• Hey Guest!
    British Car Forum has been supporting enthusiasts for over 25 years by providing a great place to share our love for British cars. You can support our efforts by upgrading your membership for less than the dues of most car clubs. There are some perks with a member upgrade!

    **Upgrade Now**
    (PS: Upgraded members don't see this banner, nor will you see the Google ads that appear on the site.)
Tips
Tips

Is this Recycling?

DavidApp

Yoda
Country flag
Offline
About 20 years ago I was visiting a friend at his shop. He had backhoes and dump trucks etc. In the middle of the shop floor was a pile of cloths about 6' high and 10' diameter. So I ask if he is taking in washing. To which he replies no he had just come from the Uniform company and they were going to dump this lot and he needed some rags. They are all good just dig through and find you some shirts and pants.

I took him at his word and found that there were some nice white short sleeve shirts with a Car makers logo. Service manager type shirts. I got about 20 of them along with some Dicky uniform pants.
I am still getting good use out of these shirts when I work in the shop.
So I think that could be considered to be recycling.

David
 
My T shirts and jeans go through a life cycle. Wear out and about, casual clothes, wear when doing light work like yard and weekend fix it projects around the house, wear when working on car, wear when working under car, and for the t-shirts final job is shop or polishing rag.
 
Back in the Old Days, when the bed sheets wore thin, you cut them up for dish towels.

When the dish towels wore thin, you cut them up for hand towels.

When the hand towels wore thin, you cut them up for face cloths.

When the face cloths wore thin ... you sowed them together for bed sheets.

:angel:
 
My Mother would cut the thinning sheets down the middle and sow the edges together to make a slightly narrower sheet.

Envelopes would get opened up carefully to make note paper. Waste not want not was one of her sayings. She was the youngest of 6 and went through the Second World War in London. She would cycle to work in the City during the Blitz.

David
 
Puts me in mind of childhood. Nothing got thrown away until it was completely exhausted of any use. As the kids of those who survived the Great Depression and WW-II, it was passed down to us.

"I'm a hoarder and I admit it!"

"Mebbe I can use this (whatever) in future."
 
Wait'll you see my lifetime collection of nuts and bolts, screws and misc. small thingies. Once a year, I find a use for one. I dread moving or even worse, sticking my poor wife with them when I go.
 
I am also a hoarder or collector but most things get used eventually if I can find where I have put them.
I acquired several cardboard boxes of assorted metric screws from work. Probable 50 lb in each box. The guy in charge of the shop at the time was glad to get rid of the boxes but said " You will never use any of them" Also watch out for the weigh stations as your car may be over weight.
I finally sorted them into the various sizes and put them in bins. Hardly a week goes by without me going to the bins for a screw or nut.

Moving is defiantly out of the question.

David
 
Back
Top