rot
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Posts: 728
Joined: Wed Sep 24, 2008 1:15 am
Location: Ventura County, CA, Sunset 23

Go figure

..
Yeah it's trash until someone else wants it.

I know the supermarkets are worried about the transients that come around and try to eat stuff that the regulators have declared no longer safe but they can't make any allowance for composters. When I got popped and marched to the store manager I looked like hell but one doesn't over dress for dumpster diving.

I will scrounge from dumpsters and discards on a passive basis. I'm not cruising town at the wee hours of the morning looking to score from behind businesses but in the course of the day if I see something, I'll snag it. I've gotten my hands on those big wooden cable reels, scrap lumber and I once nabbed this really neat tall multi-tiered cart that serves as bird feeder we roll into the garage each night.

My concern is the trend between liability laws and municipal recycling it will become impossible to for cheapos like me to simply scrounge things and make use of them. As resources become scarce in general, even compost-able yard waste will become untouchable.

While an occasional Starbucks might pop up to encourage such things, the over all trend seems like more of greed and just plain mean.

It's sometime hard for me not to become jaded. It requires work on my part to remain charitable of people.

to sense
..

toxcrusadr
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Posts: 970
Joined: Thu Sep 09, 2010 4:50 pm
Location: MO

I think with the grocery stores it is a percieved liability problem in their eyes. Their produce aisle must look perfect, which means they throw out a lot of trimmings (outer leaves etc.) as well as blemished and spoiled produce. I suspect there is a lot of edible material in there - stuff that, if it came out of your garden, you'd trim it up and use it. They don't want people eating it. If you go into any grocery store in the US and tell them you want their produce waste for composting, you are likely to get the same response. It's sad but true.

Now and then there are probably exceptions. When I had more time for such things I had a juice bar and organic restaurant that would give me plastic tubs full of food waste - all I wanted. Otherwise the owner was taking it to his farm to compost.

vermontkingdom
Senior Member
Posts: 141
Joined: Sun Nov 08, 2009 8:03 am
Location: 4a-Vermont

I often dumpster dive for wooden pallet material on Sunday morning after church. I've used the stuff to make compost bins, cold frames, raised beds, etc. My wife doesn't like me doing so but she knows at that point, after more than 40 years, it's impossible to change.

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Hitched_Gibson
Full Member
Posts: 46
Joined: Wed Apr 13, 2011 6:28 pm
Location: Conroe, TX

I noticed something has been thieving through my compost pile. I guess what goes around comes around.

toxcrusadr
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Posts: 970
Joined: Thu Sep 09, 2010 4:50 pm
Location: MO

You set up a buffet there, dude, whadya expect? 8)

vermont: My wife has started helping me sometimes. Sometimes she sits in the car and talks on her phone, but she's cool with it. After seeing all the stuff that comes out - not only pallets but torn bags of potting soil, discarded plants that are still alive, and all manner of other non-gardening stuff.

My best find ever was a brand new $250 air compressor that was returned under warranty. The problem? A 5 cent lock washer missing from a really important spot.

Right now I have an $800 generator at my small engine guy...says he can fix it for a couple hundred.

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!potatoes!
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Posts: 1938
Joined: Tue Apr 14, 2009 2:13 pm
Location: wnc - zones 6/7 line

just stopping by to say that I'm in the guild.

ucg, bagged city leaves, etc...

Bloody Boots
Full Member
Posts: 21
Joined: Mon Nov 09, 2009 1:03 am
Location: Wisconsin

I've found that if I ask right up front, and offer a nice benefit for the employees, most stores/gas stations are enthusiastic about me taking their UGC, old/spoiled fruit/shredded papers/pallets. I explain how I plan to use it, offer them a nice container to hold it out of site (5 Gallon bucket w/lid) and a pickup schedule with my cell phone number if the booty gets to large or they have bigwigs coming. And they are pleased to have me remove heavy waste that they don't have to.

The Benefit for the employees and location you ask? Most places pay a per ton disposal fee. I pull those heavy buckets of UGC, pallets and fruit out of their trash flow and those dumpsters get mighty light. More than a few managers have told me I'm saving them a hundred or so a month, and few complaints about lugging those heavy bags to the back of the store as well.

And then when they toss out some shelves, counters or sinks as they remodel, they offer them to you first!

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gixxerific
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Posts: 5889
Joined: Fri Jun 26, 2009 5:42 pm
Location: Wentzville, MO (Just West oF St. Louis) Zone 5B

I sometimes stop by and get bagged grass and leaves from the curb. But I get a lot of grass from 4 of my neighbors. Sometimes like a big trash can full that is plenty.

I also get coffee grounds from various places.

My MIL and my neighbor gives me their shredded paper. My neighbor also puts their food waste in my pile, only the good stuff though they know what not to put in there.



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