Today I Consign To Hell -the All Saints version

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  • jedijudyjedijudy Heaven Host, 8th Day Host
    Somebody dumped a huge pile of garbage, including a great big safe, on my BFF's property!!!! To do it, they had to run over the carefully wrapped bundles (wood with nails bundled to eliminate danger to the garbage men) which split them open so they had to be rebundled. Some people are just jerks, aren't they?
  • I hope they got flat tires running over the nails that they exposed in the process!
    :angry:
  • Re the older couple:

    I'm not quite following. What do you think happened? I'd say that most 80 yr olds couldn't manage putting that stuff out. So...thieves? A worker who stopped and left?

    Thx.
  • BroJamesBroJames Purgatory Host, 8th Day Host
    Sound to me more like somebody illegally fly tipping.
  • Absolutely.
  • Yes, that's probably what happened.

    Damn all fly-tippers to Hell, and back again. And then back to Hell for the second (and final) time.
  • Locally the refuse dumps all closed recently without a lot of warning. Those still working on sites may have been caught out. And fly tipping has always been an route for the unscrupulous.
  • Ah, so someone dumping off their trash in the driveway, since the dumps are closed? Yuck. If someone's going to do that, why not put it in a back alley, or by a long-abandoned building, or even outside the real dump? (Ok, they might get arrested at the dump.)
  • JapesJapes Shipmate
    Because those of us who live by the back alleys and long-abandoned buildings (garages) don't want the fly-tipping and resultant rats either. I've reported the next round of it but have no hope of anything being done. Not just because of the Current Situation, but as it's a long-running saga here and for the third time in 5 years the promised demolition of the garages has been put on hold.
  • Here, not only have the council tips closed, but they've also stopped uplifting bulky waste: the instruction is to "Please leave any unwanted items safely on your own property such as your back garden or your back court and remain mindful of any fire risk."

    They are taking general waste (food waste now to be included in this) and recycling only. Public glass bins are still cleared (city, with lots of flats, so no domestic glass collection from those), but if you live in a house with a glass bin, it won't be emptied.

    So if you do have bulky/white goods waste, you have to hang onto it....
  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited April 2020
    I didn't realise that the tips had all closed (not having much occasion to use them), so yes, it does present a problem to those who find themselves with rubbish they can't get rid of.

    That doesn't mean they have licence to dump it on someone else, though - and the collection of domestic rubbish (wheelie-bins/black bags/garden waste) is still being done regularly (well, here, at any rate).

    BTW, common practice here, if you have anything in the way of metal/electrical goods to get rid of, is to simply leave it on the pavement for the local scrap merchants to pick up. This, I suspect, is not entirely by-the-book, but the items tend to disappear very quickly indeed.
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    It was very much the thing in Newfoundland when we lived there: you'd sometimes see entire three-piece suites out on the verge in front of council houses.

    We once picked up a scruffy little chest of drawers from outside a block of flats round the corner from our house. All it needed was a few coats of paint (applied by me) and new drawer handles (affixed by our friendly handyman), and it was good to go as a useful piece of kitchen/dining-room furniture (our kitchen was woefully short of drawers).
  • kingsfold wrote: »
    Here, not only have the council tips closed, but they've also stopped uplifting bulky waste: the instruction is to "Please leave any unwanted items safely on your own property such as your back garden or your back court and remain mindful of any fire risk."

    They are taking general waste (food waste now to be included in this) and recycling only. Public glass bins are still cleared (city, with lots of flats, so no domestic glass collection from those), but if you live in a house with a glass bin, it won't be emptied.

    So if you do have bulky/white goods waste, you have to hang onto it....
    Same here. And, at first, they said that we could put a little bit of garden waste into our bins. Then they changed their mind because (a) they feared people would abuse it and (b) their refuse-to-power incinerator would not be happy. So we have to hang onto that, too.

  • BTW, common practice here, if you have anything in the way of metal/electrical goods to get rid of, is to simply leave it on the pavement for the local scrap merchants to pick up. This, I suspect, is not entirely by-the-book, but the items tend to disappear very quickly indeed.
    Same here, and they tend to come round on bin day.

  • (A)t first, they said that we could put a little bit of garden waste into our bins. Then they changed their mind because (a) they feared people would abuse it and (b) their refuse-to-power incinerator would not be happy. So we have to hang onto that, too.

    We too have a garden waste collection: I use it maybe once every couple of years to get rid of brambles so I don't follow it closely, but I think it's still running.

    But if you have a garden that produces waste, haven't you got room for a compost heap? If nothing else, in the current circumstances, if one of the waste collections must be dropped, then surely this should be the first one to go, followed by recycling and keeping residual waste (which is likely to include unsanitary waste as well) going as long as possible.

  • Four times a year we have pick-ups for household waste that is too big for our regular bins -- just stack it neatly in our alleys and they come and remove it. Yesterday I put out the remains of two sheds* which my handyman recently tore down for me. Within a couple of hours they had been picked up by someone apparently interested in the scrap metal. I was pleased -- I'd rather have things recycled than wind up in a landfill.

    *Sorry, you can't call me "Two Sheds" since I had three, and I now have one.
    :wink:
  • Fawkes Cat wrote: »
    Haven't you got room for a compost heap?
    We did in our last house (two in fact), but not here, sadly.

  • TheOrganistTheOrganist Shipmate
    edited April 2020
    Golden Key wrote: »
    Re the older couple:

    I'm not quite following. What do you think happened? I'd say that most 80 yr olds couldn't manage putting that stuff out. So...thieves? A worker who stopped and left?

    Thx.

    Its called flytipping - a disgusting practice where ignorant, antisocial neanderthals take their refuse (anything from a bag of waste-paper to the contents of a house) and just dump it where they can't be seen. Farm gateways, sports fields, common land, beachfronts - you name it, some moron will decide its the perfect place for his filth.

    In addition to individuals there are also "rogue" waste disposal firms: a householder will pay them to take their garbage to a proper, authorised facility but the bogus firm will just dump the stuff - see this story and photographs.

    The couple whose driveway was blocked by it are socially isolating and haven't even walked to the end of their driveway for 3 weeks.
  • A wonderfully outspoken neighbour of mine found two alien rubbish bags dumped on her doorstep on the day when the rubbish collection was due. She opened one of the bags and rifled around until she found an envelope, addressed to someone living just a couple of streets away. She lugged the bags round to his flat, knocked on his door, and said "Excuse me, I think these belong to you!" Apparently he shamefacedly took them back :confounded:
  • A wonderfully outspoken neighbour of mine found two alien rubbish bags dumped on her doorstep on the day when the rubbish collection was due. She opened one of the bags and rifled around until she found an envelope, addressed to someone living just a couple of streets away. She lugged the bags round to his flat, knocked on his door, and said "Excuse me, I think these belong to you!" Apparently he shamefacedly took them back :confounded:

    I love it!
    "Kid, we found your name on an envelope at the bottom of ab' a half a ton of garbage, and just wanted to know if you had any information about it."


  • Caroline, that's *awesome*! :)
  • Pigwidgeon wrote: »
    "Kid, we found your name on an envelope at the bottom of ab' a half a ton of garbage, and just wanted to know if you had any information about it."
    My favourite line is where the judge walks in with the seein' eye dawg...
  • Pigwidgeon wrote: »
    "Kid, we found your name on an envelope at the bottom of ab' a half a ton of garbage, and just wanted to know if you had any information about it."
    My favourite line is where the judge walks in with the seein' eye dawg...

    I'm so glad someone recognized this great piece of American culture!
    :wink:
  • RossweisseRossweisse Hell Host, 8th Day Host
    A wonderfully outspoken neighbour of mine found two alien rubbish bags dumped on her doorstep on the day when the rubbish collection was due. She opened one of the bags and rifled around until she found an envelope, addressed to someone living just a couple of streets away. She lugged the bags round to his flat, knocked on his door, and said "Excuse me, I think these belong to you!" Apparently he shamefacedly took them back :confounded:
    BRAVA!

  • Our council has suspended garden waste collections for the forseeable future. I have a compost heap and a wormery but donate to the council all the stuff I don't want in my compost like weeds, brambles, any branches that need secateurs, and plants that spread at the roots and so come back at the drop of a hat (bluebells, acanthus and alstromeria being the worst offenders here.)
  • Penny SPenny S Shipmate
    Mine is still doing collections, but I don't have enough of their sacks, and the supply of them in my village has disappeared. They won't take anything in any other container. I've a lot of woody stuff to dispose of. They are not happy about bonfires, so I guess that means my chiminea can't be used for the purpose.
    Bonfires produce smoke, which is not a good thing for the body dealing with virus. Someone round here has a barbecue on the go, from the smell.
    My bluebells, from the wood where Mum's ashes were spread, have disappeared. I suspect woodmice. There was a hole.
  • HuiaHuia Shipmate
    My Council is still collecting everything, but the recycling is being dumped because it is sorted in part by people. I've decided to not put my recycling bin out as it's not full, Hopefully by the time it is full recycling will be happening again.
  • Recycling collection round here stopped (which I understand) and started again a fortnight later (which I don't). Either way, I'm very grateful.
  • Another flytipping pile, this time next to the churchyard. May the perpetrators rot in the hot place :rage:
  • Any evidence as to where the pile came from?
    :rage:
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    That's a bit of a bollocks, @TheOrganist!

    I similarly condemn to Hell the wee toe-rags who sprayed some very nasty graffiti on the walls of Kirkwall Grammar School the other day: not just unpleasant, but libellous against someone who I presume* is one of the school staff.

    * As it's almost 40 years to the day since I left that establishment, I'm a bit out of touch ...
  • BroJamesBroJames Purgatory Host, 8th Day Host
    edited April 2020
    The burglars who broke into and ransacked my sister’s house while she and my b-i-l are away isolating with my father. :angry:
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    That's beyond despicable and out the other side. May they rot. :rage:
  • RossweisseRossweisse Hell Host, 8th Day Host
    BroJames wrote: »
    The burglars who broke into and ransacked my sister’s house while she and my b-i-l are away isolating with my father. :angry:
    :rage: That's just evil, @BroJames. I hope the police are able to track them down and charge them appropriately.

  • Vile people will always take advantage of difficult times.

    When the morning's must-do tasks have been completed the three of us are going to join our CSO to go through the latest flytip in search of clues.
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Good luck!
  • Hopefully, you'll find evidence, and (in due course) the Evil Ones will be named and shamed in public.

    Maybe the stocks should be re-introduced for the purpose of punishing such offenders?
    :naughty:

    The same applies to the Evil Ones who robbed @BroJames' sister's house.
  • Baptist TrainfanBaptist Trainfan Shipmate
    edited April 2020
    Sadly there have been two or three break-ins locally during the last 24 hours. Scary.

    Although (to lighten things a bit) did you hear the story of the well-known burglar who was observed kicking in his own front door?

    "What are you doing?", a passer-by asked. The reply: "I'm working from home".
  • *groan*
  • LOL.
  • jedijudyjedijudy Heaven Host, 8th Day Host
    There's a Heaven thread you could share that on, @Baptist Trainfan ! Laughing (and groaning!) is good!
  • Our local Catholic Charities had their shed STOLEN from the front patio. They purchased the shed with our community donated funds, and had paid for a shed platform to be built with donated funds. They were all set to have someone to put the shed together. They always hire local people from our town to do the work for them.
    They help people with food distributions, utility bills rental assistance, Seniors, disabled, undocumented and anyone struggling to make ends meet. What is wrong with someone that they think stealing from those helping their own community is okay. I feel both sad and angry that this happened to this organization who does nothing but good for our community.
  • Oh, there's more of that sort of disgusting behaviour, for example this.
  • DooneDoone Shipmate
    Disgusting!
  • JapesJapes Shipmate
    Fireworks. The setting off of one or two around 8.00 p.m. on Thursday nights when others are outside acknowledging, in their chosen noisy fashion, the NHS and carers seems to have become the norm around here and whilst I dislike fireworks intensely for numerous reasons, I can live with the occasional ones. It is not OK to set them off for the rest of the evening.

    The continued fly-tipping at the disused garages at the end of my garden. I seem to be sending new pictures of it all every day.

    And whilst I'm here there is absolutely no need to throw the eggs shells from the eggs fried on a barbeque into the alleyway rather than into a bin. Mind you, it's an improvement on the dog shit which also gets thrown over the fence into the alley way. I do have such delightful across the alleyway neighbours.
  • If you can bring yourself to do so, throw the eggshells, and dogshit, discreetly back over the fence...
    :naughty:

    Meanwhile, TICTH the relentless East Wind (aka Black Breath of Mordor), which seems to have been blowing for ever, and is giving me a headache. It makes my ears feel tight, as though they could do with loosening by a quarter-turn, but that really isn't viable...
    :cry:
  • Hope the wind dies down a bit - that sounds a bit grim. :grimace:
  • Alas, it's forecast to continue into next week...and possibly the week after that...
    :rage:
  • JapesJapes Shipmate
    If you can bring yourself to do so, throw the eggshells, and dogshit, discreetly back over the fence...
    :naughty:

    I keep a small scoop thing for this very purpose! I'm up earlier than most people in my part of the world and they are more inclined to the nocturnal so I've never been spotted throwing stuff back...

  • TwilightTwilight Shipmate
    Careful now, Japes, it depends on where you live.

    I'm ashamed to say that two of my favorite TV shows are, "Fear Thy Neighbor," and its British counterpart "The Nightmare Neighbour Next Door."

    Trouble often begins with something like Japes's eggshell mess, then there's "having it out", followed by even more eggshells, followed by calling the police (U.S) or the council (UK), then follows more arguments, blocked driveways, children upset, loud noises in the night... until...the American gets fed up and shoots someone,
    or the British person knocks over someone's wheelie bin.
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