October 26, 2006

TCPalm: Lifestyle

Filed under: US Southern — ScottUSnews @ 11:52 pm

TCPalm: Lifestyle

Two years ago, Vero Beach resident Joy Walmer found a way to keep her family’s junk out of the local landfill.
“I hate to throw things away, I like to give them to people who can use them and it has helped me out too. I’ve gotten things I needed,” said Walmer, a self proclaimed “anti-pack rat.”

Walmer is one of more than 2.7 million members of the freecycle.org network, which has local message boards along the Treasure Coast. The site was started in Tucson in May 2003 with the intent to advocate waste reduction and keep useful items from cluttering up landfills.
According to site

By REBECCA PANOFF
rebecca.panoff@scripps.com

TCPalm: Lifestyle

TownOnline.com - Local News: Recycling the past for the future

Filed under: US Northeast — ScottUSnews @ 11:52 pm

TownOnline.com - Local News: Recycling the past for the future

Do you happen to have a mystery tool in your basement, or an old crib, perhaps, or some other gently used household item you don’t want to throw out but can’t imagine selling? Well, step right up to the Danvers “freecycle” recycling Web site, begun by Danvers’ own Carla King.

“You’re keeping it out of the landfill,” King said this week, which is the main reason to join this international movement, all of it free, and much of it localized to make it that much easier.

Given the town’s new mandatory recycling program, which began Oct. 1, King thinks the freecycle movement is a blessing.

By Cathryn Keefe O’Hare
cohare@cnc.coM
www2.townonline.com

CLICK HERE TO VISIT townonline.com and READ THE WHOLE ARTICLE

October 24, 2006

Go recycle with Freecycle

Filed under: US West Coast — ScottUSnews @ 10:29 am

Observer-Reporter

Go recycle with freecycle

Heidi Price
Staff writer

Alice Harris, a grower from California, had some extra pond plants she couldn’t use. So she went to the Mon Valley Chapter of the Freecycle Web site and posted a note seeking takers A woman from Marianna responded, stating that she would take the pond plants and, by the way, could Harris use some goldfish?

The two women made the exchange and eventually became friends.

The Freecycle Network, an online forum where people can exchange unwanted items and request various needs, has grown exponentially in the three years since an unwanted bed sparked its inception.

“If I have something that I don’t use, I’ll put it on there. Other times I’ve asked for stuff and I have gotten it,” Harris said.

“Stuff” in freecycle language is not necessarily the stuff of garage sales.

“My barn burned down and I had a fire. I had a lot of help from people offering me different animals,” Harris explained. She also posted a request for a barn and received three offers from people to disassemble their barns and reconstruct them on her property, but all were too big.

Not long ago, she received a request from a female student who attended Ringgold High School who was looking for a dress for a Valentine’s Day dance.

“My daughter had four of them,” said Harris, and with a quick exchange of information, the girl was ready for the dance.

If the Freecycle Network seems like a sensible idea, thank Deron Beal.

A conservationist who wanted to put his MBA to good use, Beal founded Freecycle on May 1, 2003. Beal, who had just moved in with his wife, sent an e-mail to a couple dozen friends and several nonprofit groups asking if anyone could use an extra bed.

Around the same time, Beal was working for a nonprofit group that helped people find transition employment and worked with recycling. On recycling runs in Tuscon, Ariz., the group would collect “treasures” and save them in a warehouse.

“They were offering us perfectly good stuff that was not recyclable,” Beal recalled. From there, he decided to start a cause to preserve the desert landscape and promote waste reduction in landfills.

The “perfectly good stuff” went onto Listserv, and the Freecycle movement was born.

A local newspaper ran an article on the group, and membership went from 60 to 1,000 members overnight.

More than three years later, 3,806 Freecycle groups exist in 70 different countries. A company in the United Kingdom has come forward to offer translation services, and Waste Management has offered financial assistance in developing a Web site.

The Freecycle Network now relies mostly on the work of volunteers, and its one employee, Beal, who serves as executive director.

Many exchanges go unnoticed, but to Beal and others, they serve as reminders of acts of goodness. Beal cited a recent instance in which Freecycle members from his local chapter in Tuscon ralied around a man whose house had caught fire.

Freecycle also served as a valuable resource for families who were devastated by hurricanes in Florida and New Orleans.

“If we weren’t basically good and giving, Freecycle wouldn’t work,” Beal said. “There is hope for us.”

Harris moderates the Mon Valley Freecycle group, which started two years ago and now has 325 members. The Washington County group bosts 452 members, and a Waynesburg site has 320 members.

Harris said the only task of moderators is try to ensure that spammers stay off the network. In the two years that she has been involved, she always has had positive experiences.

“I’ve given away more than I have gotten,” Harris said. “My husband got a wheelbarrow.”

In the wake of Hurricane Katrina last year, a family whose home had been destroyed moved to the area temporarily. The Freecycle community supplied the family with furniture. Recently, when the family moved back to their rebuilt home in Louisiana, they relisted all the items they had been given.

Harris goes a long way back as far as recycling.

“We have always pretty much used the land to its best,” Harris said.

She first learned about the Freecycle network a few years ago from a friend who designed movie sets in Hollywood.

“He said he got a lot of different odds and ends for things they would use from Freecycle.”

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October 23, 2006

Top 10 trendy websites - Woman and Home… A Brand New Attitude..

Filed under: UK — Em @ 6:23 am

Top 10 trendy websites - Woman and Home… A Brand New Attitude..
Top 10 trendy websites

Surf these super sites to find out what all buzz is about!
1 freecycle.org What is it? Nicknamed FreeBay (free eBay), Freecycle is a classified ads website where no money changes hands. Why is it causing a buzz? Lauded by the green-minded or anyone who hates to see old sofas, beds and kitchen appliances cluttering up streets and landfills. How can I use it? Join for free and you can swap or give items away to someone who wants them. You can also get some great freebies – nearly new gadgets and furniture, record or magazine collections, clothes. Simply keep an eye on the messageboard for your area, or choose to have all new messages e-mailed to you.

Classy cleaner /September - Woman and Home… A Brand New Attitude..

Filed under: UK — Em @ 6:22 am

Classy cleaner /September - Woman and Home… A Brand New Attitude..

Classy cleaner /September

Our domestic goddess Lorna Wing shows you how to recycle, re-use and reduce waste
Go green the easy way!

There are lots of simple steps we can take to make our homes “greener”. As well as getting that feel-good factor, you’ll save money too

Clever recycling

o The Freecycle Network™ is a non-profit-making network aimed at keeping waste such as clothes, furniture and appliances out of landfills by recycling items that might otherwise be binned. Just post an e-mail on www.freecycling.org if you want to offer an unwanted item or need to acquire something. But no money must change hands.

A question of value - [Sunday Herald]

Filed under: UK — Em @ 6:12 am

A question of value - [Sunday Herald]
A question of value

Vicky Allan

IT is becoming a minor obsessive-compulsive disorder. The first thing I look at when opening my inbox are the thrice-daily digests from my friends at www.freecycle.org. There are plenty of offers of TVs, DVDs, beds, and other nominally useful items, but they are not what lure me. Rather it’s the true junk: the old glass jars, the used Jiffy bags, the old floorboards available for kindling, the bits of polystyrene, or the two tins of Barbour wax which were posted as “taken – sorry I didn’t have more to supply all interested”. What fascinates is not what you can get, but what you can get rid of . It’s the easiest way of dumping your junk, a kind of e-trashcan.

This is the sloth’s method of recycling. You don’t have to go to all the effort of preparing your cast-offs for the immaculate standards of the charity shop. You don’t even have to leave the house. Freecyclers mostly come to your home to collect. In my current (pregnant) state, I am not allowed to lift heavy objects (or, at least, I’m taking advantage of the fact that everyone seems to think I’m not). So I stand by and watch while others strain their lumbar region instead. Most Freecyclers are very obliging. They arrive at the door with their life-stories and lifting power and leave with your bags of junk, emailing days later to tell you that your old rags are now being transformed into haute couture by a fashion student daughter.

At first glance, running through the lists of “offered, taken and wanted”, the exchange site almost looks like a gift economy. People give other people stuff and they don’t seem to expect anything immediate in return – how anarchistic and free-loving. Except, of course, the gift is already there. For some of us, now seized in a kind of junk-paralysis, the relief of having it all taken away is equivalent to an unexpected visit from Father Christmas. Dear Mr Claus, What I would really like for Christmas is for you to take away the contents of my box room. Bring an extra Rudolph.

Freecycle.org does for the conscience what recycling used to do. A few years ago, it was enough to bung your junk in a few separate bins . Then that familiar mantra “reduce, reuse, recycle” became reduced to a rhetorical “recycle, recycle, recycle”. Now Scots are so good at it that there are growing recycling mountains, and some of this waste is being sent across the other side of the world for processing.

I’m not very good at reusing. I can just about manage to sew the odd button back on . But other people are astonishingly good. There are people out there who can fix a dud TV or transform a bag of old junk into a business proposition.

Of course, this freecycle love is a false intimacy. I like to call them my friends at Freecycle, but actually I don’t really know any of them, not to call them up and have a whinge or meet down the pub. It’s just that each time they arrive at my door, I feel such a ridiculous wave of love and gratitude that I don’t have to deal with this junk any more, they almost feel like my new best mates.

If I were single, I might consider this as a possible dating site, luring men with promises of 6″ bolts, cookery books and travel guides. As it is, I’ll go on just thinking of those Freecyclers as my obliging friends. OFFERED: Rubbish plus tea and chat, Edinburgh.

22 October 2006

October 14, 2006

Evesham Freecycle Website Is Making A Difference (from Worcester News)

Filed under: UK — Em @ 6:07 am

Evesham Freecycle Website Is Making A Difference (from Worcester News)

EVESHAM: Freecycle website is making a difference

WHEN two women from Lower Moor and South Littleton, near Evesham, met, they decided to change the lives of thousands of people in the county and also make a difference to the environment.

Freecycle is a web-based service that allows users to give away unwanted items for free. With more than 1,000 members in Evesham and Pershore, it instills a sense of generosity of spirit and strengthens community ties.

The Freecycle concept was conceived in May 2003 by Deron Beal, of Tucson, Arizona,US, who e-mailed around 30-40 friends and a handful of charitable organisations.
continued…

Sarah Cohen, aged 55, of Lower Moor, a keen environmentalist, liked the idea so much that she decided to set up a branch of the Freecycle Network herself.

“I joined the Malvern group and thought it was a great idea but unfortunately it didn’t work out for me. Every time someone wanted my items they were really put off by the distance they had to travel. So I thought why not create another branch of Freecycle here in Lower Moor.”

Mrs Cohen, who is a full-time massage therapist, launched the Evesham and Pershore branch in February. She said: “We’ve had some unusual requests placed on the website, with one young girl asking for a Flat B trumpet on Saturday morning and by that afternoon she had got one.

“We’ve had someone place kitchen units on the website that were snapped up, a doctor’s couch was another, which is all great as nothing gets thrown away.”

Mary Neilsen, 56, of South Littleton, works alongside Mrs Chen, helping her moderate the website.

“It is helping hundreds of people across the Vale of Evesham, ” she said. “It is ideal for those on a low income and for others who simply want to get rid of items they’ve had for years. But most importantly, it prevents items from being thrown away which eventually end up in landfill sites.”

For Mrs Cohen, recycling holds much importance: “I live right opposite the Hill and Moor landfill site so I have a visual reminder every day of the impact of throwing away items that can easily be recycled,” she added.

Supported by Worcester-shire County Council, Freecycle is open to all who want to recycle items that are still usable. For details go to freecycle.org.uk

Is Your Level Of Debt Spiralling (from Worcester News)

Filed under: UK — Em @ 6:07 am

Is Your Level Of Debt Spiralling (from Worcester News)

PRESENTS: With Christmas approaching don’t panic about all those gifts you have to magic out of thin air, you can get plenty for free if you look in the right places. Try www.freecycle.org, a site for people giving away all sorts of goodies.

October 9, 2006

BBC - Tees - We Are Teesside - Something for nothing

Filed under: UK — Em @ 4:10 am

BBC - Tees - We Are Teesside - Something for nothing

Something for nothing
Alice Wood runs the Middlesbrough Chapter of Freecycle, an internet community which has 1.2 million members, who give things away for free….

Freecycle Facts

* The site is the creation of Deron Beal, an environmentalist from Arizona, who started it in mid-2003 as an automated e-mail list.
* The idea behind the site is to reduce the amount of rubbish sent to landfill sites by encouraging one of the most efficient forms of recycling - giving things away.
* The Freecycle network has 1.2 million members in 2,700 clusters worldwide.
* There are 60 groups in the UK - which means goods can be picked up rather than posted, handy for bulky items such as sofas.

Alice says, “I heard about it over the radio and they were talking about recycling and I liked the idea, and thought someone should start one, so I thought, hang it, I’ll start one.

“We’re approaching 1500 members in Middlesbrough, and we’ve had people offer breezeblocks, football programmes, doors, baths, baby clothes, tables, tiles, and tvs.

“The very first thing I had was a knitting machine. I couldn’t believe my luck. They’re 300 quid new, and I thought wow.

So why do people choose to use freecycle rather than selling their stuff on auction sites?

“You have to advertise on them and pay for the privilege and it’s a case of can I really be bothered?

“There’s a really nice feeling when you give something away and you make them happy.

“You are giving something but you’re making someone’s life better aswell - they need it and might not be able to afford it.

“When I was a kid, we used to pass things along our street and I think the idea of –re-using things is coming back.

“We’ve had a box of books on the site that’s gone round various people and it’s back again now.

“It’s a really nice thing to do, we’ve got a good sense of community.”
Listen to the full feature in the ‘See Also’ Section in the top right of this page.

October 8, 2006

Freecycle | Reviews | Mansized

Filed under: UK — Em @ 3:36 am

Freecycle | Reviews | Mansized

Freecycle
Got a pile of unwanted stuff at home? Don’t just take it down the tip…

Freecycle aims to ‘change to world, one gift at a time’ by helping to find homes for unwanted goods.

Rather than dumping your stuff down the tip, you can offer your goods to local groups. And if there’s something you’re looking for, just post a ‘wanted’ message and you may just get a reply.

There are now over over 370,000 individuals signed up across the UK, spread over 300 groups so there’s bound to be one near you.

No money changes hands. We’ve heard of people picking up everything from rare LPs to garden sheds, so it’s worth signing up and seeing what you can trade.

Each group is monitored by a volunteer to make sure everything runs smoothly. There’s also a simple to follow posting etiquette so everyone can quickly see what’s wanted and up for grabs - click the link for more details.

As long as your goods are free, legal and appropriate for all ages you could soon find a good home for all your unwanted gear.

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