On 23/03/2018 14:48, dennis@home wrote: I frequently fill the 240l recycling bin every week. The smaller landfill bin is about 25% full after a week. The food waste bin is full most weeks. It really is waste like peelings, etc. Every one has different recycling bins depending on where they live. I have 4 wheelie bins and supposedly one bag (due to be phased out as they blow away). I have no food recycle bin. Dennis is as usual socially oppressive. More cr@p from TNP. I now think everything TNP says is cr@p and probably lies apart from his insults. A total arsehole in every way. All I said is what I do and made no mention of others. We all know that different councils do different things, even my council does different things in some areas of the borough. TBH in this case I cannot find a reason to call you a **** ![]() That denis can fill a waste bin with food waste very week implies a huge wastage -- The biggest threat to humanity comes from socialism, which has utterly diverted our attention away from what really matters to our existential survival, to indulging in navel gazing and faux moral investigations into what the world ought to be, whilst we fail utterly to deal with what it actually is. |
#48
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On 24/03/18 18:42, S Viemeister wrote:
On 3/24/2018 12:39 PM, John Rumm wrote: There also seems to be quite a variation in what classifications of stuff each bin will take. Our recyclables bin is quite flexible - glass, plastic, card, paper, tins etc. It now takes the bulk of the stuff that gets put out. (when the scheme first started they could not handle things like window envelopes, but now apparently those are ok as well). We have just two bins - one for landfill, the other for paper, tins, and plastic. Alternate week pickup. Most other stuff has to be taken to the local recycling place. The council will pick up a maximum of three large items, booked and paid in advance - freezers, furniture, etc. Last time I used that service it cost about GBP17. No garden waste bins, but it's a rural area and most people have compost bins/piles. Bins preferred. Piles are a pain in the arse. |
#49
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On 24/03/2018 18:54, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 24/03/18 17:07, ARW wrote: On 24/03/2018 16:16, dennis@home wrote: On 24/03/2018 06:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 24/03/18 06:15, ARW wrote: On 23/03/2018 14:48, dennis@home wrote: I frequently fill the 240l recycling bin every week. The smaller landfill bin is about 25% full after a week. The food waste bin is full most weeks. It really is waste like peelings, etc. Every one has different recycling bins depending on where they live. I have 4 wheelie bins and supposedly one bag (due to be phased out as they blow away). I have no food recycle bin. Dennis is as usual socially oppressive. More cr@p from TNP. I now think everything TNP says is cr@p and probably lies apart from his insults. A total arsehole in every way. All I said is what I do and made no mention of others. We all know that different councils do different things, even my council does different things in some areas of the borough. TBH in this case I cannot find a reason to call you a **** ![]() That denis can fill a waste bin with food waste very week implies a huge wastage TNP is thick, its quite easy to get 15l of waste food if you cook everything rather than get ready meals microwaved by his carer. |
#50
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On 24/03/2018 12:21, Bob Eager wrote:
On Sat, 24 Mar 2018 12:10:16 +0000, soup wrote: On 24/03/2018 10:59, Andrew wrote: On 23/03/2018 13:46, Steve Walker wrote: On 23/03/2018 10:45, Andy Burns wrote: Tim Streater wrote: The recycling bin goes out every two weeks At the moment we get weekly collections of both wheelie bins (I choose to put them out less frequently) but I gather the collections are due to alternate between recycling and rubbish later this year ... might bother larger households. If it is anything like where we are, they'll have a system to cope with larger housholds. Our normal system is: Green bin, 240l - food waste (plus garden waste if you pay an extra £40 a year) - collected weekly. Grey bin, 120l - non-recyclable waste - collected fortnightly. Blue bin, 240l - carboard and paper - collected monthly. Black bin, 240l - plastic bottles, tins, cans and glass bottles - collected monthly. Leading to the green bin, plus one other, being collected every week. For households with 5 or more residents, a 240l grey bin can be requested instead of the 120l one. Additional blue and black bins can also be requested. What sort of people discard 240 litres of food waste every week ?. No idea, but SteveW was talking about a 240l grey bin,I.E non recyclable (landfill) Grey NOT green He also mentions a 240l green bin for food waste, but if he'd read it properly, he'd have seen it was optionally for garden waste as well. Mea culpa, didn't read it properly . Saw the comment about 240l of food waste and the "five or more.." bit and typed, didn't look properly. Sorry all. |
#51
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On 24/03/2018 19:16, Richard wrote:
On 24/03/18 18:42, S Viemeister wrote: On 3/24/2018 12:39 PM, John Rumm wrote: There also seems to be quite a variation in what classifications of stuff each bin will take. Our recyclables bin is quite flexible - glass, plastic, card, paper, tins etc. It now takes the bulk of the stuff that gets put out. (when the scheme first started they could not handle things like window envelopes, but now apparently those are ok as well). We have just two bins - one for landfill, the other for paper, tins, and plastic. Alternate week pickup. Most other stuff has to be taken to the local recycling place. The council will pick up a maximum of three large items, booked and paid in advance - freezers, furniture, etc. Last time I used that service it cost about GBP17. No garden waste bins, but it's a rural area and most people have compost bins/piles. Bins preferred. Piles are a pain in the arse. Hee bloody haw. :O) |
#52
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On 24/03/18 22:37, Tim Streater wrote:
In article , "dennis@home" wrote: On 24/03/2018 18:54, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 24/03/18 17:07, ARW wrote: On 24/03/2018 16:16, dennis@home wrote: On 24/03/2018 06:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 24/03/18 06:15, ARW wrote: On 23/03/2018 14:48, dennis@home wrote: I frequently fill the 240l recycling bin every week. The smaller landfill bin is about 25% full after a week. The food waste bin is full most weeks. It really is waste like peelings, etc. Every one has different recycling bins depending on where they live. I have 4 wheelie bins and supposedly one bag (due to be phased out as they blow away). I have no food recycle bin. Dennis is as usual socially oppressive. More cr@p from TNP. I now think everything TNP says is cr@p and probably lies apart from his insults. A total arsehole in every way. All I said is what I do and made no mention of others. We all know that different councils do different things, even my council does different things in some areas of the borough. TBH in this case I cannot find a reason to call you a **** ![]() That denis can fill a waste bin with food waste very week implies a huge wastage Â*TNP is thick, its quite easy to get 15l of waste food if you cook everything rather than get ready meals microwaved by his carer. Wrong. Exactly. I cook three times a day. Whats left will be root vegetable peelings, bones and thats really all the waste there is Apart from packaging -- "And if the blind lead the blind, both shall fall into the ditch". Gospel of St. Mathew 15:14 |
#53
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On 24/03/2018 12:10, soup wrote:
On 24/03/2018 10:59, Andrew wrote: On 23/03/2018 13:46, Steve Walker wrote: On 23/03/2018 10:45, Andy Burns wrote: Tim Streater wrote: The recycling bin goes out every two weeks At the moment we get weekly collections of both wheelie bins (I choose to put them out less frequently) but I gather the collections are due to alternate between recycling and rubbish later this year ... might bother larger households. If it is anything like where we are, they'll have a system to cope with larger housholds. Our normal system is: Green bin, 240l - food waste (plus garden waste if you pay an extra £40 a year) - collected weekly. Grey bin, 120l - non-recyclable waste - collected fortnightly. Blue bin, 240l - carboard and paper - collected monthly. Black bin, 240l - plastic bottles, tins, cans and glass bottles - collected monthly. Leading to the green bin, plus one other, being collected every week. For households with 5 or more residents, a 240l grey bin can be requested instead of the 120l one. Additional blue and black bins can also be requested. What sort of people discard 240 litres of food waste every week ?. No idea, but SteveW was talking about a 240l grey bin,I.E non recyclable (landfill) Grey NOT green I'm afraid that means nothing. In Horsham, Green is normal landfill rubbish Brown is garden waste Blue is mixed recycling. We have no separate collections for food waste or electricals, the council assume people are going to somehow travel to the various Viridor sites and deposit their old fm radio or hair curlers in the correct skip - if only. |
#54
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On 24/03/2018 12:21, Bob Eager wrote:
He also mentions a 240l green bin for food waste, but if he'd read it properly, he'd have seen it was optionally for garden waste as well. In Horsham if the garden waste is contaminated with any sort of food waste, it is just scooped back up (at the composting site) and taken to landfill. Food waste could contain meat remnants, including pork and that was what caused the 2001 foot-and-mouth outbreak. If people were careful enought to separate uncooked veggy remnants from cooked food waste then it wouldn't be an issue but people are lazy (and not generally very clued-up). 'Food Waste' means different things to different people. |
#55
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On 24/03/2018 14:23, Tim Streater wrote:
In article , Richard wrote: On 24/03/18 11:57, Tim Streater wrote: In article , Richard wrote: On 23/03/18 13:46, Steve Walker wrote: On 23/03/2018 10:45, Andy Burns wrote: Tim Streater wrote: The recycling bin goes out every two weeks At the moment we get weekly collections of both wheelie bins (I choose to put them out less frequently) but I gather the collections are due to alternate between recycling and rubbish later this year ... might bother larger households. If it is anything like where we are, they'll have a system to cope with larger housholds. Our normal system is: Green bin, 240l - food waste (plus garden waste if you pay an extra £40 a year) - collected weekly. Grey bin, 120l - non-recyclable waste - collected fortnightly. Blue bin, 240l - carboard and paper - collected monthly. Black bin, 240l - plastic bottles, tins, cans and glass bottles - collected monthly. Leading to the green bin, plus one other, being collected every week. For households with 5 or more residents, a 240l grey bin can be requested instead of the 120l one. Additional blue and black bins can also be requested. That makes our black bag for general waste and clear recycle bag seem overly complicated. I'm glad we have bins and no longer bags. That was a major improvement (foxes have already been mentioned). Put the bags out in the morning. **** that. In Cardiff, the bin police will fine you :-). |
#56
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On 24/03/2018 12:56, alan_m wrote:
On 24/03/2018 11:05, Richard wrote: That makes our black bag for general waste and clear recycle bag seem overly complicated. See.... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zkj7gZmuuhU Around my way Black bag for general waste (landfill) - buy your own bags Pink bag for mixed recycled waste - bags supplied by council Small container for food waste - container and small biodegradable lining bags supplied by council Large container for paper - council supplied Broken down card also collected. White bags for recycled clothing which are often never collected so the next week they get stuffed into the black bags. I see very few white bags being put out these days. A generalised observation: Around 1 in 20 put out a food waste container. If the wind is blowing many of these emptied containers will end up elsewhere! Many people seem to leave their paper waste until the containers are full so perhaps 1 in 6 have these containers are put out for any one collection. Garden waste is an optional, additional, paid for service at around £50 a year and buy your own wheelie bin from the contractor (£30) or alternatively put your garden waste into a pre-paid branded bag at around 65p a time. I'm amazed that the efficient Germans haven't persuaded the EU to 'harmonize' bin colours. It might be good idea. |
#57
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On 24/03/2018 22:28, dennis@home wrote:
Â*TNP is thick, its quite easy to get 15l of waste food if you cook everything rather than get ready meals microwaved by his carer. Except that it isn't food waste, much of it is uncooked veggy parings (which contain most of the vitamins anyway). All this can be composted at home. Anything containing bones, fat or protein, whether cooked or not needs to go to landfill. |
#58
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On 24/03/2018 19:16, Richard wrote:
On 24/03/18 18:42, S Viemeister wrote: On 3/24/2018 12:39 PM, John Rumm wrote: There also seems to be quite a variation in what classifications of stuff each bin will take. Our recyclables bin is quite flexible - glass, plastic, card, paper, tins etc. It now takes the bulk of the stuff that gets put out. (when the scheme first started they could not handle things like window envelopes, but now apparently those are ok as well). We have just two bins - one for landfill, the other for paper, tins, and plastic. Alternate week pickup. Most other stuff has to be taken to the local recycling place. The council will pick up a maximum of three large items, booked and paid in advance - freezers, furniture, etc. Last time I used that service it cost about GBP17. No garden waste bins, but it's a rural area and most people have compost bins/piles. Bins preferred. Piles are a pain in the arse. Only if you put grass mowings on them. They take years to compost unless you build up layers of scrap cardboard in between mowings, with some compost accelerator added. Also helps to have big bit of old epdm or pond liner to cover it and keep the heat in. |
#59
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On 24/03/2018 16:19, dennis@home wrote:
I don't eat cauliflower stalks, the greens of the carrots, chicken bones, etc.Â* even if you do. The first two are compostible. Bones, fat, meat remnants and other stuff of animal or fowl origin cannot be composted. This is why pig farmers no longer collect 'swill' from schools. The possibility of another foot-and-mouth outbreak is ominous. This sort of food waste must go to landfill. Unless you grow your own carrots (which means you have space for a compost heap or bin anyway), where are these 'greens of carrots' coming from ?. You only need to chop off the top 1/4 inch. How can you end up with 240 litres a week ?. |
#60
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On 25/03/2018 10:52, Andrew wrote:
On 24/03/2018 22:28, dennis@home wrote: Â*Â*TNP is thick, its quite easy to get 15l of waste food if you cook everything rather than get ready meals microwaved by his carer. Except that it isn't food waste, much of it is uncooked veggy parings (which contain most of the vitamins anyway). All this can be composted at home. Anything containing bones, fat or protein, whether cooked or not needs to go to landfill. Do you have authority for contradicting the advice from my council (and umpteen others) on what can be composted[1] in their facility? [1] You can recycle all raw and cooked food waste: vegetables and peelings fish and fish bones fruit cores and skins bones bread, rice, pasta meat (raw or cooked) teabags, coffee granules egg shells plate scrapings cheese -- Robin reply-to address is (intended to be) valid |
#61
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"Andrew" wrote in message
news ![]() I'm amazed that the efficient Germans haven't persuaded the EU to 'harmonize' bin colours. It might be good idea. I agree. It would be a very good idea if there were standard colours for specific types of waste, and standard items that can be collected at the roadside and/or recycling centres. Moving from one area to another means learning a new council's rules - in some areas, normal waste is a black bin, in others it is green. In some areas they will take tin cans and paper (as opposed to cardboard), in other areas they won't. Some councils charge extra for garden waste at the roadside, and rubble / broken plant-pots etc at the recycling centre. I'd like to see a national standard for bin colours and what is collected, with no additional per-load charge for items that are taken to the tip (ie all covered by council tax), I'd also like to see weekly collections of normal waste. Many times I've had to make a special journey to the recycling centre to take packaging etc which will not fit in the normal-waste bin, or even to take additional cardboard boxes. tin cans, glass etc which will not fit in the very small crate and even smaller bag for cardboard. Having to dismantle and rip up and fold carboard boxes to make the fit in the bag is not acceptable: the bin should be large enough to take these without putting the householder to the hassle of making it fit. It is fine to encourage people to recycle more, but all households generate a certain amount of waste on average, and it all needs to be removed - whether in the normal bin or the recycling bin. There seems to be a school of thought that we should magically produce less waste, even of the recyclable type. |
#62
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On 25/03/2018 11:05, Robin wrote:
On 25/03/2018 10:52, Andrew wrote: On 24/03/2018 22:28, dennis@home wrote: Â*Â*TNP is thick, its quite easy to get 15l of waste food if you cook everything rather than get ready meals microwaved by his carer. Except that it isn't food waste, much of it is uncooked veggy parings (which contain most of the vitamins anyway). All this can be composted at home. Anything containing bones, fat or protein, whether cooked or not needs to go to landfill. Do you have authority for contradicting the advice from my council (and umpteen others) on what can be composted[1] in their facility? [1] You can recycle all raw and cooked food waste: Â*Â*Â* vegetables and peelings Â*Â*Â* fish and fish bones Â*Â*Â* fruit cores and skins Â*Â*Â* bones Â*Â*Â* bread, rice, pasta Â*Â*Â* meat (raw or cooked) Â*Â*Â* teabags, coffee granules Â*Â*Â* egg shells Â*Â*Â* plate scrapings Â*Â*Â* cheese Try horsham.gov.uk website. They have told us that the brown bins for garden waste must not be contaminated with food waste. Who is right ?. I don't suppose your council has an incinerator by chance ?. |
#63
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On 25/03/2018 11:10, NY wrote:
snip It is fine to encourage people to recycle more, but all households generate a certain amount of waste on average, and it all needs to be removed - whether in the normal bin or the recycling bin. There seems to be a school of thought that we should magically produce less waste, even of the recyclable type. If it modifies your behaviour to reduce waste and recyclable matter, it all sounds a good thing. Otherwise pay the price of inconvenience. |
#64
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"Robin" wrote in message
... On 25/03/2018 10:52, Andrew wrote: On 24/03/2018 22:28, dennis@home wrote: TNP is thick, its quite easy to get 15l of waste food if you cook everything rather than get ready meals microwaved by his carer. Except that it isn't food waste, much of it is uncooked veggy parings (which contain most of the vitamins anyway). All this can be composted at home. Anything containing bones, fat or protein, whether cooked or not needs to go to landfill. Do you have authority for contradicting the advice from my council (and umpteen others) on what can be composted[1] in their facility? [1] You can recycle all raw and cooked food waste: vegetables and peelings fish and fish bones fruit cores and skins bones bread, rice, pasta meat (raw or cooked) teabags, coffee granules egg shells plate scrapings cheese Yes I'd have thought that all of those except fruit and veg peelings/cores could be recycled in an anaerobic digester, rather than needing to go into landfill. We used to compost veg peelings etc along with grass mowings and plant prunings. Even with intermediate layers of cardboard or newspaper, and with occasional watering in dry weather, it took ages for the waste to be composted down. We had three "daleks" (*) on the go, and there were times when all three were full and we had no more room for a few weeks until it had rotted down. (*) Conical plastic composting bins with lids, obtained from local council. |
#65
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"Fredxx" wrote in message
news ![]() On 25/03/2018 11:10, NY wrote: snip It is fine to encourage people to recycle more, but all households generate a certain amount of waste on average, and it all needs to be removed - whether in the normal bin or the recycling bin. There seems to be a school of thought that we should magically produce less waste, even of the recyclable type. If it modifies your behaviour to reduce waste and recyclable matter, it all sounds a good thing. I'm all for encouraging people to recycle rather than landfill, by carrot rather than stick by making it easy to recycle rather than difficult/costly to landfill. But expecting people to reduce the *total* amount of waste is ludicrous. If something comes boxed, you have to get rid of the box - and you don't have the option of saying "supply this item in clean, pristine, undamaged condition but with less packaging" - the packaging is the means of making sure the item is clean/undamaged. |
#66
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On 25/03/2018 11:37, NY wrote:
"Fredxx" wrote in message news ![]() On 25/03/2018 11:10, NY wrote: snip It is fine to encourage people to recycle more, but all households generate a certain amount of waste on average, and it all needs to be removed - whether in the normal bin or the recycling bin. There seems to be a school of thought that we should magically produce less waste, even of the recyclable type. If it modifies your behaviour to reduce waste and recyclable matter, it all sounds a good thing. I'm all for encouraging people to recycle rather than landfill, by carrot rather than stick by making it easy to recycle rather than difficult/costly to landfill. But expecting people to reduce the *total* amount of waste is ludicrous. If something comes boxed, you have to get rid of the box - and you don't have the option of saying "supply this item in clean, pristine, undamaged condition but with less packaging" - the packaging is the means of making sure the item is clean/undamaged. Then modify your buying habits to include items with less packaging or suffer the consequences and so we suffer your moans. I have never had an issue with size of bins, even when our children have been in disposable nappies. If this is making you consider your lifestyle choice, so be it. It can only be a good thing. |
#67
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On 25/03/2018 11:14, Andrew wrote:
On 25/03/2018 11:05, Robin wrote: On 25/03/2018 10:52, Andrew wrote: On 24/03/2018 22:28, dennis@home wrote: Â*Â*TNP is thick, its quite easy to get 15l of waste food if you cook everything rather than get ready meals microwaved by his carer. Except that it isn't food waste, much of it is uncooked veggy parings (which contain most of the vitamins anyway). All this can be composted at home. Anything containing bones, fat or protein, whether cooked or not needs to go to landfill. Do you have authority for contradicting the advice from my council (and umpteen others) on what can be composted[1] in their facility? [1] You can recycle all raw and cooked food waste: Â*Â*Â*Â* vegetables and peelings Â*Â*Â*Â* fish and fish bones Â*Â*Â*Â* fruit cores and skins Â*Â*Â*Â* bones Â*Â*Â*Â* bread, rice, pasta Â*Â*Â*Â* meat (raw or cooked) Â*Â*Â*Â* teabags, coffee granules Â*Â*Â*Â* egg shells Â*Â*Â*Â* plate scrapings Â*Â*Â*Â* cheese Try horsham.gov.uk website. They have told us that the brown bins for garden waste must not be contaminated with food waste. Who is right ?. I was citing what can be put into the bin for *food waste* (not garden waste). Their treatment of food waste is different from that for garden waste - but neither goes to landfill. I don't suppose your council has an incinerator by chance ?. It sends some waste to one - but not food waste. -- Robin reply-to address is (intended to be) valid |
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On 25/03/18 10:56, Andrew wrote:
On 24/03/2018 19:16, Richard wrote: On 24/03/18 18:42, S Viemeister wrote: On 3/24/2018 12:39 PM, John Rumm wrote: There also seems to be quite a variation in what classifications of stuff each bin will take. Our recyclables bin is quite flexible - glass, plastic, card, paper, tins etc. It now takes the bulk of the stuff that gets put out. (when the scheme first started they could not handle things like window envelopes, but now apparently those are ok as well). We have just two bins - one for landfill, the other for paper, tins, and plastic. Alternate week pickup. Most other stuff has to be taken to the local recycling place. The council will pick up a maximum of three large items, booked and paid in advance - freezers, furniture, etc. Last time I used that service it cost about GBP17. No garden waste bins, but it's a rural area and most people have compost bins/piles. Bins preferred. Piles are a pain in the arse. Only if you put grass mowings on them. They take years to compost unless you build up layers of scrap cardboard in between mowings, with some compost accelerator added. Also helps to have big bit of old epdm or pond liner to cover it and keep the heat in. Radical underwear there. |
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NY wrote:
I'm all for encouraging people to recycle rather than landfill, by carrot rather than stick by making it easy to recycle Indeed, the best step they took here was to get rid of the plethora of bins for this/that/the other and the list of banned items (yoghurt pots, butter tubs, tetrapaks, window envelopes, cardboard with sellotape on it) and just take all the recycling in one bin ... |
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On 24/03/2018 16:50, alan_m wrote:
On 24/03/2018 16:32, John Rumm wrote: The only snag is, I could probably fill it half a dozen times just with grass clippings! Grass clippings will compact to a least a sixth of the volume by themselves within a few days in the summer. Indeed, but I can take several cubic metres of them off the lawn in one cutting when its growing fast... they really ain't going in the bin! (not to mention it would mean manually handling them up into the bin after the mower dumps em on the ground) -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
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On 25/03/2018 10:43, Andrew wrote:
On 24/03/2018 12:21, Bob Eager wrote: He also mentions a 240l green bin for food waste, but if he'd read it properly, he'd have seen it was optionally for garden waste as well. In Horsham if the garden waste is contaminated with any sort of food waste, it is just scooped back up (at the composting site) and taken to landfill. Food waste could contain meat remnants, including pork and that was what caused the 2001 foot-and-mouth outbreak. If people were careful enought to separate uncooked veggy remnants from cooked food waste then it wouldn't be an issue but people are lazy (and not generally very clued-up). Alternatively they have taken the time to read what things their local composting bin collections will take... 'Food Waste' means different things to different people. Indeed, from our district council's web site: Compostables The compostables bin is green with a yellow lid and is for food and garden waste only. Please put items into the bin: Loose Wrapped in a sheet of newspaper or In a 100% compostable bag Carrier bags, black sacks and bin liners are not accepted in this bin. Items you can put in this bin include: Fruit and vegetable peelings Raw and cooked food Meat and fish (including bones) Plate scrapings and leftovers Eggshells Teabags, tea leaves and coffee grounds Bread Dairy products Garden cuttings Grass Flowers Leaves Branches (less than 30cm in diameter) Please do NOT put soil/compost/sand, dead animals, pet food, animal bedding, treated wood or animal/human faeces in this bin. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
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On 25/03/2018 11:10, NY wrote:
"Andrew" wrote in message news ![]() I'm amazed that the efficient Germans haven't persuaded the EU to 'harmonize' bin colours. It might be good idea. I agree. It would be a very good idea if there were standard colours for specific types of waste, and standard items that can be collected at the roadside and/or recycling centres. I'd like to see a national standard for bin colours and what is collected, with no additional per-load charge for items that are taken to the tip (ie all covered by council tax), The difficulty there is that the various recycling facilities around the country do not all have the same capabilities. So you would be in danger of reducing the range of things that can be collected everywhere to a small common subset of recyclable items. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
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On 25/03/2018 11:03, Andrew wrote:
On 24/03/2018 16:19, dennis@home wrote: I don't eat cauliflower stalks, the greens of the carrots, chicken bones, etc.Â* even if you do. The first two are compostible. Bones, Ground up heat treated bone is commonly applied to gardens. fat, meat remnants and other stuff of animal or fowl origin cannot be composted. I once watched a TV program where the commercial company claimed that could almost compost anything organic from the food industry. The programmed showed their operation where one heap was the waste from chicken processing including feathers. They had gigantic heaps on the runway of a disused airport and the heaps were turned and mixed with the help of bulldozers. In council collections the food waste (including all the things you believe cannot be composted) does not go to landfill. My council states: Quote:
This is why pig farmers no longer collect 'swill' from schools. The possibility of another foot-and-mouth outbreak is ominous. This sort of food waste must go to landfill. Unable to compost is not the reason. I believe that this type of waste cannot be guaranteed to have been heat treated to the required high temperatures and it's not economic to do this on a small scale. Unless you grow your own carrots (which means you have space for a compost heap or bin anyway), where are these 'greens of carrots' coming from ? You only need to chop off the top 1/4 inch. How can you end up with 240 litres a week ?. Some people don't buy their carrots pre-packed in a supermarket and even then some "organic" branded carrots sold in supermarkets often are sold with the leaves. I was lead to believe that many root vegetables had a longer shelf/storage life with the greenery removed as once picked the dying leaves suck moisture from the root. -- mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
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On 25/03/2018 11:52, Fredxx wrote:
On 25/03/2018 11:37, NY wrote: "Fredxx" wrote in message news ![]() On 25/03/2018 11:10, NY wrote: snip It is fine to encourage people to recycle more, but all households generate a certain amount of waste on average, and it all needs to be removed - whether in the normal bin or the recycling bin. There seems to be a school of thought that we should magically produce less waste, even of the recyclable type. If it modifies your behaviour to reduce waste and recyclable matter, it all sounds a good thing. I'm all for encouraging people to recycle rather than landfill, by carrot rather than stick by making it easy to recycle rather than difficult/costly to landfill. But expecting people to reduce the *total* amount of waste is ludicrous. If something comes boxed, you have to get rid of the box - and you don't have the option of saying "supply this item in clean, pristine, undamaged condition but with less packaging" - the packaging is the means of making sure the item is clean/undamaged. Then modify your buying habits to include items with less packaging or suffer the consequences and so we suffer your moans. I have never had an issue with size of bins, even when our children have been in disposable nappies. Has it occurred to you that your local council's provision may be very different from NY's? The pilot scheme our council ran for a couple of years had a blue plastic create that took a smaller range of stuff, and separate bags for paper and card. They made recycling some things significantly more difficult than the current scheme with a large wheelie bin that takes pretty much any recyclable. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
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On 24/03/2018 22:28, dennis@home wrote:
On 24/03/2018 18:54, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 24/03/18 17:07, ARW wrote: On 24/03/2018 16:16, dennis@home wrote: On 24/03/2018 06:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 24/03/18 06:15, ARW wrote: On 23/03/2018 14:48, dennis@home wrote: I frequently fill the 240l recycling bin every week. The smaller landfill bin is about 25% full after a week. The food waste bin is full most weeks. It really is waste like peelings, etc. Every one has different recycling bins depending on where they live. I have 4 wheelie bins and supposedly one bag (due to be phased out as they blow away). I have no food recycle bin. Dennis is as usual socially oppressive. More cr@p from TNP. I now think everything TNP says is cr@p and probably lies apart from his insults. A total arsehole in every way. All I said is what I do and made no mention of others. We all know that different councils do different things, even my council does different things in some areas of the borough. TBH in this case I cannot find a reason to call you a **** ![]() That denis can fill a waste bin with food waste very week implies a huge wastage TNP is thick, its quite easy to get 15l of waste food if you cook everything rather than get ready meals microwaved by his carer. 15L is a pretty small "compostables" bin, or is that designated for food waste only? -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
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On 25/03/2018 11:03, Andrew wrote:
On 24/03/2018 16:19, dennis@home wrote: I don't eat cauliflower stalks, the greens of the carrots, chicken bones, etc. even if you do. The first two are compostible. Bones, fat, meat remnants and other stuff of animal or fowl origin cannot be composted. This is why pig farmers no longer collect 'swill' from schools. The possibility of another foot-and-mouth outbreak is ominous. This sort of food waste must go to landfill. In our area they *do* collect that kind of waste with all the other compostable waste. Unless you grow your own carrots (which means you have space for a compost heap or bin anyway), where are these 'greens of carrots' coming from ?. You only need to chop off the top 1/4 inch. How can you end up with 240 litres a week ?. I thought he said the recycling bin was 240L, not the food waste one... -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
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On 25/03/2018 10:52, Andrew wrote:
On 24/03/2018 22:28, dennis@home wrote: Â*Â*TNP is thick, its quite easy to get 15l of waste food if you cook everything rather than get ready meals microwaved by his carer. Except that it isn't food waste, much of it is uncooked veggy parings (which contain most of the vitamins anyway). All this can be composted at home. Anything containing bones, fat or protein, whether cooked or not needs to go to landfill. It does not need to go to landfill, the council runs a composting service for bones and other food waste. It does not go into the green waste for composting. One chicken carcase will fill half the bin so it doesn't take many meals to fill the waste container. |
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On 25/03/2018 11:14, Andrew wrote:
On 25/03/2018 11:05, Robin wrote: On 25/03/2018 10:52, Andrew wrote: On 24/03/2018 22:28, dennis@home wrote: Â*Â*TNP is thick, its quite easy to get 15l of waste food if you cook everything rather than get ready meals microwaved by his carer. Except that it isn't food waste, much of it is uncooked veggy parings (which contain most of the vitamins anyway). All this can be composted at home. Anything containing bones, fat or protein, whether cooked or not needs to go to landfill. Do you have authority for contradicting the advice from my council (and umpteen others) on what can be composted[1] in their facility? [1] You can recycle all raw and cooked food waste: Â*Â*Â*Â* vegetables and peelings Â*Â*Â*Â* fish and fish bones Â*Â*Â*Â* fruit cores and skins Â*Â*Â*Â* bones Â*Â*Â*Â* bread, rice, pasta Â*Â*Â*Â* meat (raw or cooked) Â*Â*Â*Â* teabags, coffee granules Â*Â*Â*Â* egg shells Â*Â*Â*Â* plate scrapings Â*Â*Â*Â* cheese Try horsham.gov.uk website. They have told us that the brown bins for garden waste must not be contaminated with food waste. Who is right ?. The garden waste bin is not a food waste bin. They do not get composted in the same way. I don't suppose your council has an incinerator by chance ?. |
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On 25/03/2018 15:03, John Rumm wrote:
On 24/03/2018 22:28, dennis@home wrote: On 24/03/2018 18:54, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 24/03/18 17:07, ARW wrote: On 24/03/2018 16:16, dennis@home wrote: On 24/03/2018 06:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 24/03/18 06:15, ARW wrote: On 23/03/2018 14:48, dennis@home wrote: I frequently fill the 240l recycling bin every week. The smaller landfill bin is about 25% full after a week. The food waste bin is full most weeks. It really is waste like peelings, etc. Every one has different recycling bins depending on where they live. I have 4 wheelie bins and supposedly one bag (due to be phased out as they blow away). I have no food recycle bin. Dennis is as usual socially oppressive. More cr@p from TNP. I now think everything TNP says is cr@p and probably lies apart from his insults. A total arsehole in every way. All I said is what I do and made no mention of others. We all know that different councils do different things, even my council does different things in some areas of the borough. TBH in this case I cannot find a reason to call you a **** ![]() That denis can fill a waste bin with food waste very week implies a huge wastage Â* TNP is thick, its quite easy to get 15l of waste food if you cook everything rather than get ready meals microwaved by his carer. 15L is a pretty small "compostables" bin, or is that designated for food waste only? Food waste only. It is quite small. The other green waste bin is 240l but its not for food, just garden waste. |
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On 25/03/2018 14:28, John Rumm wrote:
On 24/03/2018 16:50, alan_m wrote: On 24/03/2018 16:32, John Rumm wrote: Â*The only snag is, I could probably fill it half a dozen times just with grass clippings! Grass clippings will compact to a least a sixth of the volume by themselves within a few days in the summer. Indeed, but I can take several cubic metres of them off the lawn in one cutting when its growing fast... they really ain't going in the bin! (not to mention it would mean manually handling them up into the bin after the mower dumps em on the ground) As long as you mow frequently they are better left on the grass anyway. When you start cutting inches off then they become messy in the wet. |
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