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Thought I’d Share: Friendly Fly Repellent
An acquaintance shared an interesting little tidbit of useful information today, especially considering my current waste disposal situation.
The trash passes twice a week, on Mondays and on Thursdays. A guy with a cowbell runs several blocks ahead of the trash
truck letting people know that now is the time to take out their plastic bags, cardboard boxes and trash bins. Now or never. So people stream out of their houses, bags in tow, to leave them in the designated area.
We used to have a bright yellow garbage bin. It was in pretty bad shape, but it at least kept the trash contained. Then, when the bellboy would pass by, I would hoist my baby into his carrier, grab hold of the remaining handle on the bin and hike it out to the designated garbage area.
Then someone stole our crusty, grimy garbage bin. The trash men? The vengeful neighbor? We’ll never know what happened, but life is a lot more complicated… and a lot messier.
So now, at least until we get another bin for them to steal, the trash accumulates out back until trash day comes around. Blessed be the bellboy. I’m afraid to think of all the animals that these bags could attract- flies are the least of my worries.
But, I now have a secret weapon to use against these malignant flies. A small bag of water. That’s it. No chemicals. No insecticides. No potential poisonings. All I have to do is fill a Ziplock bag with water and hang it where the trash bags quickly accumulate.
Apparently, the light that reflects off the surface serves as a great repellent. This may come in handy at your next picnic, barbecue or any other outdoor event. So I thought I’d share.
The separation fence
The remains of a mattress emit
The Nubarashen dump site in Yerevan, with the Mont Ararat on
The Hashmonaim settlement
The country involving aboriginal people
THE BACKGROUND
Talk trash
My city is tossing around the idea of introducing a one bag of garbage per household bylaw. So, every week on garbage pick-up day, put out one bag. One. Un. I'm a fan of this, naturally. I'm all for recycling, composting, green carting, what have you. So I think it's fantastic that this could happen as early as March 2008.
Lots of people, though, aren't nearly as happy as I. They claim they can't possibly reduce down to one bag per week. I've read letters in the paper where large families - with small children in diapers - try hard to divert their waste, but insist they would not be able to stick to the one bag limit. While I do feel for them, I still maintain that it's a possibility that should be given some thought. We're a family of 4. Each week we put out (maybe) one and a half small grocery sized bags of trash. Some weeks we don't put out any. We don't use a bin or a green/black garbage bin, we have no need for that. So, I'm thinking, even a family of say 6 would probably go about a half a large bag or garbage bin. Family of 8? 10? You get the picture. It's doable.
Stolen Painting Found in Manhattan Garbage Sells for $1 Mill
Nov. 21 (Bloomberg) -- A stolen painting found in a pile of Manhattan garbage bin sold for $1 million at Sotheby's in New York yesterday, hitting its top estimate with fees and enriching its rightful owners.
Mexican artist Rufino Tamayo's ``Tres Personajes,'' an abstract 1970 image of three people, was bought by a U.S. collector bidding on the telephone, Sotheby's said in a statement yesterday. The painting was stolen 20 years ago, then dumped on New York's West 72nd Street in 2003 and was found by Upper West Side resident Elizabeth Gibson, who traced its owner.
Paintings with a story often do better than other works. Christie's International this week sold two Tamayos below their top estimates. A third Tamayo, a picture of a guitarist valued at as much as $3 million, was pulled from the Christie's International sale after a court barred Randolph College from selling it. Christie's hopes to sell it later, said spokesman Toby Usnik.
The sellers of ``Tres Personajes'' were a Houston couple who bought the picture at Sotheby's in 1977 for $50,000. The FBI and Houston police failed to trace it after it disappeared from a storage facility in Texas.
The top price for Tamayo, who died in 1991, was set by his 1955 ``America (Mural),'' which took $2.59 million at Christie's in New York in 1993.
Gibson had a $15,000 reward from the owner and an undisclosed fee from Sotheby's, and is writing a book about her adventure.
Secrets of Dog Training Professionals - Operant Conditioning
Secondary Garbage Bin - for those who do compost
introSecondary Garbage Bin - for those who do compost
I started composting last year and I wish to compost everything I can from the kitchen. However, I do not want to walk the composter many times a day and decided I needed a second garbage bin to collect green stuff that's ready for composting.
Here are the characteristics I was looking for:
- Small - not only by lack of room but to make sure I'd be forced to take it outside regurlarly.
- Hidden - fits under the counter, close to the "real" garbage bin.
- Portable - can be moved, either to have it the counter when cooking and having lots of veggie skins or other compostable waste, or to go pour it's content in the "real" composter outside.
- Closed - a lid is a must.
I came up with this simple solution, made out of a plastic box and a few other components.
I made that I while ago so do not have pictures for all intermediate steps, but they are very simple.
Ryuse garbage
Richard wills is guilty
Reduce,reuse,recycle
Recycleable for live
Paul put out to die like 'garbage' cousin tells inquiry
VANCOUVER -- Nine years ago Frank Paul, 45, an aboriginal man and a chronic alcoholic, died drunk, cold and alone in an Downtown Eastside alley where he had been dumped by the driver of a police wagon.
He died of hypothermia, freezing to death behind a detox centre in soaking wet clothes.
On Tuesday a full scale public inquiry into Mr. Paul's death began after years of lobbying by aboriginal groups and others in the Downtown Eastside.
Headed by former B.C. Supreme Court justice William Davies, the inquiry will examine all of the government agencies responsible for what happened to Mr. Paul the night he died and those who subsequently decided not to hold any sort of inquiry into his death.
The underlying themes will be whether ingrained racism played a role in what happened to Mr. Paul and the right of the police to investigate themselves when someone dies in custody.
Aboriginal observers say the results of the inquiry will have profound implications for aboriginals across the country who they say suffer from racism in their dealing with police and other government agencies.
The Paul family were originally told that Mr. Paul had died as the result of a hit and run.
A phone call from the former counsel to the B.C. Police Complaint Commission, Dana Urban, two years later alerted them to what had actually happened.
Paul's cousin Peggy Clement told the inquiry Ms. Urban said Mr. Paul had been dumped in the alley "like the garbage bin being put out for the night."
When the family recovered his body for burial they also received a black garbage bin bag containing Mr. Paul's clothes.
"And they were still wet," Ms. Clement said, weeping.
Pattern of partisanship did not change
More Thoughts On Plastic Trash Bags
Media Bias? Who Cares!
Local briefly: Load of garbage blocks traffic on Highway 99
Leave comments as to how you made out!
Some opponents of the bylaw, while in favour of the reduction of trash worry that people will put their one bag on the curb - and 3 or 4 others in a ditch someplace. I was all "wha'?? People would do that??" Apparently they would. Or, they'd divvy up their trash amongst their neighbours. This I believe, we've had this happen to us before - all of a sudden there are 6 bags of garbage bin on my lawn? Huh? Pisses me off. So there would need to be some policing for sure, I'm really not sure city council has thought this through, but I'm happy there's some buzz about it and some debate happening.
The amount of waste we produce can be reduced. I know a lot of people blame manufacturers for packaging that is wasteful, and I totally get that. But so much of what is sent to landfill has to do with our society's addiction to consumption and overconsumption. Especially at this time of year when we're inundated with ads to buy buy buy! It's all a little sickmaking, and when you multiply our own urge to spend and buy by millions of others? It's almost obscene.
This is why I'm encouraging y'all to participate - or not participate? - in Buy Nothing Day. On Friday, November garbage bin 23rd - the day after US Thanksgiving, and the absolute busiest shopping day of the year in North America - buy nothing. Think you can do it? I'm going to try. If you absolutely have to buy, at least be aware of Buy Nothing Day and be mindful of your purchases. So much of our shopping and buying time is spent zombie-like in malls and shopping centres, so think carefully, know where you're spending your money.
Anyone who decides to take part, please feel free to leave comments as to how you made out!
And yes, I realize I'm talking to maybe two people, but I do like to be optimistic.
KMC searches for place to dump garbage
The constant obstructions in the Sisdole landfill site have compelled the Kathmandu Metropolitan City (KMC) to search for alternative places to dump the garbage.
Soon after a row involving a dispute between local people and YCL cadres – which resulted in obstruction in the landfill site for more than ten days during Tihar festival – had resolved, another dispute has emerged leading to non-collection of garbage bin in the capital city since last five days.
"The state does not pay attention, what can a metropolitan alone do?" asked an exasperated KMC chief executive Dinesh Thapaliya. He told Nepal Samacharpatra daily that the KMC was now looking for alternative place to dump the garbage.
The fresh dispute involves local people of Aathmile area who have blocked the route to dumping site demanding teacher recruitment and other helps.
According to KMC environment section chief Rabin Man Shrestha, even garbage heaps nearby the Prime Minister's Office could not be collected. The meeting among government officials and local people ended up inconclusive on Monday. nepalnews.com sd Nov 27 07
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Drinking with the Garbage Bin
This morning I spotted a woman who was drinking with an old pal of mine: the trash bin.
Garbage bins are great drinking buddies. They always take your crap without complaint, and they never suggest that you might have a problem. They even take the evidence of any such problem out of your hands just as quickly as you can down 500 ml. Which is quick.
She is an otherwise normal looking woman who appears to live in this exclusive part of town. The only item in her hand that's not a homemaking supply is the large sized can of Sapporo.
The legality of drinking in public makes for an interesting dynamic here in Tokyo. Japan is a country in which alcoholism is every bit a spectator sport. When we are too embarrassed to drink in front of our family or friends, we drink in front of everyone else instead, alone with the trash.
Discovered the burned remains after extinguishing the blaze