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Refining "Green" trash
My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help
eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind |
Refining "Green" trash
On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Sounds good - but it seems awful small scale - it would need to be much bigger to be truly effective in handling and the economy of scale might not be cost efficient. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Oct 12, 7:52*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports
wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Sounds good - but it seems awful small scale - it would need to be much bigger to be truly effective in handling and the economy of scale might not be cost efficient. I'm not sure, but seeing this is new stuff, there may be plans for larger and many. I dont' think this is the only plant being built. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:57:45 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote: On Oct 12, 7:52*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Sounds good - but it seems awful small scale - it would need to be much bigger to be truly effective in handling and the economy of scale might not be cost efficient. I'm not sure, but seeing this is new stuff, there may be plans for larger and many. I dont' think this is the only plant being built. Yeahbut, did you think Amanda was cute, or what? |
Refining "Green" trash
On Oct 13, 8:06*am, John H wrote:
On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:57:45 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 12, 7:52*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Sounds good - but it seems awful small scale - it would need to be much bigger to be truly effective in handling and the economy of scale might not be cost efficient. I'm not sure, but seeing this is new stuff, there may be plans for larger and many. I dont' think this is the only plant being built. Yeahbut, did you think Amanda was cute, or what?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, she's not a bad looker. But what really got me is that the engineering firm that employs my son is working on the project. He's the tall skinny kid in plaid with the hard hat. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 06:33:56 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote: On Oct 13, 8:06*am, John H wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:57:45 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 12, 7:52*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Sounds good - but it seems awful small scale - it would need to be much bigger to be truly effective in handling and the economy of scale might not be cost efficient. I'm not sure, but seeing this is new stuff, there may be plans for larger and many. I dont' think this is the only plant being built. Yeahbut, did you think Amanda was cute, or what?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, she's not a bad looker. But what really got me is that the engineering firm that employs my son is working on the project. He's the tall skinny kid in plaid with the hard hat. Is your son the tall skinny kid? Hell, I may go back and look at it again. |
Refining "Green" trash
John H wrote:
On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:57:45 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 12, 7:52 pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Sounds good - but it seems awful small scale - it would need to be much bigger to be truly effective in handling and the economy of scale might not be cost efficient. I'm not sure, but seeing this is new stuff, there may be plans for larger and many. I dont' think this is the only plant being built. Yeahbut, did you think Amanda was cute, or what? Wardrobe by men's warehouse. Flat hair and frumpy. Yup. She's hot. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Oct 13, 8:41*am, John H wrote:
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 06:33:56 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 13, 8:06*am, John H wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:57:45 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 12, 7:52*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Sounds good - but it seems awful small scale - it would need to be much bigger to be truly effective in handling and the economy of scale might not be cost efficient. I'm not sure, but seeing this is new stuff, there may be plans for larger and many. I dont' think this is the only plant being built. Yeahbut, did you think Amanda was cute, or what?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, she's not a bad looker. But what really got me is that the engineering firm that employs my son is working on the project. He's the tall skinny kid in plaid with the hard hat. Is your son the tall skinny kid? Hell, I may go back and look at it again.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yep. He's talking with another engineer as well as one of the main investors in the project |
Refining "Green" trash
On 10/13/09 12:30 PM, Gene wrote:
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 12:27:15 -0400, H the K wrote: I hope the fort is doing better than military bases usually do in pollution control. Big local news story: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_Le..._contamination Ayyyup. I recall the problems at the Jax NAS because of PCBs and other lovelies. It was and may still be a superfund site. -- Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger: Idiots All |
Refining "Green" trash
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 08:33:26 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote: On Oct 13, 8:41*am, John H wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 06:33:56 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 13, 8:06*am, John H wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:57:45 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 12, 7:52*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Sounds good - but it seems awful small scale - it would need to be much bigger to be truly effective in handling and the economy of scale might not be cost efficient. I'm not sure, but seeing this is new stuff, there may be plans for larger and many. I dont' think this is the only plant being built. Yeahbut, did you think Amanda was cute, or what?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, she's not a bad looker. But what really got me is that the engineering firm that employs my son is working on the project. He's the tall skinny kid in plaid with the hard hat. Is your son the tall skinny kid? Hell, I may go back and look at it again.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yep. He's talking with another engineer as well as one of the main investors in the project Well damn, why didn't you tell us that right up front? Now I'll have to go watch the whole video again. Oh well, Amanda's worth every minute! OK, I spotted him. What does he do for the company besides take leading roles in their videos? |
Refining "Green" trash
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 12:02:11 -0400, wrote:
On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Ft Myers is burning their trash for electricity. I think that is an excellent use. It is certainly a reliable fuel source. I think they should be burning the paper and plastic "recycle" too. Nobody has even convinced me trucking this stuff 500-1500 miles was good for the environment or economically viable. My neighbor, VP of Raymond Lumber, thought it might be a valuable marketing tool to be able to say those recycled bottles you throw in the blue tubs come back as the Trex he sells and add some gee whiz info about the process.. In that little quest for knowledge he found out we were trucking the plastic to a plant in New York. The paper was being processed in Georgia. I think the sale of water in plastic bottles should be outlawed. If water must be sold, it should be done in glass and returned for a deposit. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Oct 13, 12:08*pm, KotP-A wrote:
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 08:33:26 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 13, 8:41*am, John H wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 06:33:56 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 13, 8:06*am, John H wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:57:45 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 12, 7:52*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Sounds good - but it seems awful small scale - it would need to be much bigger to be truly effective in handling and the economy of scale might not be cost efficient. I'm not sure, but seeing this is new stuff, there may be plans for larger and many. I dont' think this is the only plant being built. Yeahbut, did you think Amanda was cute, or what?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, she's not a bad looker. But what really got me is that the engineering firm that employs my son is working on the project. He's the tall skinny kid in plaid with the hard hat. Is your son the tall skinny kid? Hell, I may go back and look at it again.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yep. He's talking with another engineer as well as one of the main investors in the project Well damn, why didn't you tell us that right up front? Now I'll have to go watch the whole video again. Oh well, Amanda's worth every minute! OK, I spotted him. What does he do for the company besides take leading roles in their videos?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - LOL! I'm really not sure what he does, but I can find out! a "leading role" In the video? I was thinking he actually had only a "cameo" spot. he didn't even know he was in it. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 10:26:53 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote: On Oct 13, 12:08*pm, KotP-A wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 08:33:26 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 13, 8:41*am, John H wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 06:33:56 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 13, 8:06*am, John H wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:57:45 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 12, 7:52*pm, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Sounds good - but it seems awful small scale - it would need to be much bigger to be truly effective in handling and the economy of scale might not be cost efficient. I'm not sure, but seeing this is new stuff, there may be plans for larger and many. I dont' think this is the only plant being built. Yeahbut, did you think Amanda was cute, or what?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, she's not a bad looker. But what really got me is that the engineering firm that employs my son is working on the project. He's the tall skinny kid in plaid with the hard hat. Is your son the tall skinny kid? Hell, I may go back and look at it again.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yep. He's talking with another engineer as well as one of the main investors in the project Well damn, why didn't you tell us that right up front? Now I'll have to go watch the whole video again. Oh well, Amanda's worth every minute! OK, I spotted him. What does he do for the company besides take leading roles in their videos?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - LOL! I'm really not sure what he does, but I can find out! a "leading role" In the video? I was thinking he actually had only a "cameo" spot. he didn't even know he was in it. I was being jocular. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 13:10:15 -0400, KotP-A
wrote: I think the sale of water in plastic bottles should be outlawed. If water must be sold, it should be done in glass and returned for a deposit. Unfortunately glass doesn't travel well and it's heavy. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 16:59:34 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 13:10:15 -0400, KotP-A wrote: I think the sale of water in plastic bottles should be outlawed. If water must be sold, it should be done in glass and returned for a deposit. Unfortunately glass doesn't travel well and it's heavy. We now have a bottle law in CT for ALL drinks served in cans, bottles and plastic bottles. I can't move out of this freakin' state fast enough to suit me. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 16:59:34 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 13:10:15 -0400, KotP-A wrote: I think the sale of water in plastic bottles should be outlawed. If water must be sold, it should be done in glass and returned for a deposit. Unfortunately glass doesn't travel well and it's heavy. Home Depot coolers. |
Refining "Green" trash
|
Refining "Green" trash
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 22:20:21 -0400, wrote:
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 13:10:15 -0400, KotP-A wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 12:02:11 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Ft Myers is burning their trash for electricity. I think that is an excellent use. It is certainly a reliable fuel source. I think they should be burning the paper and plastic "recycle" too. Nobody has even convinced me trucking this stuff 500-1500 miles was good for the environment or economically viable. My neighbor, VP of Raymond Lumber, thought it might be a valuable marketing tool to be able to say those recycled bottles you throw in the blue tubs come back as the Trex he sells and add some gee whiz info about the process.. In that little quest for knowledge he found out we were trucking the plastic to a plant in New York. The paper was being processed in Georgia. I think the sale of water in plastic bottles should be outlawed. If water must be sold, it should be done in glass and returned for a deposit. Why not just burn them in the waste to energy plant? Why? I have rain gear made from recycled plastic bottles - soft, pliable, wears like iron, easy to clean. I also have a pair of sandals, first pair I've ever owned, that are 75% recycled plastic bottles. Same deal. There's a lot you can do with recycled plastics. Do you know how much energy it takes to ship glass? Dunno - but I'll be it's about the same as it is to make new glass. There is also the hazard broken glass poses in the whole retail to recycle chain. Huh? We got away from glass bottles for a reason. True enough I suppose, but glass is 100% recyclable. Side note: Why does the word recyclable look misspelled? :) |
Refining "Green" trash
On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 02:30:32 -0400, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote:
such things as dead skin cells, I just know you want to hear this. ;-) It's not only mattresses, but 75% of household dust, is dead skin cells. http://www.boston.com/news/science/articles/2008/09/01/ does_the_dust_in_my_house_really_include_my_own_sk in/ |
Refining "Green" trash
On Oct 14, 1:30*am, Tom Francis - SWSports
wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 22:16:14 -0400, wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 12:27:15 -0400, H the K wrote: Ft Myers is burning their trash for electricity. I think that is an excellent use. It is certainly a reliable fuel source. I think they should be burning the paper and plastic "recycle" too. Nobody has even convinced me trucking this stuff 500-1500 miles was good for the environment or economically viable. My neighbor, VP of Raymond Lumber, thought it might be a valuable marketing tool to be able to say those recycled bottles you throw in the blue tubs come back as the Trex he sells and add some gee whiz info about the process.. In that little quest for knowledge he found out we were trucking the plastic to a plant in New York. The paper was being processed in Georgia. I hope the fort is doing better than military bases usually do in pollution control. This fort has not been a military base since the war of northern aggression. Hey it is (Robert E) Lee County. *;-) The waste to energy incinerator has been blessed by the environmentalists as being as clean as the new gas powered plant. (both a whole lot better than the bunker oil plant they displaced.) The trash plant doesn't even contribute to the thermal water pollution that makes the Caloosahatchee River a manatee hangout. Speaking of recycling, the new "Dirty Jobs" episode (last week's) had an interesting one on mattress recycling. Among the interesting facts - almost all of the mattress and/or box springs are 100% recyled into other stuff including the fabric. Best fact of all - the overall weight of a mattress increases by about 10% over the years with the addition of such things as dead skin cells, residue from various fluids and atmospheric dust. Various fluids? |
Refining "Green" trash
On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 06:04:46 -0500, thunder
wrote: On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 02:30:32 -0400, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: such things as dead skin cells, I just know you want to hear this. ;-) It's not only mattresses, but 75% of household dust, is dead skin cells. COOL!!! One of my old hunting buddies is a forensic scientist who studied under Dr. Lee. Some of the stuff they find in houses, bedrooms and stuff like that is amazing. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 04:22:02 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote: On Oct 14, 1:30*am, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 22:16:14 -0400, wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 12:27:15 -0400, H the K wrote: Ft Myers is burning their trash for electricity. I think that is an excellent use. It is certainly a reliable fuel source. I think they should be burning the paper and plastic "recycle" too. Nobody has even convinced me trucking this stuff 500-1500 miles was good for the environment or economically viable. My neighbor, VP of Raymond Lumber, thought it might be a valuable marketing tool to be able to say those recycled bottles you throw in the blue tubs come back as the Trex he sells and add some gee whiz info about the process.. In that little quest for knowledge he found out we were trucking the plastic to a plant in New York. The paper was being processed in Georgia. I hope the fort is doing better than military bases usually do in pollution control. This fort has not been a military base since the war of northern aggression. Hey it is (Robert E) Lee County. *;-) The waste to energy incinerator has been blessed by the environmentalists as being as clean as the new gas powered plant. (both a whole lot better than the bunker oil plant they displaced.) The trash plant doesn't even contribute to the thermal water pollution that makes the Caloosahatchee River a manatee hangout. Speaking of recycling, the new "Dirty Jobs" episode (last week's) had an interesting one on mattress recycling. Among the interesting facts - almost all of the mattress and/or box springs are 100% recyled into other stuff including the fabric. Best fact of all - the overall weight of a mattress increases by about 10% over the years with the addition of such things as dead skin cells, residue from various fluids and atmospheric dust. Various fluids? He didn't ask and I don't want to know. :) |
Refining "Green" trash
On Oct 14, 7:10*am, Tom Francis - SWSports
wrote: On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 04:22:02 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 14, 1:30*am, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 22:16:14 -0400, wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 12:27:15 -0400, H the K wrote: Ft Myers is burning their trash for electricity. I think that is an excellent use. It is certainly a reliable fuel source. I think they should be burning the paper and plastic "recycle" too.. Nobody has even convinced me trucking this stuff 500-1500 miles was good for the environment or economically viable. My neighbor, VP of Raymond Lumber, thought it might be a valuable marketing tool to be able to say those recycled bottles you throw in the blue tubs come back as the Trex he sells and add some gee whiz info about the process.. In that little quest for knowledge he found out we were trucking the plastic to a plant in New York. The paper was being processed in Georgia. I hope the fort is doing better than military bases usually do in pollution control. This fort has not been a military base since the war of northern aggression. Hey it is (Robert E) Lee County. *;-) The waste to energy incinerator has been blessed by the environmentalists as being as clean as the new gas powered plant. (both a whole lot better than the bunker oil plant they displaced.) The trash plant doesn't even contribute to the thermal water pollution that makes the Caloosahatchee River a manatee hangout. Speaking of recycling, the new "Dirty Jobs" episode (last week's) had an interesting one on mattress recycling. Among the interesting facts - almost all of the mattress and/or box springs are 100% recyled into other stuff including the fabric. Best fact of all - the overall weight of a mattress increases by about 10% over the years with the addition of such things as dead skin cells, residue from various fluids and atmospheric dust. Various fluids? He didn't ask and I don't want to know. *:) 'r-r-rroger" |
Refining "Green" trash
On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 06:04:46 -0500, thunder
wrote: On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 02:30:32 -0400, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: such things as dead skin cells, I just know you want to hear this. ;-) It's not only mattresses, but 75% of household dust, is dead skin cells. http://www.boston.com/news/science/articles/2008/09/01/ does_the_dust_in_my_house_really_include_my_own_s kin/ Some "science" ain't too good. That piece of "science" is plain laughable. The 75% part you mentioned. Couldn't get at the article. Everything in a house is decomposing. Anybody who ever found an unoccupied closed room all dusty knows better than that. --Vic |
Refining "Green" trash
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 22:20:21 -0400, wrote:
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 13:10:15 -0400, KotP-A wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 12:02:11 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Ft Myers is burning their trash for electricity. I think that is an excellent use. It is certainly a reliable fuel source. I think they should be burning the paper and plastic "recycle" too. Nobody has even convinced me trucking this stuff 500-1500 miles was good for the environment or economically viable. My neighbor, VP of Raymond Lumber, thought it might be a valuable marketing tool to be able to say those recycled bottles you throw in the blue tubs come back as the Trex he sells and add some gee whiz info about the process.. In that little quest for knowledge he found out we were trucking the plastic to a plant in New York. The paper was being processed in Georgia. I think the sale of water in plastic bottles should be outlawed. If water must be sold, it should be done in glass and returned for a deposit. Why not just burn them in the waste to energy plant? Do you know how much energy it takes to ship glass? There is also the hazard broken glass poses in the whole retail to recycle chain. We got away from glass bottles for a reason. OK, OK. Require a deposit for all plastic bottles. That way most will get returned and recycled. Hopefully fewer will end up in the dump or Chesapeake Bay. |
Refining "Green" trash
|
Refining "Green" trash
On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 15:38:27 -0400, wrote:
On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 14:33:09 -0400, KotP-A wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 22:20:21 -0400, wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 13:10:15 -0400, KotP-A wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 12:02:11 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Ft Myers is burning their trash for electricity. I think that is an excellent use. It is certainly a reliable fuel source. I think they should be burning the paper and plastic "recycle" too. Nobody has even convinced me trucking this stuff 500-1500 miles was good for the environment or economically viable. My neighbor, VP of Raymond Lumber, thought it might be a valuable marketing tool to be able to say those recycled bottles you throw in the blue tubs come back as the Trex he sells and add some gee whiz info about the process.. In that little quest for knowledge he found out we were trucking the plastic to a plant in New York. The paper was being processed in Georgia. I think the sale of water in plastic bottles should be outlawed. If water must be sold, it should be done in glass and returned for a deposit. Why not just burn them in the waste to energy plant? Do you know how much energy it takes to ship glass? There is also the hazard broken glass poses in the whole retail to recycle chain. We got away from glass bottles for a reason. OK, OK. Require a deposit for all plastic bottles. That way most will get returned and recycled. Hopefully fewer will end up in the dump or Chesapeake Bay. You missed the point, these things get burned here, not put in the dump. Deposits are just a tax. It may be a handy way to employ unskilled labor in a make work job but that is the only redeeming thing. They could be burnt after being returned to the store. The stores would just be centralized collection points. I'll bet a lot fewer empties would be in the ditches, on the golf courses, or floating in the bay. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 22:57:58 -0400, wrote:
On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 16:00:10 -0400, KotP-A wrote: On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 15:38:27 -0400, wrote: On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 14:33:09 -0400, KotP-A wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 22:20:21 -0400, wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 13:10:15 -0400, KotP-A wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 12:02:11 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Ft Myers is burning their trash for electricity. I think that is an excellent use. It is certainly a reliable fuel source. I think they should be burning the paper and plastic "recycle" too. Nobody has even convinced me trucking this stuff 500-1500 miles was good for the environment or economically viable. My neighbor, VP of Raymond Lumber, thought it might be a valuable marketing tool to be able to say those recycled bottles you throw in the blue tubs come back as the Trex he sells and add some gee whiz info about the process.. In that little quest for knowledge he found out we were trucking the plastic to a plant in New York. The paper was being processed in Georgia. I think the sale of water in plastic bottles should be outlawed. If water must be sold, it should be done in glass and returned for a deposit. Why not just burn them in the waste to energy plant? Do you know how much energy it takes to ship glass? There is also the hazard broken glass poses in the whole retail to recycle chain. We got away from glass bottles for a reason. OK, OK. Require a deposit for all plastic bottles. That way most will get returned and recycled. Hopefully fewer will end up in the dump or Chesapeake Bay. You missed the point, these things get burned here, not put in the dump. Deposits are just a tax. It may be a handy way to employ unskilled labor in a make work job but that is the only redeeming thing. They could be burnt after being returned to the store. The stores would just be centralized collection points. I'll bet a lot fewer empties would be in the ditches, on the golf courses, or floating in the bay. I suppose that might make a lot of sense if you live in a place where they have a huge litter problem but I bet it would be cheaper in the long run to pay people to pick up the trash. I know you think that is "free" in a place with a deposit law but I would compare the cost of product before the deposit is added and show you where you are paying. To start with, most places where this happens pay the merchant 2 cents a bottle or so, just for handling them. That money comes from you somewhere. You missed the point. The deposit should be steep enough that people want to bring them back - or, better yet, not buy them at all. Then the energy used to make the damn things could be saved. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Oct 15, 10:59*am, John H. wrote:
On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 22:57:58 -0400, wrote: On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 16:00:10 -0400, KotP-A wrote: On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 15:38:27 -0400, wrote: On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 14:33:09 -0400, KotP-A wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 22:20:21 -0400, wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 13:10:15 -0400, KotP-A wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 12:02:11 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Ft Myers is burning their trash for electricity. I think that is an excellent use. It is certainly a reliable fuel source. I think they should be burning the paper and plastic "recycle" too.. Nobody has even convinced me trucking this stuff 500-1500 miles was good for the environment or economically viable. My neighbor, VP of Raymond Lumber, thought it might be a valuable marketing tool to be able to say those recycled bottles you throw in the blue tubs come back as the Trex he sells and add some gee whiz info about the process.. In that little quest for knowledge he found out we were trucking the plastic to a plant in New York. The paper was being processed in Georgia. I think the sale of water in plastic bottles should be outlawed. If water must be sold, it should be done in glass and returned for a deposit. Why not just burn them in the waste to energy plant? Do you know how much energy it takes to ship glass? There is also the hazard broken glass poses in the whole retail to recycle chain. We got away from glass bottles for a reason. OK, OK. Require a deposit for all plastic bottles. That way most will get returned and recycled. Hopefully fewer will end up in the dump or Chesapeake Bay. You missed the point, these things get burned here, not put in the dump. Deposits are just a tax. It may be a handy way to employ unskilled labor in a make work job but that is the only redeeming thing. They could be burnt after being returned to the store. The stores would just be centralized collection points. I'll bet a lot fewer empties would be in the ditches, on the golf courses, or floating in the bay. I suppose that might make a lot of sense if you live in a place where they have a huge litter problem but I bet it would be cheaper in the long run to pay people to pick up the trash. I know you think that is "free" in a place with a deposit law but I would compare the cost of product before the deposit is added and show you where you are paying. To start with, most places where this happens pay the merchant 2 cents a bottle or so, just for handling them. That money comes from you somewhere. You missed the point. The deposit should be steep enough that people want to bring them back - or, better yet, not buy them at all. Then the energy used to make the damn things could be saved.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - make it high enough and people will be importing them in from out of state. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 09:03:49 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote: On Oct 15, 10:59*am, John H. wrote: On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 22:57:58 -0400, wrote: On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 16:00:10 -0400, KotP-A wrote: On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 15:38:27 -0400, wrote: On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 14:33:09 -0400, KotP-A wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 22:20:21 -0400, wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 13:10:15 -0400, KotP-A wrote: On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 12:02:11 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 17:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: My son sent me this. I think it would be an excellent way to help eliminate land fills and pollution by efficiently turning crap into "clean" carbon for various uses. http://www.mantria.com/mantria_industries.shtml click below the vid. I kept hitting the arrow on the screen and nothing happened. then I clicked below it where it says "Click here....." Oh, never mind Ft Myers is burning their trash for electricity. I think that is an excellent use. It is certainly a reliable fuel source. I think they should be burning the paper and plastic "recycle" too. Nobody has even convinced me trucking this stuff 500-1500 miles was good for the environment or economically viable. My neighbor, VP of Raymond Lumber, thought it might be a valuable marketing tool to be able to say those recycled bottles you throw in the blue tubs come back as the Trex he sells and add some gee whiz info about the process.. In that little quest for knowledge he found out we were trucking the plastic to a plant in New York. The paper was being processed in Georgia. I think the sale of water in plastic bottles should be outlawed. If water must be sold, it should be done in glass and returned for a deposit. Why not just burn them in the waste to energy plant? Do you know how much energy it takes to ship glass? There is also the hazard broken glass poses in the whole retail to recycle chain. We got away from glass bottles for a reason. OK, OK. Require a deposit for all plastic bottles. That way most will get returned and recycled. Hopefully fewer will end up in the dump or Chesapeake Bay. You missed the point, these things get burned here, not put in the dump. Deposits are just a tax. It may be a handy way to employ unskilled labor in a make work job but that is the only redeeming thing. They could be burnt after being returned to the store. The stores would just be centralized collection points. I'll bet a lot fewer empties would be in the ditches, on the golf courses, or floating in the bay. I suppose that might make a lot of sense if you live in a place where they have a huge litter problem but I bet it would be cheaper in the long run to pay people to pick up the trash. I know you think that is "free" in a place with a deposit law but I would compare the cost of product before the deposit is added and show you where you are paying. To start with, most places where this happens pay the merchant 2 cents a bottle or so, just for handling them. That money comes from you somewhere. You missed the point. The deposit should be steep enough that people want to bring them back - or, better yet, not buy them at all. Then the energy used to make the damn things could be saved.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - make it high enough and people will be importing them in from out of state. Make it high everywhere! |
Refining "Green" trash
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Refining "Green" trash
On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 16:53:49 -0400, wrote:
On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 13:41:51 -0400, John H. wrote: On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 13:03:42 -0400, wrote: On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 11:59:39 -0400, John H. wrote: You missed the point, these things get burned here, not put in the dump. Deposits are just a tax. It may be a handy way to employ unskilled labor in a make work job but that is the only redeeming thing. They could be burnt after being returned to the store. The stores would just be centralized collection points. I'll bet a lot fewer empties would be in the ditches, on the golf courses, or floating in the bay. I suppose that might make a lot of sense if you live in a place where they have a huge litter problem but I bet it would be cheaper in the long run to pay people to pick up the trash. I know you think that is "free" in a place with a deposit law but I would compare the cost of product before the deposit is added and show you where you are paying. To start with, most places where this happens pay the merchant 2 cents a bottle or so, just for handling them. That money comes from you somewhere. You missed the point. The deposit should be steep enough that people want to bring them back - or, better yet, not buy them at all. Then the energy used to make the damn things could be saved. So you don't care if everything delivered in a bottle got a 5-10% price increase or that the price increase got spread out across the whole grocery store inventory? Even if the deposit was a one for one swap with no real cost (fantasy), there is still a handling charge on the empties. They stopped using deposit bottles for a reason., It is very expensive and uses almost fuel to return them as it does to deliver the product in the first place. If you simply burn the plastic bottles to produce electricity it is simply a one way fuel delivery charge with the use as a container as a bonus. Soda and water bottles only. That's where most of the trash is. My plastic bottles are being picked up now, and transported, and sorted and on and on. The store could have a dumpster for empty water and soda bottles. One pickup, then burn 'em. No handling charge, no sorting. 5-10% sounds good. Or more. People would get their money back when they returned the plastic bottles. Wouldn't bother me a bit. The places that have deposits pay 2 or 3 cents apiece to the retailer for handling the bottle. It is still not enough to pay for handling them. That money comes from the consumer. I am pretty surprised that a small government conservative like you wants this government boondoggle. Finished? Good. |
Refining "Green" trash
wrote in message ... On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 11:59:39 -0400, John H. wrote: You missed the point, these things get burned here, not put in the dump. Deposits are just a tax. It may be a handy way to employ unskilled labor in a make work job but that is the only redeeming thing. They could be burnt after being returned to the store. The stores would just be centralized collection points. I'll bet a lot fewer empties would be in the ditches, on the golf courses, or floating in the bay. I suppose that might make a lot of sense if you live in a place where they have a huge litter problem but I bet it would be cheaper in the long run to pay people to pick up the trash. I know you think that is "free" in a place with a deposit law but I would compare the cost of product before the deposit is added and show you where you are paying. To start with, most places where this happens pay the merchant 2 cents a bottle or so, just for handling them. That money comes from you somewhere. You missed the point. The deposit should be steep enough that people want to bring them back - or, better yet, not buy them at all. Then the energy used to make the damn things could be saved. So you don't care if everything delivered in a bottle got a 5-10% price increase or that the price increase got spread out across the whole grocery store inventory? Even if the deposit was a one for one swap with no real cost (fantasy), there is still a handling charge on the empties. They stopped using deposit bottles for a reason., It is very expensive and uses almost fuel to return them as it does to deliver the product in the first place. If you simply burn the plastic bottles to produce electricity it is simply a one way fuel delivery charge with the use as a container as a bonus. Up here...ten cents deposit on every bottle, can or carton...including milk. If you haul them back to the recycle depot, you get a nickel for each bottle/carton. Most people don't bother and just put the empties out in a 'blue bag'. This had caused an army of characters to roam around all garbage night digging in those blue bags for their treasure. They carry half a dozen full leaf type bags on their 'borrowed' grocery store carts to cash in. This has been going on for years . |
Refining "Green" trash
Don White wrote:
wrote in message ... On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 11:59:39 -0400, John H. wrote: You missed the point, these things get burned here, not put in the dump. Deposits are just a tax. It may be a handy way to employ unskilled labor in a make work job but that is the only redeeming thing. They could be burnt after being returned to the store. The stores would just be centralized collection points. I'll bet a lot fewer empties would be in the ditches, on the golf courses, or floating in the bay. I suppose that might make a lot of sense if you live in a place where they have a huge litter problem but I bet it would be cheaper in the long run to pay people to pick up the trash. I know you think that is "free" in a place with a deposit law but I would compare the cost of product before the deposit is added and show you where you are paying. To start with, most places where this happens pay the merchant 2 cents a bottle or so, just for handling them. That money comes from you somewhere. You missed the point. The deposit should be steep enough that people want to bring them back - or, better yet, not buy them at all. Then the energy used to make the damn things could be saved. So you don't care if everything delivered in a bottle got a 5-10% price increase or that the price increase got spread out across the whole grocery store inventory? Even if the deposit was a one for one swap with no real cost (fantasy), there is still a handling charge on the empties. They stopped using deposit bottles for a reason., It is very expensive and uses almost fuel to return them as it does to deliver the product in the first place. If you simply burn the plastic bottles to produce electricity it is simply a one way fuel delivery charge with the use as a container as a bonus. Up here...ten cents deposit on every bottle, can or carton...including milk. If you haul them back to the recycle depot, you get a nickel for each bottle/carton. Most people don't bother and just put the empties out in a 'blue bag'. This had caused an army of characters to roam around all garbage night digging in those blue bags for their treasure. They carry half a dozen full leaf type bags on their 'borrowed' grocery store carts to cash in. This has been going on for years . Good system, eh? The Obama administration will be all over that and it might be Moore's next documentary! |
Refining "Green" trash
"John H." wrote in message ... On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 19:00:53 -0300, "Don White" wrote: wrote in message . .. On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 11:59:39 -0400, John H. wrote: You missed the point, these things get burned here, not put in the dump. Deposits are just a tax. It may be a handy way to employ unskilled labor in a make work job but that is the only redeeming thing. They could be burnt after being returned to the store. The stores would just be centralized collection points. I'll bet a lot fewer empties would be in the ditches, on the golf courses, or floating in the bay. I suppose that might make a lot of sense if you live in a place where they have a huge litter problem but I bet it would be cheaper in the long run to pay people to pick up the trash. I know you think that is "free" in a place with a deposit law but I would compare the cost of product before the deposit is added and show you where you are paying. To start with, most places where this happens pay the merchant 2 cents a bottle or so, just for handling them. That money comes from you somewhere. You missed the point. The deposit should be steep enough that people want to bring them back - or, better yet, not buy them at all. Then the energy used to make the damn things could be saved. So you don't care if everything delivered in a bottle got a 5-10% price increase or that the price increase got spread out across the whole grocery store inventory? Even if the deposit was a one for one swap with no real cost (fantasy), there is still a handling charge on the empties. They stopped using deposit bottles for a reason., It is very expensive and uses almost fuel to return them as it does to deliver the product in the first place. If you simply burn the plastic bottles to produce electricity it is simply a one way fuel delivery charge with the use as a container as a bonus. Up here...ten cents deposit on every bottle, can or carton...including milk. If you haul them back to the recycle depot, you get a nickel for each bottle/carton. Most people don't bother and just put the empties out in a 'blue bag'. This had caused an army of characters to roam around all garbage night digging in those blue bags for their treasure. They carry half a dozen full leaf type bags on their 'borrowed' grocery store carts to cash in. This has been going on for years . What do the stores do with the bottles that are returned? They don't go back to the stores anymore. You have to take them to an official recycling depot. They are then put in hugh containers and shipped out to be melted down and the material re-used. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Oct 15, 6:00*pm, "Don White" wrote:
wrote in message ... On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 11:59:39 -0400, John H. wrote: You missed the point, these things get burned here, not put in the dump. Deposits are just a tax. It may be a handy way to employ unskilled labor in a make work job but that is the only redeeming thing. They could be burnt after being returned to the store. The stores would just be centralized collection points. I'll bet a lot fewer empties would be in the ditches, on the golf courses, or floating in the bay. I suppose that might make a lot of sense if you live in a place where they have a huge litter problem but I bet it would be cheaper in the long run to pay people to pick up the trash. I know you think that is "free" in a place with a deposit law but I would compare the cost of product before the deposit is added and show you where you are paying. To start with, most places where this happens pay the merchant 2 cents a bottle or so, just for handling them. That money comes from you somewhere. You missed the point. The deposit should be steep enough that people want to bring them back - or, better yet, not buy them at all. Then the energy used to make the damn things could be saved. So you don't care if everything delivered in a bottle got a 5-10% price increase or that the price increase got spread out across the whole grocery store inventory? Even if the deposit was a one for one swap with no real cost (fantasy), there is still a handling charge on the empties. They stopped using deposit bottles for a reason., It is very expensive and uses almost fuel to return them as it does to deliver the product in the first place. If you simply burn the plastic bottles to produce electricity it is simply a one way fuel delivery charge with the use as a container as a bonus. Up here...ten cents deposit on every bottle, can or carton...including milk. If you haul them back to the recycle depot, you get a nickel for each bottle/carton. Most people don't bother and just put the empties out in a 'blue bag'. *This had caused an army of characters to roam around all garbage night digging in those blue bags for their treasure. They carry half a dozen full leaf type bags on their 'borrowed' grocery store carts to cash in. This has been going on for years .- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - How do you think the FAGGOT SCOTTY INGERSOLL finances his junk boats?????? Obviously, the money aint going in to that ****house he lives in........ The poor Wife. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Oct 15, 7:37*pm, John H. wrote:
On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 19:00:53 -0300, "Don White" wrote: wrote in message .. . On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 11:59:39 -0400, John H. wrote: You missed the point, these things get burned here, not put in the dump. Deposits are just a tax. It may be a handy way to employ unskilled labor in a make work job but that is the only redeeming thing. They could be burnt after being returned to the store. The stores would just be centralized collection points. I'll bet a lot fewer empties would be in the ditches, on the golf courses, or floating in the bay. I suppose that might make a lot of sense if you live in a place where they have a huge litter problem but I bet it would be cheaper in the long run to pay people to pick up the trash. I know you think that is "free" in a place with a deposit law but I would compare the cost of product before the deposit is added and show you where you are paying.. To start with, most places where this happens pay the merchant 2 cents a bottle or so, just for handling them. That money comes from you somewhere. You missed the point. The deposit should be steep enough that people want to bring them back - or, better yet, not buy them at all. Then the energy used to make the damn things could be saved. So you don't care if everything delivered in a bottle got a 5-10% price increase or that the price increase got spread out across the whole grocery store inventory? Even if the deposit was a one for one swap with no real cost (fantasy), there is still a handling charge on the empties. They stopped using deposit bottles for a reason., It is very expensive and uses almost fuel to return them as it does to deliver the product in the first place. If you simply burn the plastic bottles to produce electricity it is simply a one way fuel delivery charge with the use as a container as a bonus. Up here...ten cents deposit on every bottle, can or carton...including milk. If you haul them back to the recycle depot, you get a nickel for each bottle/carton. Most people don't bother and just put the empties out in a 'blue bag'. *This had caused an army of characters to roam around all garbage night digging in those blue bags for their treasure. They carry half a dozen full leaf type bags on their 'borrowed' grocery store carts to cash in. This has been going on for years . What do the stores do with the bottles that are returned?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - A typical "stupid Herring " response. Shows complete ignorance. Herrings head is up his ass, AGAIN. |
Refining "Green" trash
Don White wrote:
"John H." wrote in message ... On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 19:00:53 -0300, "Don White" wrote: wrote in message ... On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 11:59:39 -0400, John H. wrote: You missed the point, these things get burned here, not put in the dump. Deposits are just a tax. It may be a handy way to employ unskilled labor in a make work job but that is the only redeeming thing. They could be burnt after being returned to the store. The stores would just be centralized collection points. I'll bet a lot fewer empties would be in the ditches, on the golf courses, or floating in the bay. I suppose that might make a lot of sense if you live in a place where they have a huge litter problem but I bet it would be cheaper in the long run to pay people to pick up the trash. I know you think that is "free" in a place with a deposit law but I would compare the cost of product before the deposit is added and show you where you are paying. To start with, most places where this happens pay the merchant 2 cents a bottle or so, just for handling them. That money comes from you somewhere. You missed the point. The deposit should be steep enough that people want to bring them back - or, better yet, not buy them at all. Then the energy used to make the damn things could be saved. So you don't care if everything delivered in a bottle got a 5-10% price increase or that the price increase got spread out across the whole grocery store inventory? Even if the deposit was a one for one swap with no real cost (fantasy), there is still a handling charge on the empties. They stopped using deposit bottles for a reason., It is very expensive and uses almost fuel to return them as it does to deliver the product in the first place. If you simply burn the plastic bottles to produce electricity it is simply a one way fuel delivery charge with the use as a container as a bonus. Up here...ten cents deposit on every bottle, can or carton...including milk. If you haul them back to the recycle depot, you get a nickel for each bottle/carton. Most people don't bother and just put the empties out in a 'blue bag'. This had caused an army of characters to roam around all garbage night digging in those blue bags for their treasure. They carry half a dozen full leaf type bags on their 'borrowed' grocery store carts to cash in. This has been going on for years . What do the stores do with the bottles that are returned? They don't go back to the stores anymore. You have to take them to an official recycling depot. They are then put in hugh containers and shipped out to be melted down and the material re-used. Can you post a pic of a "hugh container", dummy? I've never heard of one here in the states. |
Refining "Green" trash
On Fri, 16 Oct 2009 22:55:46 -0400, wrote:
Can you post a pic of a "hugh container", dummy? I've never heard of one here in the states. At first there was the Dempster Dumpster but now there are just dumpsters. Guy named Hugh came up with the idea of containerized shipping, but he is as forgotten as Dempster. Casady |
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