Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Journey to the Center of the Green Earth

I have been busy cleaning out my apartment.  It was definitely time to purge, so for a while there, there was literally nowhere to sit while I had bags, clothes, and a myriad of other crap lying over every flat surface.


Ironically, I threw very little in the trash and recycling bin.  Most things had another home to go to.


Once I had sorted the good, the bad and the ugly, I loaded up my granny cart (or, as John and I lovingly refer to it, "the cart that paid for itself" since it's saved us on many an occasion) with all sorts of stuff and began my way down the six flights of stairs and around the neighborhood unloading my stuff.


Here is my journey of how I kept things out of the landfill:


1. C-Town.  This was my favorite drop-off. 

I had been collecting our glass milk bottles to re-use for iced tea and impromptu vases. However, I'd collected so many (17 to be exact) that I no longer had room. It was time for them to head off into recycling-ville.


But as I lifted the lid off my recycling can, John shouted, "Wait!"


Apparently, we'd paid a deposit on those bottles and he wanted to return them to the store. 

I argued a bit with him asking if $.05 was worth the trip.

As it turns out, it was one time I was happy to be wrong as the deposit was not $.05 but rather $1.50!  I collected over $25 for my 17 bottles!  I stood in front of the cashier with a look that clearly frightened her. "Are you sure this is right?" I asked.  She assured me it was. 




 I continued happily on my way with "the cart that paid for itself" and made my way to the next stop.


2. Ventura.  Not the boulevard or the city.  The apartment building.  It's where the Wearable Collections box is.


Wearable Collections is a company I discovered in the NYC area that collects old clothes, bags, and shoes. The things that are in good condition are given to people in need. The stuff that is torn, ripped and headed for the landfill is turned into new fibers to make new things. The in-between stuff is made into rags.



 3. Goodwill.  I did have some household items that were ready for a new home.




4. The Animal Shelter.  Here is where I drop off old towels, sheets, and t-shirts. They are used to line the cages of the dogs and cats.  They are always at a shortage for this type of stuff and much appreciate the donation.

5. Aveda.  I was not shopping but rather dropping off all of the bottle caps I had collected. Well over 100 of them!




Since bottle caps can't be recycled, I collect them at home and at work and turn them over to Aveda who turns them into their bottles.  And sometimes, if you get a really nice salesperson, they'll give you a hand massage or a free sample of hand lotion as a thank you!


6. UPS.  My final stop was the UPS Store where I dropped off all those horrendous styrofoam peanuts I'd been saving from packages at work.  Those were the worst since they seem to fly around and get stuck everywhere.  I was happy to unload those.




I returned home and finished my delivery day by posting some stuff on eBay which turned out to be somewhat lucrative this time around!


The entire process probably took less than 45 minutes and was well worth it.  Not only did I keep a lot of things out of the landfill, but others will benefit from it.


So tell me...what can you keep out of the landfill this week?


2 comments:

Claire said...

So great! I absolutely love the Wearable Collections idea!
I've got about 300 bottle caps collected over the years that I've been meaning to turn in to Aveda but have been waaaaaaay too lazy to do. You've given me inspiration!

The Green, The Bad and The Ugly said...

Hooray!!! Get those caps to Aveda!! Go get yourself a hand massage. Haha!