Jump to content

Recommended Posts

They have tried to ban the plastic bag - next they will move on to the wheel any any other useful invention.


The wheely bin is a great invention - what this campaign should be about is how bin men are no longer required to go and collect the bins - hence they sit outside peoples houses all day awaiting collection.

Well, I can sort of understand where the roots of the opposition come from. They are ugly and not all properties have a neat nook to store them so they end up in the way or generally looking crap. However there is not much alternative as black bags look worse especially once they are ripped open and the contents strewn around, also causing smells and general health hazards.

Typical Daily Mail to jump on it and take it too far. Obviously the picture the Mail uses is from collection day when all the bins have been deliberately wheeled onto the street, so they - as usual - are distorting the view to their advantage.

I think they are different things Mick Mac


Plastic Bags = a lot of production for not a lot of reusable value. Plastic bags haven't been banned but there is now a premium on not reusing them. This seems a small step but not unreasonable


Wheely bins seem to be a solution to several problems (foxes and other vermin in urban areas for one big one) which some people seem to be inordinately upset about

Oh, but Sean they're all modern and ugly and they don't look like bins did in the good old days....


You know, when your neighbours looked out for you and everything was cheap and there was on crime and you could leave your back door unlocked and young 'uns respected their elders......


If you can't see that wheelie bins are at the black heart of Broken Britain then I don't see how I can possibly reason with you.

Looking at the leafy Leeds suburb picture I am trying to imagine how It could be improved by using refuse sacks.I suppose the odd corpse found time to time in the "ol'wheelie" could be discovered earlier before it turns to mulch.


I think we should start a "save the wheelie" counter campaign, the ad could be voice overed by Jonathan Ross, weally what do you think?


As we speak I am sitting in a "Wheelie Bin" ( lid slightly propped open with a copy of "you" ) & it's not bad at all you know.




W**F

I'm with the Daily Mail here, let's banish these plastic horrors and return to the traditional galvanised bin with seperate lid. They've given so much to the culture over the years which is more than the wheelie will ever do.


If in the Godfather Sony Corleone had to climax the beating he meted out to Carlo Rizzi with a wheelie bin lid, there would have been a a long pause while he wrestled the thing from its moorings and frankly it would have looked as if he was fanning the treacherous Rizzi rather than attempting to kill him.

Whichever way you slice it the dramatic ipmact of the scene would have been compromised.


And how would Top Cat have summoned his companions without the aid of two galvanised bin lids? He would have had to have resorted to yelling and caterwauling and by the time the gang assembled he would be too hoarse to outline their latest caper. It could have been that Benny The Ball or Brain would have been the 'brains' behind the gang and they would all have ended up in the hoosegow within the first five minutes. Not good, not good at all.


And though a small thing, the 'Anybody can make a mistake, said the Dalek climbing down from the dustbin' joke would never have existed and we'd be the slightly poorer for it.


So I for one am joining the campaign.


But only if it has a galvanised bin option.


And I don't have to kiss Melanie Phillips

The modern wheeliebin makes it all too easy for the so-called modern bin-man.


Easy wheeling. Pneumatic lifting. Scarely any danger from 'hot ashes'.


Bring back the old bin, when bins were bins and crime was a lower.


String 'em up! STRING 'EM UP, I say.. ooh, sorry.. got carried away.

Some of us are a 2-Bin Family, don't you jolly well know...


Didn't do me any good with the Bin Men recently though...


"Sorry, Guv, only allowed to take 1 Bin per household.."...getting more like bleedin' Greenwich every day....you can't do this, you can't do that, you need to have this to be able do that...jokers...


Off to the local B and Q's to dump all the excess Black Bags I went. ( for anyone else doing that do NOT leave any items that you can be traced with)...

The wheelie bins are there to make the dustmans job easier apparently, i am all for making peoples lives easier, but i remember once when my mum worked as a house manager for a warden controlled block of flats for the elderly in islington she had a letter of complaint from the council on behalf of the binmen as all the wheelie bins were kept in an area which had THREE steps to street level, the letter stated that the refuse men refuse to take the bins up the steps due to fear of injury and that residents should make sure bins are moved to street level before collection day, so my mum ended up moving them (all ten) on her own as you couldnt expect 90 year old maude to do it whilst balancing on her zimmer

I like the way Lewisham do it in "leafy" (:-S) Sydenham. We have 2 wheely bins, one for ALL recycling, which IMO is a lot better than a seperate box and bag for various things (I think they do offer that option too). And one for other waste. We tend to pretty much fill the recycling one each week, but only about 1/3 fill the other one.


Can't see why anyone would complain about them...


... But, a former colleague of mine who lived in Bexley did say he was a bit fed up with having 4 seperate wheely bins in his drive, and I must admit, that would seem a bit much!

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

    • I've never got Christmas pudding. The only times I've managed to make it vaguely acceptable to people is thus: Buy a really tiny one when it's remaindered in Tesco's. They confound carbon dating, so the yellow labelled stuff at 75% off on Boxing Day will keep you going for years. Chop it up and soak it in Stones Ginger Wine and left over Scotch. Mix it in with a decent vanilla ice cream. It's like a festive Rum 'n' Raisin. Or: Stick a couple in a demijohn of Aldi vodka and serve it to guests, accompanied by 'The Party's Over' by Johnny Mathis when people simply won't leave your flat.
    • Not miserable at all! I feel the same and also want to complain to the council but not sure who or where best to aim it at? I have flagged it with our local MP and one Southwark councillor previously but only verbally when discussing other things and didn’t get anywhere other than them agreeing it was very frustrating etc. but would love to do something on paper. I think they’ve been pretty much every night for the last couple of weeks and my cat is hating it! As am I !
    • That is also a Young's pub, like The Cherry Tree. However fantastic the menu looks, you might want to ask exactly who will cook the food on the day, and how. Also, if  there is Christmas pudding on the menu, you might want to ask how that will be cooked, and whether it will look and/or taste anything like the Christmas puddings you have had in the past.
    • This reminds me of a situation a few years ago when a mate's Dad was coming down and fancied Franklin's for Christmas Day. He'd been there once, in September, and loved it. Obviously, they're far too tuned in to do it, so having looked around, £100 per head was pretty standard for fairly average pubs around here. That is ridiculous. I'd go with Penguin's idea; one of the best Christmas Day lunches I've ever had was at the Lahore Kebab House in Whitechapel. And it was BYO. After a couple of Guinness outside Franklin's, we decided £100 for four people was the absolute maximum, but it had to be done in the style of Franklin's and sourced within walking distance of The Gowlett. All the supermarkets knock themselves out on veg as a loss leader - particularly anything festive - and the Afghani lads on Rye Lane are brilliant for more esoteric stuff and spices, so it really doesn't need to be pricey. Here's what we came up with. It was considerably less than £100 for four. Bread & Butter (Lidl & Lurpak on offer at Iceland) Mersea Oysters (Sopers) Parsnip & Potato Soup ( I think they were both less than 20 pence a kilo at Morrisons) Smoked mackerel, Jerseys, watercress & radish (Sopers) Rolled turkey breast joint (£7.95 from Iceland) Roast Duck (two for £12 at Lidl) Mash  Carrots, star anise, butter emulsion. Stir-fried Brussels, bacon, chestnuts and Worcestershire sauce.(Lidl) Clementine and limoncello granita (all from Lidl) Stollen (Lidl) Stichelton, Cornish Cruncher, Stinking Bishop. (Marks & Sparks) There was a couple of lessons to learn: Don't freeze mash. It breaks down the cellular structure and ends up more like a French pomme purée. I renamed it 'Pomme Mikael Silvestre' after my favourite French centre-half cum left back and got away with it, but if you're not amongst football fans you may not be so lucky. Tasted great, looked like shit. Don't take the clementine granita out of the freezer too early, particularly if you've overdone it on the limoncello. It melts quickly and someone will suggest snorting it. The sugar really sticks your nostrils together on Boxing Day. Speaking of 'lost' Christmases past, John Lewis have hijacked Alison Limerick's 'Where Love Lives' for their new advert. Bastards. But not a bad ad.   Beansprout, I have a massive steel pot I bought from a Nigerian place on Choumert Road many years ago. It could do with a work out. I'm quite prepared to make a huge, spicy parsnip soup for anyone who fancies it and a few carols.  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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