recycling

24th May
2010

Water; turn on the tap and it flows. In a country as well provided with water as Britain – no matter how much we may moan abo…
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17th May
2010

Recycling has been around as long as there have been humans to do it.

Hunter-Gatherers

Taking a broad definit…
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17th May
2010

Recycling has been around as long as there have been humans to do it.

Hunter-Gatherers

Taking a broad definit…
Sourced from RecyclingExpert Latest Articles and News, click here to visit

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11th May
2010

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11th May
2010

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10th May
2010

Cor, I worked hard in the garden yesterday – I was ill all last week so was a week behind on everything, and gardens don’t tolerate being a week behind at this time of year, especially since I’m already a couple of months behind on some things!

I think though, aside from a few things for successive planting or winter crops, I’ve planted just about everything I want to try this year – a new garden so lots of experimenting — and lots of empty seed packets in my seed box.

Obviously they’re just paper so could go in our recycling bin but I thought it might be interesting to hear if anyone uses them for anything creative – or to help garden organisation/labelling.

Any suggestions?

(CCA photo by LollyKnit)

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10th May
2010

Cor, I worked hard in the garden yesterday – I was ill all last week so was a week behind on everything, and gardens don’t tolerate being a week behind at this time of year, especially since I’m already a couple of months behind on some things!

I think though, aside from a few things for successive planting or winter crops, I’ve planted just about everything I want to try this year – a new garden so lots of experimenting — and lots of empty seed packets in my seed box.

Obviously they’re just paper so could go in our recycling bin but I thought it might be interesting to hear if anyone uses them for anything creative – or to help garden organisation/labelling.

Any suggestions?

(CCA photo by LollyKnit)

Sourced from How can I recycle this?, click here to visit

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7th May
2010

We’ve had an email from Julia, who work for the British High Commission in Abuja, Nigeria.

She explained “I hate throwing away those clear plastic tops from crisp tubes… so started thinking” – and she came up with some reuses for her regional recycling newsletter:

- Use to cover a glass to prevent insects flying in
- Cover a glass for storage in a fridge
- Find the right sized cup and use as an air-tight top
- Punch holes in it, fit over cup and use as a shaker
- Use as a coaster
- Decorate with coloured markers and hang as sun catches

Great reuse ideas – anyone got any more suggestions? I’ve used them under plant pots before now but the lip is so shallow that they’re more like coasters rather than water-catching saucers.

What about in combination with the tubes/cans? Anyone used the tubes for anything interesting?

(Btw, I can’t believe we’ve been doing this for four years and not featured Pringles cans yet!)

(Photo by jetalone)

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7th May
2010

We’ve had an email from Julia, who work for the British High Commission in Abuja, Nigeria.

She explained “I hate throwing away those clear plastic tops from crisp tubes… so started thinking” – and she came up with some reuses for her regional recycling newsletter:

- Use to cover a glass to prevent insects flying in
- Cover a glass for storage in a fridge
- Find the right sized cup and use as an air-tight top
- Punch holes in it, fit over cup and use as a shaker
- Use as a coaster
- Decorate with coloured markers and hang as sun catches

Great reuse ideas – anyone got any more suggestions? I’ve used them under plant pots before now but the lip is so shallow that they’re more like coasters rather than water-catching saucers.

What about in combination with the tubes/cans? Anyone used the tubes for anything interesting?

(Btw, I can’t believe we’ve been doing this for four years and not featured Pringles cans yet!)

(Photo by jetalone)

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6th May
2010

I bent the prongs on my garden fork the other day. Not just a little bit, so the prong line was a little wobbly, but really quite substantially – one prong was about 60° back, the next one about 30°. Oh the fun of having a stone-filled garden.

We tried to realign it with an artful combination of banging it against a rock and jumping on it, and that straightened it up quite a bit – until I started using it again and the super bent prong instantly bent again — not quite as bad as the first time but still difficult to use as anything other than a pseudo-rotivator. I clearly don’t know my own strength, have a lousy forking technique – or just a lousy fork. I suspect the latter is a big part of the problem – someone bought it for me and while it’s not from Poundland, I doubt it’s the best quality fork available.

Is there any way to fix it so it won’t keep bending? Or now it’s been bent once, has it been weakened so it’ll keep doing it again?

If I have to buy a replacement, I want one that will last – any brand recommendations or things to look for? Or am I to blame – should forks only be used for light work and not digging up giant-squid-esque roots (as I was doing when the prongs went bendy)?

(Photo by MarkusHagenlocher c/o or Wikipedia)

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