Here s another great tip from BobVila.com. On average, Americans recycle less than a third of our waste. If we doubled our efforts and recycled 60 percent, we d save 35 million barrels of oil a year. The best way to get your whole family involved in the recycling effort is to set up a system that s easy to use. Color-code and label bins with pictures if necessary, and post instructions where everyone can read them. Offer kids the incentive of keeping the refund for washing out, organizing and redeeming the bottles and cans. Whether your community collects recyclables at the curb or you bring them to a recycling center yourself, get a list of what they take, what you re required to sort and what can be crushed. That will determine the number and size of containers you need. Check your city or town s web site or call 1-800-cleanup to find the recycling center nearest you. Some communities provide recycling bins for curbside collection, but you ll probably want to keep the muddy bins outside and set up a sorting or collecting center inside. Locate it as close as possible to the source of most of the waste: the kitchen. Building your recycling center into your kitchen cabinets is ideal. Cabinet makers now offer a great pull-out drawer or even corner carousels with specially made plastic bins to sort recyclables and keep them out of sight and out of the reach of small children and pets. If you don t have room in your kitchen, stack or line a shelf with dedicated bins or baskets in the mud room, laundry room, basement or garage, or convert a closet into your recycling center. Keep the can crusher, extra bags, twine, scissors and any other tools and supplies there. If your recycling center is far away and you don t go very often, store sorted materials outside the house in tightly covered bins or barrels. Make sure containers are well-rinsed to avoid attracting pests and to keep recycling a pleasant job for everyone. Find out more at BobVila.com: the ultimate home improvement web site! 2008 BobVila.com
Bob visits with Leo Boudreau to learn how to recycle hardwood flooring from one room to another on a remodel project. First the floor must be salvaged. To do this a pry bar is use to lift and remove the wood piece by pieces in the opposite direction of installation. Then the wood is separated in grades depending on what shape the tongue and grooves are in or if they are there at all. From an economic standpoint, if the old floor was in good shape and the homeowner likes the look it makes sense, even in Boston�s high cost labor market. Leo shows how the old flooring is installed as if it were new flooring. Ryley shows Bob how to attach two groove ends together by using a spline.
Did you know that if your old carpet is made of Nylon 6, it can be recycled? Over two hundred million pounds of old carpet is saved from landfills every year through the recycling of Nylon 6. Through a process of depolymerization and purification, Nylon 6 can be reharvested and reused in new carpet, with no loss of quality whatsoever.
management costs rise and recycling options increase. Even if you already recycle, check your municipality Setting up a recycling system entails thinking how often you recycle and what your town reduce, reuse, recycle. Reduce what the good reason, say recycling and organizing experts
the curb? In states where recycling is mandated or even encouraged for and set prices based on recycling material. Neighbors diligently offices, they insist they recycle and include an added fee for recycling in the weekly hauling charge
best place to learn about recycling is to call whatever company and must take trash and recycling to a landfill, transfer station, or recycle center, contact them to curbside pickup for trash and recycling. The recycled things may