hubgearfreak
Über Member
Arch said:Skip diving should be encouraged (at the individuals own risk). Too many people throw away perfectly good stuff.
i agree.
Arch said:Skip diving should be encouraged (at the individuals own risk). Too many people throw away perfectly good stuff.
domtyler said:Seriously, going anywhere near these skips is hazardous, but to actually enter one is pure madness and for you to positively recomend this activity to people is downright irresponsible. I wont even begin to list the dangers of engaging in this type of thing.
Fnaar said:I like the term "skip rat". Just thought I'd let you all know that.![]()
Arch said:So how come I and my colleagues in the recycling game haven't been multipully killed doing our jobs then? That frequently involves not just going near great big skips, but getting into them to level the stuff out. We have gloves, and that's about it.
Tell you what, if you and yours are too dumb to work out what's safe and what isn't for you, then you keep away from skips. Those of us with brains will continue to use our common sense.
On a legal note though, I've a feeling that taking something from a skip is technically stealing it from the owner of the skip... So dangerous - only if you're a div. Illegal, I'm afraid probably yes, technically.
domtyler said:go and play chicken with the artics on the motorway
licking your fingers and poking them in the electric sockets
hubgearfreak said:you're comparing those things with taking a plastic chair from a skip, and she's the numpty?![]()
wafflycat said:just because someone thought a crime was being committed, it was not automatic that it was followed up. Perhaps that has gone out of the window
domtyler said:Look mate, if you are happy to go and play in a big metal box with broken glass, splintered wood, twisted metal shards, chemical spills, rotting food and assorted other refuse then go for it, I won't stop you. I just don't think it is right to go around recommending that others follow suit.
rich p said:Arch, are you mad? I won't even walk past a skip in case a shard of glass leaps out and embeds itself in my throat, or a discarded Bauhaus chair makes an unprovoked attack. I've always thought you were a menace to society and this sort of behaviour has convinced me.![]()
If people just left the stuff in hedges, or down country lanes, then we wouldn't have to run the dangers of skip-divingUser482 said:The most sensible approach would be for the council to provide an open area at the recycling/ waste centre for items that can be re-used. I can see why they would want to discourage people rooting through skips though - they'd end up getting sued if someone fell in, no doubt.
User482 said:The most sensible approach would be for the council to provide an open area at the recycling/ waste centre for items that can be re-used. I can see why they would want to discourage people rooting through skips though - they'd end up getting sued if someone fell in, no doubt.
Arch said:Which is why I'd say it should be at people's own risk.
I've often though there should be a more organised system for letting people reuse stuff - the average city tip is heaving with perfectly useful furniture, bikes, timber off-cuts, old doors, bits of carpet, reusable bricks or slates etc. If you had a large area, with sections for each type of stuff, it would just have to be sorted as it arrived and people could browse as they wished. Old bricks and timber are especially useful in gardens and allotments and a lot of furniture that is thrown out merely needs minor repairs (if any) or maybe a good cleaning.
At least here in York the bikes now get recycled by a local scheme.