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General => News => Topic started by: nilly71 on April 12, 2010, 16:35:23

Title: Gutted
Post by: nilly71 on April 12, 2010, 16:35:23
For the past two days I have driven past a skip on the way to work, it had a plastic table and large rectangular fibreglass pond (6'x3'x2'). Today I was clearing some of the new ground at the plot and thought of an ideal way to use the pond for collecting/storing rain water. So I decided to leave early and go to the owners of the skip to ask for the stuff in side.

The skip was gone :'( , I'm GUTTED

Neil
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: goodlife on April 12, 2010, 16:47:43
well....next time when you feel you fingers itching...trust them...give away.. ::) ;D
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: artichoke on April 12, 2010, 22:10:43
There is a skip right outside our font door that started off with some lovely pieces of solid wood in it, but by the time I had found out whose skip it was, it was filled with earth and rubbish and rubble and I just can't get at the wood even though I now have permission. I should have just grabbed it.
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: pookienoodle on April 13, 2010, 11:16:14
I its outside someones house its fair game imho.
building sites are different,I asked at a local builing site for some blue pipe I had seen in the skip,they were so grateful I had asked that they sorted me out some more they were going to chuck.
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: goodlife on April 13, 2010, 15:51:58
I ask some pallets from a building site..they let me take few and as I gave chaps a jar of honey to their tea room...I was allowed to take then as many as I wanted... ;D
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: macmac on April 13, 2010, 16:44:01
I think taking things from skips is recycling at it's best.
There should be a sign on every skip telling folk to help themselves,they'd have less to put in that big hole called "away" as in thrown away  >:(
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: nilly71 on April 13, 2010, 19:34:47
It's so hard driving past a skip without wanting to stop and have a look through. A few months ago someone was having their roof replaced and there was a skip full of roofing battons, at the time i didn't have a car to put them in, now i want to make trellis and it would of been ideal.

Neil
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: Trevor_D on April 14, 2010, 15:30:39
It costs good money to get rid of a skipful of "rubbish". Most people are only too happy for you to help yourself. (But - being an upstanding honest citizen - I can never do it without asking....)

But we get regular supplies for the site of pallets from the builders' yard next door, and of shredded bark from a local tree surgeon, plus a lorry-load of old scaffold-boards for the price of delivery (which we recouped by selling the surplus to members). And when a retirement home was built nearby, we saw a whole pile of builders' fencing; not only did my wife manage to get it at a knock-down price, but a couple of weeks back we got another small load free of charge! We've managed to reinforce the rather ancient hedge along the front of the site and still got a few spare!

Always make friends with your local tradesmen! Even the extra water tanks we're putting in are "rescued" ex-domestic ones!
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: Mortality on April 19, 2010, 11:57:05
I haven't plucked up the courage to ask for the wooden pallet thats outside one of the houses close to me, builders are renovating it. ::) :-[
I did however get to grab a few bricks for the garden from the other builders who are renovating another house around the corner. :D
..and there's a whole glass pane in a frame I could use in the garden outside of another house..
:-[
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: gwynnethmary on April 19, 2010, 12:32:52
I got skirting board from a neighbour's garden (I did ask first), and we also got lots of plastic fascia board from a skip- both of these have have made brilliant edgings for our paths.
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: gp.girl on April 19, 2010, 18:53:23
Adrian and I were walking back from the allotment on Sunday and spotted 4 fence posts in a skip. Owner there and hey presto off to get the car to take them up the allotment.......

Raspberry restraint here we come  :)
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: gwynnethmary on April 19, 2010, 21:42:07
I love that feeling of getting something for nothing- think it 's in the genes- my parents made do and mended, being of that generation that grew up in the 20s and 30s.
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: saddad on April 19, 2010, 21:48:49
Cultivating tradesmen is fun too...#
I have 40 18"sq slabs delivered gratis tomorrow, the only downer Is he wabnts to unload them @7:00am, glad I live on site....  :)
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: greenhousegirl on April 19, 2010, 21:54:55
When ever I spot anything I think may be of use by the time I pluck up the courage to ask it has gone.

My OH  though will come home with all sorts of things, he works for a building company, and you would be amazed at the things they throw away that are very useful. (most of the time)

I have a mail sorting rack that has made a good cage for the strawberries holes small enough for the bees to get in and out but too small for the birds to pinch my strawberries.    
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: powerspade on April 20, 2010, 06:49:29
I often go on a skip raid find very usefull things like builders buckets, wheel barrows, timber, scafold netting, a couple of months ago there was a police raid in the village next to where I live and as I walked through there I seen a skip fill of pots of compost. Big pots, they where about 12" in diameter so I phoned a mate and we took most of them. It seemed the raid was due to a "hash" factory in a local house. as they say "every little helps" 
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: Digeroo on April 20, 2010, 07:05:34
My OH used to have an office overlooking the company skip.  Our garage is still full of rubbiish he rescued.
Title: Re: Gutted
Post by: Mortality on April 20, 2010, 10:15:59
Yay got the wooden pallet this morning, I saw one of the builders and asked, the two other builders came out and after a chat, one of them carried it up to my front door for me.  ;D