The Green Village Articles Tagged ‘recycling’

Charity Shop Chic – Greening your Wardrobe

Buying a new outfit or three is most girls’ (and a fair few men’s) idea of fun, but although throw-away fashion can satisfy most budgets, the implications of fast fashion and keeping the prices low for consumers often cost the environment a great deal more. Every single year in the UK, over 900 million items of clothing are cast aside and typically find their way straight into landfill.

One way of preventing such a waste of textile products in the UK is to recycle unwanted clothes. There are a number of options available to people to enable them to do this, such as selling them on at car boot sales or on eBay, putting them in recycling bins, such as those for textile recycling organisation TRAID, or donating them to charity shops. This ensures a new life for clothes, shoes and other textiles, as well as many other unwanted items, and also reduces the ridiculous amount of waste being shipped off to landfill each year.

Supporting charity shops also helps raise money for a wealth of causes, from third world charities like Oxfam, children’s charities such as Barnardos and NSPCC, animal organisations, both national charities like PDSA and local organisations that support local animal homes and shelters, charities supporting the elderly and infirm, and many cancer and hospice shops such as Douglas MacMillan in the Midlands, Marie Curie Cancer Care and The Donna Louise Trust. And in addition to knowing that donations given and the money you spend supporting these charities will work hard to make a difference to many lives around the world, your money will go further and your green credentials get a welcome boost. (more…)

Waste Not, Want Not – the war against packaging

It seems easy once somebody points it out. But until those words are first uttered, we can find ourselves still going through the same motions and habits day after day not even realising the cold, hard truth of the matter. We only have waste because we create it.

People have become used to the convenience of the dustbin.

  1. Fill up the bin in the kitchen
  2. Empty it into the wheelybin 5 times a week
  3. Garnish with any leftovers from various wastepaper baskets and bathroom empties
  4. Serve to the pavement to be collected
  5. Start again…

Maybe I’m being facetious here, but at the end of the day, is it not the case of ‘out of sight, out of mind’? As long as that dustbin lorry keeps popping along every week to take away our refuse, we don’t need to worry about it. (more…)

Reduce, Re-use, FREECYCLE!

Everybody is well aware of the growing need to recycle and generally minimise the amount they throw away. Landfill sites are filling up and closing and there isn’t the same availability to open new sites that there used to be. But even if there was, just burying what we no longer need doesn’t help anybody. That’s where a fantastic community called Freecycle comes into its own.

Freecycle is an online community that anybody can sign up to. If you have unwanted items lying around the house (or garage, shed or attic!), you can list your goodies in an offer on Freecycle and wait for other community members to get in touch. There really is truth in the saying that one man’s rubbish is another man’s treasure.

There are currently 4,542 groups worldwide, with a total of 5,455,000 members. Each group is moderated by a volunteer local to that particular group and ensures that the facility operates as it is supposed to. (more…)