Subj : Packrats
To   : Dave Drum
From : Ruth Haffly
Date : Sun Jan 07 2024 15:43:07

Hi Dave,

DD> Ours did the same - except our usual day is Wednesday. I use Waste
DD> Management (because they're union) who e-mails me a "heads up" before
DD> every holidays which changes their usual schedule.

RH> I'm pretty sure we use those folks too. Town of WF contracts with them
RH> and their fee is included in our water/sewer bill. The WF town web site
RH> and local newspaper publish their holiday schedule but we can usually
RH> figure on a week with a federal holiday, trash pick up will be a day
RH> later. Green waste is usually picked up sometime during the week, after
RH> the Monday holiday.

DD> If you mean "recyclables" by "green waste" a separate company does

I should have said "yard waste" instead of "green waste" They're 2
separate groups; yard waste is branches, clippings, etc and green waste
is recylables. All are picked up by the same company; yard waste one
day, green waste and trash (separate runs, same truck) usually the next
day. Our recycle is co-mixed in the can and on the truck but in the
house I separate paper from cans, bottles, etc.

DD> that on contract to the city. They also do regular trash/garbage
DD> pickup but DD> in regular 'garbage' trucks. The recycling trucks
have compartments DD> and there are different coloured totes for the
resident to use. One DD> for old plastic bottles, bags, etc. Another
for old newsprint and DD> cardboard and a third for metals.

DD> The company also maintains a recycling center where they accept sorted
DD> recyclables and buy aluminum cans for ca$h.

Those don't seem to exist around here; last one I remember was when we
lived in AZ.

DD>      8<----- EDIT -----.8

DD> season". At that time (early 1950s) most wives were "house" wives.
DD> And they knew when they heard the iron wheels on the sidewalk that
DD> I had just picked vegetables on offer at good prices.

RH> Dad also planted cucumbers, only way Mom used them was in a mild pickle
RH> (about half and half water and vinegar with a bit of sugar and celery
RH> seed). Between his fussy eating an her non creative cooking, we were
RH> fed but it wasn't until I went to college, then got married, that I
RH> found out about a wider range of foods. Joining the echo here expanded
RH> my cooking/eating horizons even more.

DD> Sounds like "bread & butter" pickles.

Not really as there wasn't enough vinegar to make much of a pickle. B&B
pickles have more spicing to them as well.


DD> Railroad dining car galleys are,
DD> Here's another bread recipe. I'll be making this again tonight for
DD> a potluck at my work tomorrow ...... well, one loaf. The other is
DD> going to get turned into Reuben sandwiches at home.

DD>       Title: Rustic Rye Bread
DD>  Categories: Breads
DD>       Yield: 24 slices

RH> OK, my "standard" rye bread is the Pillsbury one, thanks to you digging
RH> up the recipe for me. I know I had it for years, but probably in one of
RH> our military moves it got thrown out or shredded with other papers.

RH> Next day--correction, we use Republic for trash pick up. Used to use
RH> Waste Management, have in other places but saw the Republic truck
RH> today, across the street.

DD> We have a choice of three companies. Waste Management, Republic and
DD> the one which does the recycling programme, plus regular trash pick-up
DD> and
DD> is locally owned, Lake Area Disposal. Lake Area uses white trucks,
DD> Waste Management uses green trucks and Republic's trucks are blue.

Republic does our regular trash, recyle and yard waste. IIRC, Waste
Management used to do the pick ups for the area but Raleigh (we're tied
into them for water, sewer and trash) changed contracters a few years
ago.

---
Catch you later,
Ruth
rchaffly{at}earthlink{dot}net  FIDO 1:396/45.28


... If you think you are confused now, wait until I explain it!

--- PPoint 3.01
* Origin: Sew! That's My Point (1:396/45.28)