Re: Council Bins
What a pain Pats. Get onto Brainiac or something and ask them if they can device a contraption that will take the food from the kitchen area and swoop it into the bin (like on a zip wire) - there must be someone out there that can think up a Mousetrap type thing that would work!Re: Council Bins
Thats the way it's gone now over here since they sold out to private enterprise, three bins, black, brown, and green and I believe they're bringing out another colour, I think it's going to be blue, that's nice because when the binmans asks me where I put the chicken carcass I can sing him a little song, 'Blue is the colour of the bin it's in, in the morning, in the morning when we rise..'. They don't ask you if you got space for the ugly looking things, oh no, that's your problem too, the onus is always on the customer in their eyes, what happened to the customer is always right?Re: Council Bins
We already have 4 wheelie bins and I believe at least another 2 are on the way. I was told off last year by a council official when I rang up and complained "The black bin man hasn't emptied my bin" I was told "Racist remarks are unacceptable", "Eh??" She said "you commented on the colour of the man's skin" I said "No I didn't" "You said the black bin man" "Yes the black bin, man......the man who empties the black bin" "Oh right"Re: Council Bins
Re: Council Bins
I just remembered. We used to have a man come around every monday morning collecting all the kitchen waste, he had a horse and cart, known to everyone as 'The Slopman' he had a big pig farm(yes all his pigs were big handsome pigs) outside the city and used to feed the pigs with the stuff, come Christmas he would offer his hams to his 'Customers' at well below the butchers prices so everyone was a winner, except maybe the butcher, beautiful hams they were too, and the young think recycling is new..Re: Council Bins
We have to sort, plastic, paper, glass, tins, cardboard, tetra and food. Two large stackbox type bins, one food bin, I put scraps in paper or those bio-degradable bags, and a large wheelie bin. I have a bigger garden now but, before, they used to take up a huge portion of my yard and I had to carry them up about ten steps when full. But, now I'm used to all that sorting, I like it. I use old carriers to carry the recycling to the bins. The only downside now is the glass & tin lids that the men drop and when it's windy papers etc. (and the bins sometimes) blow everywhere. It's a shame the council don't sell us back what they compost at a cheap rate, I don't know what they do with it. There's a rumour that it all goes to landfill anyway, but, it makes me feel better about throwing stuff away. In an ideal world the supermarkets should dispose of packaging, that way they may cut down on it.
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