Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I love trees, especially street trees but not Christmas trees left on the pavement because the owners CBA to request a free collection from the council.

I’ve seen primary school children having to walk into the road to avoid these fly-tipped trees.

Get rid of yours responsibly or don’t buy one if you don’t plan to do so.

Ask a neighbour to offer space in their brown bin, for example or take it to a tip - preferably taking a few at a time to extend that spirit of Yuletide togetherness.

(I’ve rung the council environment line to tell them about the SE22-wide problem so not just ranting…)

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/320714-abandoned-christmas-trees/
Share on other sites

It’s the council who have been chucking them on the pavement & blocking the walkways!

I came home yesterday to find my neighbours tree outside my door, it looked like it belonged to me, the way it was wedged under my railings!

I had to step over it to pass & I could see it would’ve made it difficult for buggies or wheelchairs to get through.

When I looked around I saw other trees on the road & realised it must’ve been the council.

I grabbed the tree & put it in the road & it was gone by this morning.

Did you request collection from the council or just bung it on the road and hope for the best?

 

If this question was for me, yes I did bung it in the road!

I realised the council had taken the trees & placed them on pavements for their convenience, ready to be collected!


I didn’t feel it was my place to request collection for something that’s not mine!

It’s the council who have been chucking them on the pavement & blocking the walkways!


I've not seen them doing that, but I have seen old Xmas trees being blown about by the wind, at least today.

 

I have seen the refuse guys in the past years, on lordship lane, they take the trees from gardens & put them in the road, which makes it easier for them to collect I guess.

As with previous years, the council will collect old Xmas trees with the normal food and garden cycle. There is no need to request a collection.

 

The service is uneven. When our bins were collected this week, one of the bin men rang the bell and was at pains to tell us that that should only be collecting trees for free from houses that have a large brown garden/food waste bin (which is chargeable at about £40pa ). We don't have one but he took it anyway perhaps because it wasn't that large.

As with previous years, the council will collect old Xmas trees with the normal food and garden cycle. There is no need to request a collection.

 

There is now a need to request a collection (this is free) - if you don't the tree won't be collected even if you do pay for a brown bin collection - as I found out to my cost this week!

As with previous years, the council will collect old Xmas trees with the normal food and garden cycle. There is no need to request a collection.

 

There is now a need to request a collection (this is free) - if you don't the tree won't be collected even if you do pay for a brown bin collection - as I found out to my cost this week!

According to Southwarks own website you don't need to book a collection unless you don't have a brown bin or food bin


https://www.southwark.gov.uk/bins-and-recycling/christmas-period-tips-reduce-reuse-and-recycle

[Restored to original draft]

At https://www.southwark.gov.uk/bins-and-recycling/christmas-period-tips-reduce-reuse-and-recycle there's this (see bottom of post) and a link to an online request form.

==========

"Christmas tree recycling


" We’ll collect and recycle your real Christmas tree for free! Simply remove all decorations, including any pot or stand, and do one of the following:


"Put out your Christmas tree with your food and garden waste containers on your collection day


"If you don’t have a food or garden waste collection, you need to request a free collection


"You can also bring your Christmas tree to our Reuse and Recycling centre "


"Request Christmas tree collection"

Edited by ianr
I cut up my (8ft) tree and put it in the brown bin. The problem the bin men face is that whole trees are bulky and can actually fill up the bin-lorry - sometimes they use a separate truck for them, but they often can't collect all of them in a single run. Hence they are left lying about. In my experience they do their best, but can be defeated by too many bulky trees left out.

Tax the trees! Each vendor should add £1 to each tree sold to be given to the council which would then promise to pick up abandoned trees for the whole of January.

If you’ve dumped a tree on the pavement or on the road then you’re really rather selfish.

Looking up and down the street it’s pretty clear they are taking small trees only. I’ve emailed our councillor to see if they know what’s going on.

 

I seem to remember reading that if the tree is over 6ft tall you need to cut it in half to make it easier and safer for handling

I booked a collection on the 6th Jan and put the tree out as advised but it hasn’t been collected. And unlike previous years there was no limit on the size of the tree and no request to cut in half if over a certain size. There’s a real mixture of tree sizes on our road so they just don’t seem to have got around to collecting them yet.
  • 2 weeks later...

Tax the trees! Each vendor should add £1 to each tree sold to be given to the council which would then promise to pick up abandoned trees for the whole of January.

If you’ve dumped a tree on the pavement or on the road then you’re really rather selfish.

 

Heaven forbid that Southwark put their LTN millions towards services for their residents. Like making sure the pavements are cleared of leaves in Autumn so the pavements are passable and the drains aren't blocked and Xmas trees are collected. Why should businesses pay more towards our shambolic and corrupt borough?

🤦‍♂️

Tax the trees! Each vendor should add £1 to each tree sold to be given to the council which would then promise to pick up abandoned trees for the whole of January.

If you’ve dumped a tree on the pavement or on the road then you’re really rather selfish.

 

Heaven forbid that Southwark put their LTN millions towards services for their residents. Like making sure the pavements are cleared of leaves in Autumn so the pavements are passable and the drains aren't blocked and Xmas trees are collected. Why should businesses pay more towards our shambolic and corrupt borough?

🤦‍♂️

 



I agree!

Corruption all the way………

It’s those struggling to break even, (if they are?) who get penalised the worst!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • It shouldn't be a difficult DIY job. Replacement cylinders are available here are a couple  https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/236294046742  https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/177388193151 What is the make and model of your chair?? Unless its a Herman Miller then its worth fixing but some other may not be worth it.
    • Returning to the question, although still not directly answering I'm afraid as ive not lived on that road: I have previously lived in a house where the railway line was behind the house and over a playing field, and also in a flat blocked from the railway line by at least one more block worth of houses. I would not live that close to a railway line again. In the house the noise with the windows open always disturbed me at night. And you need to bear it mind it is not just the timetables of passenger trains you need to consider, at night time there could be freight trains too. That was my problem in the flat: not noise, I was shielded from that, but the weight of the freight trains passing made the whole building shake enough to wake me up. If you are a sounder sleeper or less sensitive to noise it could be fine. I would suggest checking if freight trains use that route though.
    • Thanks TWB, that is all really useful. However, if  memory serves, The Fox Project actually directed me to The Fox Angels when I phoned them, and had no facilities in this area for sending anybody out themselves. They seem to be based in Tunbridge Wells. The Greenwich Wildlife Network also just suggests other organisations who may help in certain situations. To the best of my knowledge, however, for situations involving foxes, including injured or ill  foxes, Fox Angels are the only people who have someone available very locally who can come out virtually immediately (I waited maybe half an hour after I phoned them). The person who came had all the necessary equipment to move the fox, was very gentle and caring, and took the fox to a local vet (it sadly died). It's possible that if you phoned a local vet they would help, if you could get the fox there. The RSPCA has guidelines on what to do if you find an  animal in need,  however although they have recently had a campaign on this (and sent me a badge and a copy of the guidelines on a pocket sized card) I can't find them online. I attach a photo. Don't know if the QR code would work from a photo.    
    • My mum (91 years young!) well remembers going to Austin's as a child, which she described as an 'Aladdin's Cave'!  She absolutely loved it - and is still a shopping fiend to this day (I 'blame' Austin's 😉). Going back up Peckham Rye, passing Austin's on your right hand-side, just past Phillips Walk (so not far from Austin's at all), I believe there was a British Relay Wireless shop - this would have been in the late 1930s/early 1940s.  Does anyone know anything about this? My grandad (my mum's dad) used to manage it; it was severely damaged in The Blitz - but I am having trouble locating it.  Mum's memory is dim (she was 6 at the time); she originally thought it was in Rye Lane, but we think now it was in Peckham Rye just up from Phillips Walk (originally Phillips Road). 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...