- Messages
- 12,978
- Location
- Germany
In our Michigan village we have private rubbish pickup, contracted through the village. It costs $86.00 per month for one 95 gallon rolling trash can, emptied once a week. A pickup truck load of rubbish (loaded only to the top of the bed) costs $108.00 to deposit at the transfer station. Individual 30 gallon bags cost $6.25 to drop off at the transfer station. These prices all more than trebled over the five years after all trash companies in the county were either purchased by a major national firm or were driven out of business by the same. Needless to say the county has a terrible problem with illegal dumping...Our new house doesn't have garbage pickup, unless you contract a local service. The town does provide a garbage truck once a week from 10am-11am, you can take your garbage then.
It also costs $25 to get rid of a tire, hence why I've found 16 tires on the property.
In our Michigan village we have private rubbish pickup, contracted through the village. It costs $86.00 per month for one 95 gallon rolling trash can, emptied once a week. A pickup truck load of rubbish (loaded only to the top of the bed) costs $108.00 to deposit at the transfer station. Individual 30 gallon bags cost $6.25 to drop off at the transfer station. These prices all more than trebled over the five years after all trash companies in the county were either purchased by a major national firm or were driven out of business by the same. Needless to say the county has a terrible problem with illegal dumping...
Most of my trash consists of used newspapers and empty cat-food cans, which get recycled, used tea bags, and used cat litter. I wish they could think of a good way to recycle that. I accumulate a lot of cardboard boxes, which either get filled with stuff and put in the attic, repurposed around the house, or recycled. All my bottles get returned for the nickel deposit.
Any organic waste other than the cat poop -- peelings, bones, and similar scraps -- gets hucked over the backyard fence into the abandoned junkyard. Between that and the dead leaves, there's a nice ad-hoc compost heap going on there.
I'm not the only neighborhood resident who has taken advantage of this fine resource. My late neighbor who was a fisherman used to throw scraps of chum into the junkyard, and once I looked over the fence to see an entire three-foot-long dogfish looking back at me. "Maine, The Way Life Should Be."
My only real concern about urban composting is that it might attract vermin -- rodents especially. Seattle, for instance, is just thick with rats as it is (don't mention that to anyone from the Convention and Visitors Bureau).
We do have a lot of creatures living in the junkyard, but the raccoons and the owls keep the rats and mice under control -- it's a balanced little ecosystem out there. In the seventeen years I've lived in this house, I've never had a single visit from an uninvited rodent.
For now. We have one set on rims (those are $50 to turn in) and I've been eyeing that set for a wagon, but my husband says no, they are too worn. I shoved the four of them with rims over a woodchuck hole and the thing flipped them out...So what have you done with the tires - just left them on the property I'm guessing?
I worked in the tire manufacturing business for 30 years and you can't keep a tire buried in a landfill. It will eventually rise to the surface.Around here, it's common to use tires for landfill. There's a playground on my street that was built on the site of a neighborhood school that burned down in the sixties, and they filled in and built up the site with hundreds and hundreds of old tires. Now, the soil is eroding off due to the slope of the street, and the lot is pocked with tires poking up thru the surface. Kids never use that playground anymore, but if they did they could play a "bounce from tire to tire" game.
Haha. I wish. The neighbor tried something similar... she put a sign with $30 on them by the side of the road... when they didn't sell she put "free."It's all in the marketing!
Option #1
Put a "garage sale" sign on the front yard.
Mark the tires as "vintage" with a high price tag.
Next, tape a label on the tires that says "Hold".
Folks cannot resist this.
Option #2
Ship them to Lizzie.
She autographs them.
They'll be gone in no time!
Well I restore and repair antique radios and phonographs for a living. This involves parting out many sets, and so I have a larger waste stream than some. I used to burn surplus cabinets in the coal furnace, but over the last six years of so natural gas is considerably cheaer per therm than coal, so I use the gas furnace and save both money and trouble. (Stoking the furnace in the morning is a chore, after all. Spring Cleaning is so much simpler now that I am not burning coal. I haven't had to re-paper in years!)
I am planning for a small construction project this spring (adding another ADA full bath on the first floor) and so have been pricing roll-off dumpsters. A 30 yard roll-off will cost $925 for two weeks, with a $26.00 per day charge after the first 14. This is more than three times the cost of a similar dumpster in Cleveland OH, Charlottesville VA or Lansing MI. For all that we have two large landfills in our county. Both of them are, of course operated by the one waste company which holds the monopoly. The waste from Lansing, Clevealnd, and part of Ontario, Canada, is dumped there, but county residents must go through the retail transfer stations.
Well, when we renovated the place in Michigan back in 2001-03 I reconfigured the bedroom spaces upstairs so that five of the six bedrooms have a simple en-suite bathroom.
Downstairs we currently have two half-baths and a laundry room. I have now turned our original dining room into a bedroom for Mom and Dad. We have moved the dining room furniture into the second parlor, and will be demolishing the half bath which is currently off of that original dining room (along with its adjacent laundry room) to create the new full bathroom space. I think that it should be comfortable arrangement, and will leave a first floor living space for our future use should we be lucky enough to reach old age ourselves.
We determined that a residential elevator would actually be a simpler, less costly option, for when we renovated I designed a pair of aligned closets for a just such a future elevator installation, but Dad was uncomfortable with the idea, so we have dropped it for the time being.
Good God, man! How large is that place?
I was surprised by how "affordable" (there's gotta be a better word) those home elevators are. Not that they're inexpensive, but not so pricey as to put them out of consideration.