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One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 9:47 am
by Keaniebean
I switched on the news this morning and saw an article about a family of four who were having their bin emptied for the first time in a year, I think they were from Gloustershire, but I was still a bit bleary eyed so I cant be sure.
Well done to them, hopefully it will inspire others to do the same. I tried this for a while after reading a thread on this forum and found it so hard, but i'll give it a go again. I have to try and make up for my neighbours who dont even bother recycling, lazy s$%^^%%*&^(%$%$)^_)*&*&
Did anyone else see it?
Re: One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 10:20 am
by Green Aura
I saw a part of that too. Amazing - and it was an old galvanised dustbin, not a big wheely bin.
I was a bit dismayed they were still using bought in curry sauces, but one step at a time eh? The woman said they'd stopped buying bread and biscuits and were making them instead so it sounds like they're on a similar journey to many of us.
Good on 'em.

Re: One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 10:53 am
by Julysea
I know this lady and she's great. Definitely on an Ish journey. Her blog is at
http://myzerowaste.com/ and there's loads of helpful articles and discussions on there too.
Re: One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 12:08 pm
by Keaniebean
The website looks good, I'm going to have more of a nose round that a bit later.
I just had a rather unsucessful shopping trip to T£$(0, I'm finding it hard to buy British, preferably organic, have little or even zero packaging that would need to go to landfil and buy low fat or healthy options on most things.
I find the other ones ie. Sainsbugs certainly better for British produce, but things like meat and cheese all come so packaged and finding a good local butcher round us which you wouldnt have to remortgage your house for is just an ask too much

.
Re: One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 2:00 pm
by Julysea
Yeah, I'm also finding the packaging difficult, it just seems that *everything* has so much. I've written to shops, tried changing the things we buy and where from, but it is so frustrating and makes shopping much harder than it needs to be. Would a few paper or cornstarch (compostable) bags in supermarkets really be so hard?
Re: One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 3:22 pm
by Evelyn J
I saw this on the news and was "GREEN" with envy, i thought i was doing well only using 1/2 a bin bag a week, If shops sold things like oven chips and bread in biodegraidable bags i would be land filling even less.
I also am at the mercy of the supermarket for meat as our butchers prices are way beyond my budget, but i do reuse the trays for loads of things.
And i simpothise with the feeling some of you have that you have to try so much harder to try and compensate for your lazy stupid *@<?!?****>>< neighbours, my neighbours actualy make fun of me for recycling and have shouted D head at me when i put my recycling bins out!!
Eve
Re: One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 3:37 pm
by Julysea
That's awful! Still, at least your conscience is clear as you know you are doing what you can right now and always moving forward with your Ish activities! They must be uncomfortable with themselves at some level if they can be bothered to have such an extreme reaction to what you do!
Re: One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 5:38 pm
by southeast-isher
Re: One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 11:12 pm
by MKG
SusieGee wrote:They ruined it all for me by using jars of ready made curry sauce

and its so easy to make! ah well if that's their only vice I suppose I can forgive them. Certainly something to think about - I wonder what my butcher would say if I took my own containers, should give it a try.
...but...but...but ... if it's the one I'm thinking of, you can't blame them. When I bought a dozen jars, it cost 12p per jar (about three months ago) and I believe it's even cheaper now. You can't make it for that. Mind you, they should have been keeping the jars for jam, pickles etc.
Can't have everything, I suppose.
Mike
Re: One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Thu Jan 28, 2010 7:25 am
by Millymollymandy
I saw it too and was a bit surprised that they can be sooooo Ish in one way and not in another.
Personally I'd rather throw out more rubbish and eat more 'proper' food.
Oh, hang on, I already do.

Re: One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Thu Jan 28, 2010 7:46 am
by prison break fan
Absolutely agree with Millymollymandy! Curry sauce in jars! it might only be 12p, but what's in it? pbf.
Re: One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Thu Jan 28, 2010 9:12 am
by Keaniebean
Re: One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Thu Jan 28, 2010 1:27 pm
by Millymollymandy
Hey I like Angel Delight but wouldn't fancy the taste of it mixed with pot noodles!
I can't imagine getting ANYTHING for 12p, food or otherwise.

Re: One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Tue Feb 02, 2010 10:18 am
by Keaniebean
It is hard to think of anything for 12p these days.
Even penny sweets seem to be astronomical, and certainly not pennies. Not that I've bought any for a long long time.
As to Angel Delight, it just brings back bad child hood memories of a dinner lady forcing me to eat it with semolina. Sends shivers down my spine

Re: One bin, one year, one family. Hooray.
Posted: Tue Feb 02, 2010 10:24 am
by Green Aura
My gal has been living on A$DAs 9p noodles and 26p jars of sauce (obviously the expensive alternative!

).
She wondered why she felt well while staying here over Christmas
MMM - when did you get your tastebuds removed

Angel delight tastes like soap and makes me
