Monday, December 30, 2013
Neptune’s plastic patch – news from the vortex
Monday, December 16, 2013
Big Bellies for Trash!
- The fully enclosed design prevents weather or pests from scattering trash from bins
- The compacting system allows their collectors to hold a greater volume of trash and therefore require less frequent collection.
- The units are internet-connected, and will notify their handlers electronically when they need collection
Monday, December 2, 2013
What are the kids drinking these days?
- It’s all about the Steel Reserve. Whether it’s my neighborhood on the Eastside or where I work in the SLU, those shiny silver cans are congregated together. No other brand seems to satisfy the thirsty teen in 2013.
- When they aren’t leaving cans in neat piles, they are walking down the street, leaving a trail of cans, about two to the block.
- Nobody seems to want to dent the smooth silvery exterior of the cans. The picture above is typical. Even crammed by the six pack into the adopt-a-stop bin, the cans are miraculously unmarred.
- They are a breeze to pick up. Except for the shambling trail-leavers, these nests are clean, consolidated, and recyclable.
Monday, November 18, 2013
Go Skateboarding! A Summer Flashback
38 years later, I still whip my board out while waiting for the bus, in that moment of calm and stillness and, dare I say, boredom, when I am at the mercy of the transit schedule and no other deadline is bearing down upon me. I skate the way I did in my youth – slopestyle (yes that’s me), curb tricks, handstands…
Here’s me on Go Skateboarding Day this past summer.
Cruising around the park ‘n ride gives me ample opportunity to police litter. Pick up a bottle or a rag or a bag or a butt, skate it over to the receptacle, repeat.
Recently I found two pair of jeans and a towel discarded in the lot. I left it for a week to make sure that nobody was coming back for it. They’re now washed and ready to donate to charity.
A week or two ago, I read the sign laying out the rules for park ‘n ride users. The “no skateboarding” rule was no surprise to me – skateboarders are used to being outlaws, despite the hard work of advocacy organizations such as Skaters for Public Skateparks to legalize skateboarding in public places (maybe it won’t surprise you to hear that I was a longtime member of SPS not to mention my involvement in local Seattle projects such as the Puget Sound Skateboard Association, and Marginal Way.)
One hallmark of skateboarders is that they appreciate having great places to skate. The skateboarding community has garnered a lot of appreciation from the nonskating community because of their tendency to police litter at skateparks. Those of us who are members of the “Old Man Army” habitually travel with brooms and dustpans to clean out the bottom of skate bowls. I like to take a tour around the park either on arrival or before I leave, to ensure the park is trash free.
When skateboarders first started to build Portland’s Burnside skatepark as a renegade project in the early 1990s, that area of Portland was high-crime and riddled with drugs and prostitution. The skaters not only cleaned up the site, they cleaned u the neighborhood. They brought in a new community, just as badass, but dedicated to good healthy fun. To this day, the city remembers the great things the Burnside crew did for the Portland community.
Being a part of a community that values making the world a better place makes me feel good. Reading the park ‘n ride sign, I got to musing – if I split my time at the facility between skateboarding and removing litter, do they cancel each other out?
Deep thoughts, readers… deep thoughts.
Skate on, and pick up trash.
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
When Nature is a Litterbug
Monday, October 7, 2013
One re-usable piece a day
Ok, in hindsight, finding a discarded axe in an alley in Los Angeles might have been less a reason to exult and more a reason to call the police, but I was young and it was a cool find.
While I’ve left my dumpster-diving days behind me, I am not blind to good finds. A few weeks ago I spied a perfectly good neoprene knee brace at the park ‘n ride I frequent. I left it or a day to make sure nobody was coming back for it. A bird had pooped on it, but after a trip through the washer it was good as new. I have a trick knee and I periodically have need for a brace.
Today was a two-find day. On my walk to work, after collecting a bagful of random detritus, I found a brand new bandanna. It was lying in the street. I peered at it carefully to make sure it didn’t contain anything objectionable, but it seemed to only carry stains from having been run over a few times.
Then, at the park ‘n ride on my way home, a re-usable plastic Starbucks coffee cup was discarded in the bushes. My keen sense of observation tells me that somebody was drinking liquor out of it. Both have received a very thorough series of washings in very hot soapy water, and are ready to go into rotation.
I draw the line at underwear, socks, shoes… you might be surprised how often those crop up. I have to admit I often have a difficult time bringing myself to pick those up to discard them. Hand washing – it’s not just for dinnertime.
Who can resist free stuff? Pick up a piece a day and it will happen!
Monday, September 30, 2013
The intangible benefits of garbage
Monday, September 16, 2013
The Biodegradable fallacy
Monday, September 9, 2013
No ifs ands or butts - probing smoker psychology
- A cigarette is a burning object and is not safe to place in a receptacle which may contain flammable materials. If there is no ashcan specifically made to contain burning materials, then putting the butt on the ground is the safe thing to do. A corollary of this line of thinking is that people who maintain public facilities have the obligation to provide proper disposal for flammable materials in all public spaces, and if these are not provided then a smoker cannot be held responsible for littering. (Question: if you put out the offending item by stepping on it, isn’t it ready for disposal? Or does the fact that it has been on the ground now make it dirty and offensive to touch? )
- Cigarettes are thrown from cars because butts left in the ashtray create a worse smell in the car than the residue left by the smoke.
- Cigarettes are small and seem like an innocuous thing to leave behind.
- Piles of butts gather in certain areas – outside businesses or at park and ride lots – and the presence of butts on the ground creates the perception that it’s ok – after all, what’s one more butt where there are already so many?
Monday, September 2, 2013
Ready-bagged trash day
Monday, August 26, 2013
Keep Portland Cleared
Sunday, July 21, 2013
One open water piece a day
We started out from the Center for Wooden Boats in Lake Union, motored out through the cut, and raised sail in Lake Washington not far from the new bridge construction that will double the size of the highway 520 floating bridge.
There wasn't much wind, so we spent our time relaxing, nibbling on cheese and salmon, knocking back some beers, and I spent a good amount of time in the lake indulging my love of open water swimming.
At the end of the day, nearly back to the dock, I spotted a floating object that was not supposed to there
Can you see it?
I whipped off my shirt and sprang into action, determined to bring the fugitive beer can to justice.
In a very short time, I succeeded in removing the offending item, and once again the cool waters of Lake Union were pristine. Once docked, I deposited the can in the nearest recycle bin.
Saturday, July 13, 2013
One sartorial piece a day
It all started when several of us went to Vancouver, Washington for a visit. We decided to go to the Kiggins to see Back to the Future. The Kiggins is a cool old theater that shows cool old movies. Anyway, somebody had the idea to go to a nearby vintage shop and buy vintage outfits to see the vintage movie. We kept our vintage outfits and re-used them to have a vintage Thanksgiving. My vintage outfit included a fedora, and everyone commented on how great it looked. So I became a hat guy.
This past Thanksgiving, the guys wore plaid shirts, boots, and cowboy hats. The gals wore saris and put a bindi on their third eye. Cowboys and Indians - Get it? I came away with a nice big black fedora (Value Village - 7 bucks!).
So, that's the hat story. Apparently we're a family that does theme holidays.
How does this relate to picking up one piece of garbage a day?
Well, recently, I was walking to my car from work, clutching a discarded paper coffee cup I'd picked up off the sidewalk. It was a warm sunny day. I had the hat on, only because I'd needed it in the rain when walking to work that morning. I passed a gnarled old guy with a ratty grey beard crossing the street. He cocked his head at me as I passed. "Nice hat", he said.
I still can't decide if he was giving me a serious compliment, or criticizing my choice of sunny day wear. Maybe he meant the discarded cup. Who knows. At least that cup wound up in the garbage where it belongs. At least I'm a hat guy.
Monday, April 1, 2013
Hot zones
Carry a bag
In Seattle, they are outlawing plastic grocery bags. That doesn't seem to keep our kitchen from accumulating them. I can't bring myself to toss out a perfectly reusable bag, so I've taken to carrying a few in my pockets, my car, and my backpack. So, when I come across a spot with several pieces of trash,like this grass parking strip on Yale Avenue and its associated gutter, I can clean up the whole area and leave it looking a little bit better.Before... and after!
Once my bag is full, I just drop it in the nearest bin. Job done!
What area would you pick to clean up? Keep your eyes open, and remember, when in doubt, just one piece is plenty!
Saturday, March 2, 2013
Seattle Proper
Denny Park, Seattle 3-1-2013
Since my last post (three years? I've been doing this for three years?), I've kept my resolution. Except for days when I don't leave the house (or hotel as the case my be), there is always at least one piece of trash to collect. I try to carry a plastoc bag in my backpack or jacket pocket so that I can fill it up and deposit it in thenext trash receptacle.
Since then, I've also moved jobs a couple of times, and I'm now working in downtown Seattle rather than the suburbs of the east side. I walk 10 blocks from the bus or my parking spot to my office. On the way there are a multitude of routes to take, and always trash on the streets.
There are a couple of locations I targeted right away for pickup. For example, the stretch of Denny adjacent to Cornish College has a strip of bushes where a lot of trash was collecting. I started picking up trash there. This week, I walked through there and the area was immaculately groomed. Did somebody notice? Is this a manifestation of Broken Windows theory taking hold? Another location I started to police was on Fairview, and seemed to be a recently abandoned homeless nest. A montha fter I started picking up trash, somebody came through and cleaned up the whole place.
You can make an impact! One piece a day is all it takes :-)
-Nick