Showing posts with label Rubbish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rubbish. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 November 2009

Please show my best side!

A good while ago I had a rant about the rubbish left along Pond Lane. Mr Anonymous (which one I'm not allowed to know) admonished me for jumping to conclusions. He felt that they could accidentally have been dropped from a waste lorry.

So I suppose I'd better be careful about this piano, and alert everyone to the fact that they may have accidentally lost it off the back of their lorry.

I quite liked the fierce look the Rock Pipit had when I took the picture head on. It really showed how the character of the bird changes with the view you get. I think that the same is true with these two blackbirds.

He looks quite gentle when showing his profile.

This young female looks a fierce as it did when confronting the other Blackbird, shown above.

In fact it displaced the male that then went down to the large bath on the ground that is normally used by Wood Pigeons lounging about.

There was a sudden surge in the use of the feeders this afternoon, with a small group of Goldfinches brightening up the gloom.

Greenfinch and Chaffinch numbers were up a bit as well. I'll be needing to order more sunflower seeds next week.

Thursday, 27 November 2008

Tired of what is happening to our society

I don't suppose this pile of tyres can have accidentally dropped of a lorry on to the side of the road. I possibly could be attributable to some anti-social person who dumped them here, what a shame that the village is spoiled by such behaviour.

It's not the only bad behaviour suffered by the village lately. On Saturday night a spate of thieving, included our garage and an out-building being broken into, and motorbikes and a quad bike being stolen and burnt out occurred. We seem to be a tolerant society as this sort of thing has happened before and nothing has happened to prevent it happening again. It is about time it was stopped.

Saturday, 22 December 2007

Recycling

A favourite occupation at the weekend is a visit to the local Civic Amenity, also know as a waste or rubbish site. Here we are all encouraged to separate our rubbish for recycling. I'm fully in favour of reducing the consumer societies impact on the world but, I have to say that I am far from convinced that that way we are tackling the waste problem is the correct way.
There are certainly some things that will be used and then are ideal for recycling. Newspapers are an example. Providing the energy used and the greenhouse gasses produced in recycling is less than that in producing the original then it must be worth it. What does worry me is when we are not just recycling but reprocessing materials that could be used again. When I was a lad, and the coal man came round in a horse drawn cart, the lemonade man came round in a van. We bought our bottles, the price including a deposit on the bottle, and then returned the empties, for cleaning and re-using, the next week. While I realise that this seems less convenient than just dumping bottles in a skip, it does seem irrational to me to have to send empty bottles, often overseas, to be reprocessed, when I'm sure a system for reusing a high percentage of them could be arranged. Plastic is another example of a problem that is ever growing but largely unnecessary. The huge amount of plastic used in packaging is largely totally useless. Why not put a dozen or an ounce (as it used to be) of nails in a paper bag like the iron -monger used to (four candles please). It's because you need more labour, but this will be irrelevant once the planet becomes uninhabitable. Milk in glass bottles, the bottles washed and used again was once the norm, now it's throw away plastic bottles. My biggest moan is plastic bags! next time you go to the shop, take a bag with you, and refuse the free plastic bag. It should be illegal to give them away, they are an unnecessary piece of litter as soon as they are empty. The worst thing about plastic is that in general no economic use for recycled plastic has been developed, and in Dover they no longer collect for recycling. Unlike a paper bag, a plastic bag is not readily composted and takes centuries to disintegrate.
One interesting use of waste products is this interesting piece of are made out of various items of rubbish. It is on display at the waste centre and the credits ore on the notice below.