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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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#1
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Rocked up at the tip yesterday, with a few big pieces of plasterboard
and a couple of croc tubs of ****e only to be turned away because i've no permit. Apparently since Feb you've to apply to the council for a permit, with which I will be able to dispose of 10 x 25k bags per year. A 25k bag of plasterboard? I've to break it into ####ing bits? Less than one bag per month on average? I've a fairly big project on. In a town that (like many/most others?) has a fly tipping problem. Pure genius. |
#3
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R D S wrote:
Rocked up at the tip yesterday, with a few big pieces of plasterboard and a couple of croc tubs of ****e only to be turned away because i've no permit. Apparently since Feb you've to apply to the council for a permit, with which I will be able to dispose of 10 x 25k bags per year. A 25k bag of plasterboard? I've to break it into ####ing bits? Less than one bag per month on average? I've a fairly big project on. In a town that (like many/most others?) has a fly tipping problem. Pure genius. Did you rock up in a white van or other obvious trade persons vehicle? Tim -- Please don't feed the trolls |
#4
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On 11/04/2019 16:13, Tim+ wrote:
R D S wrote: Rocked up at the tip yesterday, with a few big pieces of plasterboard and a couple of croc tubs of ****e only to be turned away because i've no permit. Apparently since Feb you've to apply to the council for a permit, with which I will be able to dispose of 10 x 25k bags per year. A 25k bag of plasterboard? I've to break it into ####ing bits? Less than one bag per month on average? I've a fairly big project on. In a town that (like many/most others?) has a fly tipping problem. Pure genius. Did you rock up in a white van or other obvious trade persons vehicle? Tim No, car, all 'inert' waste needs this permit apparently, domestic or not. |
#5
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R D S wrote:
A 25k bag of plasterboard? I've to break it into ####ing bits? Round here it costs £3 to dispose of a 1.8mx0.9m sheet of plasterboard, that only costs £5.50 to buy in B&Q ... alternatively you crumble it up and sneak it into the wheelie bin over a few weeks. |
#6
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On 11/04/2019 16:13, Andy Burns wrote:
R D S wrote: A 25k bag of plasterboard? I've to break it into ####ing bits? Round here it costs £3 to dispose of a 1.8mx0.9m sheet of plasterboard, that only costs £5.50 to buy in B&Q ... alternatively you crumble it up and sneak it into the wheelie bin over a few weeks. Sadly the reason they have imposed this restriction on plasterboard is to stop it going into general waste, although it has had exactly the opposite effect. My lot you have to dispose of it by being weighed in and out over a weighbridge shared with laden skips on beat-waste trucks. Apparently in the reducing environment of a refuse tip the sulphate gets reduced to hydrogen sulphide and has been causing them problems. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
#7
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Martin Brown wrote:
Andy Burns wrote: Round here it costs £3 to dispose of a 1.8mx0.9m sheet of plasterboard, that only costs £5.50 to buy in B&Q ... alternatively you crumble it up and sneak it into the wheelie bin over a few weeks. Sadly the reason they have imposed this restriction on plasterboard is to stop it going into general waste I'm aware of that, they used to have a separate plasterboard skip at the tip, and I always made use of it, keeping it separate although it has had exactly the opposite effect. yep. |
#8
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"R D S" wrote in message
... Rocked up at the tip yesterday, with a few big pieces of plasterboard and a couple of croc tubs of ****e only to be turned away because i've no permit. Apparently since Feb you've to apply to the council for a permit, with which I will be able to dispose of 10 x 25k bags per year. A 25k bag of plasterboard? I've to break it into ####ing bits? Less than one bag per month on average? I've a fairly big project on. In a town that (like many/most others?) has a fly tipping problem. Pure genius. Some years ago I dug up a large pile (maybe several hundredweight) of sandstone sheets (naturally occurring, in the sandy soil). I took most of the smaller pieces to the tip in refuse bags, at a time when it was still free to dispose of rubble as long as you didn't take more that n bags per month - so I took n bags per month to each of several tips in the area (nothing wrong with playing the system). The rest ended up in a large pile at the bottom of the garden. By that stage, tips were charging colossal sums of money - we worked out that it would have cost over £100 to dispose of it. We could have hired a skip, which would probably have been cheaper, but it was overkill for something that would barely cover the bottom of a skip. The official explanation for what people should do with their waste rubble was "advertise locally to see if anyone wants rubble for filling potholes in farm tracks". Oh yeah. I bet you'd get a *lot* of takers... So my wife build a "dry stone wall" of the slabs, alongside part of the hedge beside a brick compost heap, where we had problems with local dogs getting in when their owners let them off the lead while going for a walk along the unofficial "footpath" at the bottom of the garden. The concept of paying to dispose of any waste, over and above normal council tax, seems fundamentally wrong when *I* transport it to the tip and don't even want someone else to collect it. We were also expected to pay extra if we wanted the council to collect garden waste. Initially it was free. The council sounded aghast when I asked them to collect the bin, and said that we'd take our garden waste to the tip ourselves for free. |
#9
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On 11/04/2019 16:46, NY wrote:
"R D S" wrote in message ... Rocked up at the tip yesterday, with a few big pieces of plasterboard and a couple of croc tubs of ****e only to be turned away because i've no permit. Apparently since Feb you've to apply to the council for a permit, with which I will be able to dispose of 10 x 25k bags per year. A 25k bag of plasterboard? I've to break it into ####ing bits? Less than one bag per month on average? I've a fairly big project on. In a town that (like many/most others?) has a fly tipping problem. Pure genius. Some years ago I dug up a large pile (maybe several hundredweight) of sandstone sheets (naturally occurring, in the sandy soil). I took most of the smaller pieces to the tip in refuse bags, at a time when it was still free to dispose of rubble as long as you didn't take more that n bags per month - so I took n bags per month to each of several tips in the area (nothing wrong with playing the system). The rest ended up in a large pile at the bottom of the garden. By that stage, tips were charging colossal sums of money - we worked out that it would have cost over £100 to dispose of it. We could have hired a skip, which would probably have been cheaper, but it was overkill for something that would barely cover the bottom of a skip. The official explanation for what people should do with their waste rubble was "advertise locally to see if anyone wants rubble for filling potholes in farm tracks". Oh yeah. I bet you'd get a *lot* of takers... So my wife build a "dry stone wall" of the slabs, alongside part of the hedge beside a brick compost heap, where we had problems with local dogs getting in when their owners let them off the lead while going for a walk along the unofficial "footpath" at the bottom of the garden. The concept of paying to dispose of any waste, over and above normal council tax, seems fundamentally wrong when *I* transport it to the tip and don't even want someone else to collect it. We were also expected to pay extra if we wanted the council to collect garden waste. Initially it was free. The council sounded aghast when I asked them to collect the bin, and said that we'd take our garden waste to the tip ourselves for free. Our council introduced a charge for garden waste two years ago. We kept the bin though, as it is still used for food waste and cut flowers are also allowed. As we didn't pay for the garden waste removal service, we didn't get a sticker and so couldn't put such waste out in the bin - so I bought an old style, round, black bin and just took that along to the tip every so often. I am assuming that they had a lot of people do the same and got a lot less money in than they expected, as the charge is being dropped from June. SteveW |
#10
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Steve Walker Wrote in message:
On 11/04/2019 16:46, NY wrote: "R D S" wrote in message ... Rocked up at the tip yesterday, with a few big pieces of plasterboard and a couple of croc tubs of ****e only to be turned away because i've no permit. Apparently since Feb you've to apply to the council for a permit, with which I will be able to dispose of 10 x 25k bags per year. A 25k bag of plasterboard? I've to break it into ####ing bits? Less than one bag per month on average? I've a fairly big project on. In a town that (like many/most others?) has a fly tipping problem. Pure genius. Some years ago I dug up a large pile (maybe several hundredweight) of sandstone sheets (naturally occurring, in the sandy soil). I took most of the smaller pieces to the tip in refuse bags, at a time when it was still free to dispose of rubble as long as you didn't take more that n bags per month - so I took n bags per month to each of several tips in the area (nothing wrong with playing the system). The rest ended up in a large pile at the bottom of the garden. By that stage, tips were charging colossal sums of money - we worked out that it would have cost over £100 to dispose of it. We could have hired a skip, which would probably have been cheaper, but it was overkill for something that would barely cover the bottom of a skip. The official explanation for what people should do with their waste rubble was "advertise locally to see if anyone wants rubble for filling potholes in farm tracks". Oh yeah. I bet you'd get a *lot* of takers... So my wife build a "dry stone wall" of the slabs, alongside part of the hedge beside a brick compost heap, where we had problems with local dogs getting in when their owners let them off the lead while going for a walk along the unofficial "footpath" at the bottom of the garden. The concept of paying to dispose of any waste, over and above normal council tax, seems fundamentally wrong when *I* transport it to the tip and don't even want someone else to collect it. We were also expected to pay extra if we wanted the council to collect garden waste. Initially it was free. The council sounded aghast when I asked them to collect the bin, and said that we'd take our garden waste to the tip ourselves for free. Our council introduced a charge for garden waste two years ago. We kept the bin though, as it is still used for food waste and cut flowers are also allowed. As we didn't pay for the garden waste removal service, we didn't get a sticker and so couldn't put such waste out in the bin - so I bought an old style, round, black bin and just took that along to the tip every so often. I am assuming that they had a lot of people do the same and got a lot less money in than they expected, as the charge is being dropped from June. SteveW To be replaced by a charge at the tip :-) -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#11
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On 11/04/2019 16:06, R D S wrote:
Rocked up at the tip yesterday, with a few big pieces of plasterboard and a couple of croc tubs of ****e only to be turned away because i've no permit. My local tip requires proof of address before being allowed in. They accept a photo driving licence with an appropriate address. They make no check on how often you use it but do ask about what you are dumping - mainly to direct you to specialised skips for certain types of waste. -- mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
#12
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On Thu, 11 Apr 2019 16:06:06 +0100, R D S wrote:
Apparently since Feb you've to apply to the council for a permit, with which I will be able to dispose of 10 x 25k bags per year. A 25k bag of plasterboard? I've to break it into ####ing bits? Cumbria County Council: Permit required if you are disposing of general houshold waste and drive any sized van, a pickup or use a twin axle trailer less than 3m in length. Single use, last a month, free. Permit required if you are disposing of recycables and drive any sized van, a pickup or use a twin axle trailer less than 3m in length. Multiple use, last a year, free. No limits on quantity of waste, other than that imposed by only allowing a single general waste trip per month in a van/pickup/2 axle trailer. No permits, no limits, no charges if you turn up in a car. Northumberland County Council: Each household has a maximum of 12, single use, vehicle permits per year (vehicles loosely as above), free. There is a limit of 6 cubic yards of "DIY waste", per household per year some of which is chargeable. £2/per bag (bag being the size that 25 kg of sand comes in). There is also charging based on vehicle (inc cars) and how full they are for "DIY waste". Both are of course only supposed to be used by residents of the appropiate county. Stuff that, we live in Cumbria (just) but go to Hexham (Northumberland) far more than anywhere else in Cumbria, guess which HWRC we use... -- Cheers Dave. |
#13
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"Dave Liquorice" wrote in message
idual.net... Both are of course only supposed to be used by residents of the appropiate county. Stuff that, we live in Cumbria (just) but go to Hexham (Northumberland) far more than anywhere else in Cumbria, guess which HWRC we use... We used to live near Malton, and the North Yorkshire tip in Malton and the York City tip in Strensall were more or less equidistant so I used both... until York started checking for ID and I was turned away because I wasn't a resident of York City "county". As an aside, even many locals cannot get their brains around the concept of York being in a county of its own, and not being part of North, West or East Yorkshire or the three Ridings that preceded those 1974 counties. It is interesting how some tips have staff who are far more willing to help unload cars than at other tips. When I used to live in Oxfordshire, the staff, especially at Redbridge, wouldn't lift a finger to help, and were there only to try to catch people out who were putting things in the wrong skips (*). In North Yorkshire, Malton, Thornton-le-Dale and Wombleton (**) usually leave people to manage on their own, though more recently they are willing to help if you ask them. Leyburn, the nearest tip to where we live at the moment, are very willing to help: sometimes I've barely reversed up to the skips when the boot is opened and one of the cheery staff is starting to empty my trugs of garden waste. On one occasion I had to stop him from taking something that *I* knew was not to be thrown away, but happened to be in the boot; I should have anticipated what would happen and put in on the back seat instead... (*) I once asked "Where do I put this?" and was greeted with a shrug and a grunt, so I said "Thank you for being so helpful" and put it in the most sensible one. At that point, he yelled at me for putting it in the wrong one - he kept going on and on, repeating himself many times over. I pointed out that I'd asked him and he hadn't deigned to give me a sensible answer. "You should have known" was his answer. (**) I kid you not: I love the idea of Wombles of Wombleton collecting "things that everyday folk leave behind" ;-) |
#14
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On 12/04/2019 09:24, NY wrote:
"Dave Liquorice" wrote in message idual.net... Both are of course only supposed to be used by residents of the appropiate county. Stuff that, we live in Cumbria (just) but go to Hexham (Northumberland) far more than anywhere else in Cumbria, guess which HWRC we use... We used to live near Malton, and the North Yorkshire tip in Malton and the York City tip in Strensall were more or less equidistant so I used both... until York started checking for ID and I was turned away because I wasn't a resident of York City "county". As an aside, even many locals cannot get their brains around the concept of York being in a county of its own, and not being part of North, West or East Yorkshire or the three Ridings that preceded those 1974 counties. It is interesting how some tips have staff who are far more willing to help unload cars than at other tips. When I used to live in Oxfordshire, the staff, especially at Redbridge, wouldn't lift a finger to help, and were there only to try to catch people out who were putting things in the wrong skips (*). In North Yorkshire, Malton, Thornton-le-Dale and Wombleton (**) usually leave people to manage on their own, though more recently they are willing to help if you ask them. Leyburn, the nearest tip to where we live at the moment, are very willing to help: sometimes I've barely reversed up to the skips when the boot is opened and one of the cheery staff is starting to empty my trugs of garden waste. On one occasion I had to stop him from taking something that *I* knew was not to be thrown away, but happened to be in the boot; I should have anticipated what would happen and put in on the back seat instead... (*) I once asked "Where do I put this?" and was greeted with a shrug and a grunt, so I said "Thank you for being so helpful" and put it in the most sensible one. At that point, he yelled at me for putting it in the wrong one - he kept going on and on, repeating himself many times over. I pointed out that I'd asked him and he hadn't deigned to give me a sensible answer. "You should have known" was his answer. The staff at one of our local tips are less than helpful too. The tip has bays painted on the ground, at an angle. If it is busy (which it usually is) and you have to reverse in with a trailer, the bay is not long enough. At quieter times I can simply swing across a number of bays, pull forward and stop with the car at the front of the bay and the trailer at a sharp angle across the bottom of the bay and the one next to it. One busy day, I had one have a right go at me for having my trailer stick a couple of feet into the walkway, narrowing it to about 3 feet - he just couldn't accept that if I'd stopped any further forward, no vehicle would have been able to pass the front of my car and the whole place would have simply locked solid and that I'd chosen the better of two options. SteveW |
#15
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On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 09:39:55 +0100, Steve Walker wrote:
One busy day, I had one have a right go at me for having my trailer stick a couple of feet into the walkway, narrowing it to about 3 feet - he just couldn't accept that if I'd stopped any further forward, no vehicle would have been able to pass the front of my car and the whole place would have simply locked solid and that I'd chosen the better of two options. Best to call their bluff, get back in and say where do you want me to park? When it all clogs up take the time to expalin to the drivers that are obstructed that you had left room but where told to park how you are by the site operative. Of course all this friendly chat with other drivers means your not unloading... Also compalin about the layout to the council and site operator (probably a private company). Frequently the layout of places misses basic common sense facts, like not everyone can reverse a trailer into a parking bay. -- Cheers Dave. |
#16
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On 12/04/2019 10:24, Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 09:39:55 +0100, Steve Walker wrote: One busy day, I had one have a right go at me for having my trailer stick a couple of feet into the walkway, narrowing it to about 3 feet - he just couldn't accept that if I'd stopped any further forward, no vehicle would have been able to pass the front of my car and the whole place would have simply locked solid and that I'd chosen the better of two options. Best to call their bluff, get back in and say where do you want me to park? When it all clogs up take the time to expalin to the drivers that are obstructed that you had left room but where told to park how you are by the site operative. Of course all this friendly chat with other drivers means your not unloading... I have been know to act like that on some occassions, but I don't really like to cause trouble for innocent people. Also compalin about the layout to the council and site operator (probably a private company). I did do and yes, it is a private company. Frequently the layout of places misses basic common sense facts, like not everyone can reverse a trailer into a parking bay. I can reverse it fortunately, but that becomes impossible if the load is low and I can't then see it at all unless its already turned far out of line. I will get around to welding at least one and possibly two tubes on at some point, specifically to hold corner marker poles. SteveW |
#17
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"Dave Liquorice" wrote in message
idual.net... On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 09:39:55 +0100, Steve Walker wrote: One busy day, I had one have a right go at me for having my trailer stick a couple of feet into the walkway, narrowing it to about 3 feet - he just couldn't accept that if I'd stopped any further forward, no vehicle would have been able to pass the front of my car and the whole place would have simply locked solid and that I'd chosen the better of two options. Best to call their bluff, get back in and say where do you want me to park? When it all clogs up take the time to expalin to the drivers that are obstructed that you had left room but where told to park how you are by the site operative. Of course all this friendly chat with other drivers means your not unloading... Also compalin about the layout to the council and site operator (probably a private company). Frequently the layout of places misses basic common sense facts, like not everyone can reverse a trailer into a parking bay. My local tip has bays marked at 45 degrees to the way you come in, so you drive past a space and reverse into it. One day I was there and a guy in a big 4x4 drove in sideways, across about 4 parking spaces, instead of reversing into one of the bays. I was watching him carefully because he nearly drove into the side of my car. The staff just stood there and did nothing - not even a discrete word in his ear "would you like to park properly in one of the bays so other people can park next to you". But when someone else reversed into a bay next him, and had to straddle one of the lines slightly in order to avoid his rear end, the staff gave *him* a bollocking for not parking properly. Talk about double standards... |
#18
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![]() "Dave Liquorice" wrote in message idual.net... On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 09:39:55 +0100, Steve Walker wrote: One busy day, I had one have a right go at me for having my trailer stick a couple of feet into the walkway, narrowing it to about 3 feet - he just couldn't accept that if I'd stopped any further forward, no vehicle would have been able to pass the front of my car and the whole place would have simply locked solid and that I'd chosen the better of two options. Best to call their bluff, get back in and say where do you want me to park? When it all clogs up take the time to expalin to the drivers that are obstructed that you had left room but where told to park how you are by the site operative. Of course all this friendly chat with other drivers means your not unloading... Also compalin about the layout to the council and site operator (probably a private company). Frequently the layout of places misses basic common sense facts, like not everyone can reverse a trailer into a parking bay. Problem is that its just not feasible to design the dump so that those who can't back a trailer can dump their rubbish and still have the dump handle the same volume of traffic. |
#19
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![]() "Steve Walker" wrote in message ... On 12/04/2019 09:24, NY wrote: "Dave Liquorice" wrote in message idual.net... Both are of course only supposed to be used by residents of the appropiate county. Stuff that, we live in Cumbria (just) but go to Hexham (Northumberland) far more than anywhere else in Cumbria, guess which HWRC we use... We used to live near Malton, and the North Yorkshire tip in Malton and the York City tip in Strensall were more or less equidistant so I used both... until York started checking for ID and I was turned away because I wasn't a resident of York City "county". As an aside, even many locals cannot get their brains around the concept of York being in a county of its own, and not being part of North, West or East Yorkshire or the three Ridings that preceded those 1974 counties. It is interesting how some tips have staff who are far more willing to help unload cars than at other tips. When I used to live in Oxfordshire, the staff, especially at Redbridge, wouldn't lift a finger to help, and were there only to try to catch people out who were putting things in the wrong skips (*). In North Yorkshire, Malton, Thornton-le-Dale and Wombleton (**) usually leave people to manage on their own, though more recently they are willing to help if you ask them. Leyburn, the nearest tip to where we live at the moment, are very willing to help: sometimes I've barely reversed up to the skips when the boot is opened and one of the cheery staff is starting to empty my trugs of garden waste. On one occasion I had to stop him from taking something that *I* knew was not to be thrown away, but happened to be in the boot; I should have anticipated what would happen and put in on the back seat instead... (*) I once asked "Where do I put this?" and was greeted with a shrug and a grunt, so I said "Thank you for being so helpful" and put it in the most sensible one. At that point, he yelled at me for putting it in the wrong one - he kept going on and on, repeating himself many times over. I pointed out that I'd asked him and he hadn't deigned to give me a sensible answer. "You should have known" was his answer. The staff at one of our local tips are less than helpful too. The tip has bays painted on the ground, at an angle. If it is busy (which it usually is) and you have to reverse in with a trailer, the bay is not long enough. At quieter times I can simply swing across a number of bays, pull forward and stop with the car at the front of the bay and the trailer at a sharp angle across the bottom of the bay and the one next to it. One busy day, I had one have a right go at me for having my trailer stick a couple of feet into the walkway, narrowing it to about 3 feet - he just couldn't accept that if I'd stopped any further forward, no vehicle would have been able to pass the front of my car and the whole place would have simply locked solid and that I'd chosen the better of two options. There's a reason that thats the best job he can manage. |
#20
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On Sat, 13 Apr 2019 05:24:11 +1000, cantankerous trolling geezer Rot Speed,
the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: There's a reason that that¢s the best job he can manage. You HAD to **** also in this thread, eh, you senile pest? -- dennis@home to retarded senile Rot: "sod off rod you don't have a clue about anything." Message-ID: |
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