September 10, 2006

redandblack.com - Reduce waste, swap your stuff

Filed under: US Southern — ScottUSnews @ 8:57 am

redandblack.com - Reduce waste, swap your stuff

Students looking to toss their old clothing and appliances no longer have to reach for the trash can — they can trade it online.

The Athens Georgia Freecycle group, a local online chapter of the Yahoo group Freecycle.org., aims to reduce the amount of trash in landfills by allowing members to swap what they might normally throw away.

By ALEXIS GARROBO
redandblack.com

Click Here To Visit redandblack.com and read the whole article.

September 9, 2006

Hampstead and Highgate Express - Office days are well behind Judith as she seeks out Victorian truths

Filed under: UK — Em @ 6:07 pm

Hampstead and Highgate Express - Office days are well behind Judith as she seeks out Victorian truths
“I can’t stand clutter,” she says. “If I have finished with it I give it away, usually through www.freecycle org.

“Anyway it is a myth that Victorians, particularly the early ones, had houses crammed with stuff. They owned very little, that’s why the middle-class Victorian houses are small with little storage space. They had nothing to put in them.”

September 8, 2006

Join In Our Recycling (from This Is Essex)

Filed under: UK — Em @ 11:02 am

Join In Our Recycling (from This Is Essex)

Join in our recycling!
By Frazer Clark

OFFERING UNWANTED GOODS: Jules Greaves and son Jack, eight Picture: Maxine Clarke T7GDH7

A South Ockendon mother has set up a free internet service to try and reduce the amount of rubbish created in Thurrock.

Jules Greaves, of Annifer Way, moved to the borough from Blackpool. She formed a “Freecycle” group after being shocked at what people threw away.

Her group, based in South Ockendon, already boasts more than 260 members. Each can list items they no longer want on the group website, in the hope these can go to a home elsewhere in Thurrock.

“The idea is a simple one, it’s totally free and it’s for people who want others to have their unwanted goods rather than see them end up on the tip,” Jules explained.
continued…

“It’s criminal that perfectly usable furniture, electrical goods, bikes and other stuff ends up in the tip rather than with somebody who could use it. This is a gifting site. This is about having a choice over the unwanted stuff that clutters up your home or shed.

“When I looked around, the nearest Freecycle group was in Basildon, but there didn’t seem to be one for Thurrock - so I started one. You have to register, but it’s free. No money changes hands.”

Jules, 34, believes the service will benefit not only her generation, but children like her own sons, Ryan, 15, who attends Ockendon School and Jack Greaves, eight, who goes to Bonnygate. So she is hoping the scheme can become better-known around the borough.

“It is a concept that I think should be in every town,” she said. “Our members are honest and do say if there’s something wrong with what they’re offering.

“People have signed up from Grays, South Ockendon, Chadwell, and Corringham. Thurrock Council has even added a link to us from their recycling web pages.”

For information on getting involved, call Jules on 01708 402401 or visit www.freecycle.org and click through to Essex groups.

September 7, 2006

NOW Magazine - Newsfront in Toronto, SEPTEMBER 7 - 13, 2006

Filed under: Canada — Em @ 5:19 am

NOW Magazine - Newsfront in Toronto, SEPTEMBER 7 - 13, 2006

9 Give a hoot. Please reuse. Websites like CraigsList, Freecycle and Kijiji are awesome for helping us unload unwanted couches, cowboy boots or drill bits and are full of great scores for relic hunters. The province should be pushing the concept to every household in Ontario and setting up a formal network for swapping.

September 5, 2006

Scotsman.com Living - Freecycle is great accordion to Emma

Filed under: UK — Em @ 1:04 pm

Scotsman.com Living - Freecycle is great accordion to Emma
Freecycle is great accordion to Emma
JULIA HORTON (jhorton@edinburghnews.com)

THERE was a time when recycling meant handing your unwanted clothes, books and household goods to jumble collectors, then buying someone else’s junk in return come the day of the sale, or calling Noel Edmonds on a Saturday morning and swapping your roller boots for a Monopoly game.

Then came the advent of mass car boot sales where people truly discovered that one man’s rubbish is another’s riches.

But these days, thanks to the advance of the green movement, the apparent falling-out-of-fashion of jumbles and the red and blue boxes supplied by the city council, recycling for an increasing number in Edinburgh is becoming a way of life.

And for them everything AND the kitchen sink can be recycled, from £2 off vouchers for film developing to beds, cars, TVs, bags of sand and even hay fever tablets.

These recycling fanatics are part of Freecycle, a kind of grassroots recycling online community who aim to save the planet by allowing people to pass on things that they no longer want to someone else who does want them, thus stopping goods from being dumped in landfill.

The range of belongings which are offered is so vast that people can and do furnish their entire homes through freecycling. And then there are the requests - such as one from a man desperate to find a pair of size 11 or 12 smart shoes for an imminent job interview.

Like many freecyclers, Emma Boyce 22, and boyfriend Craig Thomson, 28 of Morrison Circus in the West End turned to Edinburgh Freecycle to help them shift excess baggage when they moved house. Emma, a customer adviser at Scottish Water, is now a serial freecycler.

She says: “We moved from a three bedroom house to a one bed flat and we had lots of stuff like furniture which we couldn’t fit in which we gave away on the site. I recently gave away my computer, which wasn’t worth anything to me, to a family who didn’t have one. That made me feel good. I tend to give things to the people who sound like they need them the most.

“Craig is more into the environmental side of it, keeping things out of landfill, so he just gives things to whoever.”

She adds: “But we have got a TV and a DVD player through it. I’ve got some random things too, like a piano accordion. It’s worth about £750 and I don’t know why the man wanted to get rid of it but he gave it to me after I e-mailed and told him that I’m very musical and was really interested in learning to play it.

“I’m having lessons now and can play at least seven songs. I also posted a message asking for tap shoes and I now have some which I’m learning to dance in.”

In desperation recently she even posted a plea for hay fever medicine. She says: “It was evening and the chemists were all shut so I thought I’d give Freecycle a go. Someone replied that night. It’s amazing to think that if you need something like that people will give it to you. There’s a real community spirit.”

To become a freecycler, people have to register with the online site and give a basic outline of what they have available or need.

Some offers like “Free Small Car Nr Penicuik” sound too good to be true. And owner Emma Rawling admits that her Peugeot hatchback needed a new engine. But she is delighted that it has been taken by a mechanic who is doing it up for his wife.

Emma, 34, a wildlife conservation student living in Glencorse, near Penicuik, says: “I could not afford to repair my car myself so I am really pleased that it is going to be used by someone. It went really quickly too, it was all done within a few days. It’s such an easy way to get rid of something.

“I’m not a freecycle junkie but I’ve always been a bit of a fanatical recycler and I heard about freecycle through friends.”

Even the most unlikely items are snapped up, as Julie Dawson discovered when she offered a supply of used jiffy bags which she acquired through her addiction to eBay.

The 30-year-old children’s art teacher and textiles designer of Leith Walk, says: “I have had about a dozen responses. I don’t know why people want them but I’m delighted that they can go to some use.

“It’s incredible the things which people want. I started using the site at the start of the year and I remember seeing a posting offering three Lucozade bottles, and they went.”

Although the site urges users to be aware of the possible risk of meeting strangers in private, Julie says that most freecyclers prefer to have things picked up from their home, which she says works well. She does have one complaint which other freecyclers share, however.

“A lot of people are unreliable. They say they want something and then you never hear from them again, which is frustrating.”

Meanwhile Craig Smith, a 27-year-old actuary, used Freecycle for the first time to shift a bed which he and his wife Laura, 26, didn’t need at their Canonmills home any more. “It was in perfect condition but it was no use to us because we were getting new furniture delivered. My wife found out about Freecycle and we thought we would try it.

“Within about two or three hours we had about ten replies. If you call the council to pick something up it can be a couple of weeks.

“We gave it to the person we thought was the most needy. We gave it to someone whose sister had just split up with her boyfriend and had to move out of her flat.

“Since then we’ve given away a hi-fi unit to someone who wanted to use it as a vivarium to keep snakes in!”

It seems that jumble sales have definitely met their match.

September 4, 2006

recordonline.com - Freecycle your good old items, and get others in return

Filed under: US Northeast — ScottUSnews @ 11:39 am

recordonline.com - Freecycle your good old items, and get others in return

Bigger items, like used appliances, are not as easy to pass on or sell. If you can’t sell yours in the Record’s classified section under “Bargain Basement,” consider posting it on www.freecycle.org.

Freecycle is a global e-mail list and Web site organized by country. The U.S. listings are according to region. In our area, Middletown is one of the hub cities.

By Shawn Dell Joyce
recordonline.com

Click Here to visit recordonline.com and read the whole article

Something for Nothing? Freecycle: Community recycling that works - The Advocate

Filed under: US Northeast — ScottUSnews @ 11:39 am

Something for Nothing? Freecycle: Community recycling that works - The Advocate

The concept behind Freecycle is simple. Instead of pitching something into the garbage, you post a notice to your local group, and if a fellow member wants it, you arrange a time and place for him to pick it up. Everything must be free, legal and appropriate for all ages; trading is not allowed. Furniture and baby clothes tend to be the most common items posted, but everything from firewood to records to coupons have shown up. A local artist even used it to collect 25 cast-iron radiators for an arch sculpture

By Patrick Verel
Special Correspondent
stamfordadvocate.com

Click Here To Visit stamfordadvocate.com and read the whole article.

The Comet - Radio show signals rise in recycling

Filed under: UK — Em @ 7:23 am

The Comet - Radio show signals rise in recycling
Radio show signals rise in recycling
08 June 2006
EDITORIAL - editorial@thecomet.net

Recycling is the way forward
MEMBERSHIP of a successful recycling website has gone through the roof after its founder went on national radio to discuss its merits.

The Stevenage Freecycle website was founded in 2004 by Hazel Roethenbaugh after she realised that landfill sites in North Herts were nearing their maximum capacity.

The website allows people to give away items as gifts rather than throw them into their bins. The aim is to reduce waste by connecting individuals who are throwing away goods they no long need with others who are seeking them.

The idea has been a great success and Mrs Roethenbaugh was invited to join presenter Jeremy Vine on his BBC Radio 2 show to discuss her group.

Mrs Roethenbaugh said: “One of the questions I was asked on the show was when someone called in and said that the things people offered to give away were junk. People aren’t like that. Their generosity is tremendous.

“Freecycle is a non-profit organisation and a movement of people interested in keeping good stuff out of landfills.

“I felt no good moaning about the fact that we’ve got these problems unless I was prepared to do something about it.

“A lot of things we throw away we know could be useful to other people.”

Within an hour of Mrs Roethenbaugh’s appearance on the radio 20 people had asked to join the group and the website was overloaded with visitors wanting to know more.

Over 250 new members have joined the site within the last seven days.

Mrs Roethenbaugh said: “The whole group has gone berserk and it’s gone really well. The group now has almost 1,300 members in North Herts and is still growing.”

The website has become so popular that Mrs Roethenbaugh is now working with local councils who are keen to link the group to their own websites.

To become a member a Yahoo email address is required and then you can go to www.stevenagefreecycle.org.uk and join.

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