Author Archive

Hard times call for gleaning (new study)

Sunday, February 8, 2009

The French have a long, proud history (protected by law and immortalized in film) of preventing produce waste by opening up their farms after harvest to allow scavengers  to collect the left overs.  Gleaning still takes place in the countryside, but works a little differently in modern cities, where it takes the form of collecting discarded fruits and veg after farmers markets and from commercial trash bins.

And in these tough economic times, gleaning or “doing the end of the market” is more common than ever in Paris and smaller cities, especially among youth, the homeless and…the elderly.

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Reuters/Eric Gaillard

To get a better sense of who gleans, how and why, the French High Commissioner for Active Solidarity Against Poverty commissioned a report on the topic from a French think tank called The Center for Study and Research on Philanthropy (CerPhi).  So, CerPhi conducted a qualitative study, scoping out prime gleaning spots in Paris and two smaller cities and conducting in-depth interviews with over forty men and women spotted in the act.

While they didn’t exclude people who consider gleaning a political or environmental act, the report focuses on those who glean out of financial necessity.  In other words, everybody but the freegans.

The most interesting take-away is the fuller profile of urban gleaners the study provides. For the most part, they are young people, retirees and the homeless.  Young people have the fewest health and safety concerns about eating discarded produce.  Longtime homeless men use gleaning as a survival mechanism and continue to do it even when they have housing.  Retirees glean out of financial necessity and are, for the most part ashamed of gleaning (with the exception of a small minority who barter what they glean and gain self-worth from the practice).

The study specifically investigated the relationship between gleaners and social security to better inform government  programs.  What they found reveals a lot about pride and the challenges of aging in a failing economy.  Take these two quotes, for example:

Woman, 82 years old, Paris

Have you been “doing market ends”  for a long time?

It’s not really market ends, I buy, I see if I see something.

I think I saw you last Saturday.

Yes, Saturday I was here.  If I see something, I pick it up but I buy a lot.  Really, I do, I buy a lot, and I do it if I find something, otherwise I mainly buy,

Did you buy everything in that bag?

No, I didn’t buy everything, but I bought a good part of it, a large part of this here was picked up, it depends on the day.

Woman, 75 years old, Paris

Are you familiar with food aid, like soup kitchens?

No, I don’t go there.

Why not?

Because my grandchildren work and that doesn’t interest me.

If you read French, the full report is a heartbreaking page-turner full of nuanced questions about what gleaning means to different groups, concepts of transiance and urgency as well as larger societal questions about the relationship between hunger, public assistance and stigma.

And it’s getting harder and harder to be a gleaner, the study reports, as farmers markets and supermarkets go to greater lengths to destroy food waste and discourage scavenging.  Sadly, the report lacks clear-cut recomendations.  I’d love to hear your thoughts on the topic.

PS Thanks, Gillian, for sending me an article on this study in the first place.

The MicroFueler

Thursday, February 5, 2009

My friend Jen always finds the coolest stuff on blogs and is so sparse and disciplined about what she shares with others that you know: if she’s passing it on, it’s worth checking out.  Case in point, this DVICE blurb on Sierra Nevada’s MicroFueler.  Isn’t it the prettiest pump you ever did see?

Sierra Nevada's MicroFueler

For more on the beer-dregs-to-ethanol process, check out the original post on CNET.  For $10k, you can buy one for your home.  They should market these things to university frat houses.  What better companion to the kegerator in the kitchen than a microfueler in the driveway?

It’s been a gassy couple of days on the internet.  Yesterday the HuffPo posted on garbage-powered garbage trucks in Northern England, then this morning I found this blurb on busses in Oslo powered by methane collected from the city’s RAW SEWAGE. [Editor’s note: I’m not sure I’m as forward thinking as the Scandos on this one.  Perhaps Victor can act as cultural ambassador.  Is it just me, or are poo-powered busses a little gross?]

Robotic Garbage Trucks

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Berlin signed a contract this week with Waste Away, Inc for a new fleet of robotic garbage trucks to start collecting trash from city homes. This trend, first started by rubbish clearance services in Bristol, has picked up in popularity around the world. Don’t be surprised if they end up in your city.

Operated by a joystick (fun!), hydraulic arm trash trucks have been tried out in other cities, including some in the U.S.  They require bigger trash cans and allow for just one sanitation worker to man an entire route.  I guess the days of one guy driving the truck and another one or two riding on the back and hopping off to collect the trash are over.  While sanitation is hard, unenviable work, I hope this new technology doesn\’t reduce the need for sanitation workers.  Our poor economy needs jobs!

Side note: in scanning the internets for images of these new trucks, I came across this gem of a children\’s book: I Stink by Kate and Jim McMullan.  It\’s the first-person tale of a garbage truck and companion reader to I\’m Dirty, the first-person tale of a front-end loader.  Check out this totally endearing review over at A Wrung Sponge.  I\’m adding both to my list of trash books for kids.

Upcycling

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Upcycling.  It’s all the rage.  Want proof?  Just take a click through the internet this week.

Curbly posted on recycled kitchenware lighting, via the fantastic garblog Green Upgader.

Colander lamp by French designer "Garbage"

Colander lamp by French designer "Garbage"

The Temas Blog did a video roundup of Brazilian trashion.  This clip of looks fashioned from drink can tabs is my favorite.

Wooster Collective found not one, but two posts worth of fur coat upcycling by street artist Neozoon.

Upcycling ala Neozoon

Upcycling ala Neozoon

And the crafty mavens of Etsy shared all kinds of DIY upcycling for Valentine’s.  I love this men’s shirt turned party dress.

shirt-dress

Upcycled shirt dress

Also, the heart jean skirt is literally badass.

The green nuns of NYC

Sunday, February 1, 2009

If you haven’t yet,  you should really read Joseph Huff-Hannon’s fabulous piece about an order of nuns on a faith-driven mission to live the greenest life possible.  Go ahead and click through now, the rest of this post is just me gushing.

Photo by Josh Haner for The New York Times

Photo by Josh Haner for The New York Times

The story centers around the sisters’ efforts to build an eco-friendly convent and is full of fun scenes, like nuns sitting around  a table covered in BlackBerries negociating local food deliveries.

I love this article for a bunch of different reasons.  First of all, it is told respectfully.  It would be really easy for a piece about city nuns going green to feel expoitative or snarky.  This doesn’t.

Second, it takes place in Morningside Heights, my childhood neighborhood and home to the country’s finest journalism school (which I also attended).  The farmer’s market cited in the article is just in front of the University gate closest to the J school—a building teeming with ambitious young reporters and veteren journalists alike, all of whom are among the most news-infomed humans on the planet.  I love that this reporter—a J schooler himself—lifted a rock so close to home and revealed a world we never knew existed.

Third, it dresses dull waste politics up in compelling details.

Fourth, it covers faith in a fresh way.

Fifth and finally, it was sent to me directly by the author, allowing for a lazy Sunday of blogging from bed, thinking about the old hood and researching green building materials such as concrete visually and structurally enhanced by recycled glass (which the nuns hope to use for thier new HQ).

Thanks, Huff-Hannon.  I’ll be looking out for your byline.

Victor! everydaytrash gains a voice

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Victor in action

Victor, perhaps blogging

Dear Trashies,

Today is an exciting day for everydaytrash.com.  The keen observer may have already noticed that the last post boasts an unfamiliar byline.  Please welcome Victor Bernhardtz, eurotipster extraordinaire turned contributing editor extraoridinaire.  Based in Stockholm, Sweden, Victor wears many hats: broadcast journalist, blogger, activist, all-around rockstar.  He also shares my passion for looking more closely at what we throw away—as evidenced by his stellar first post on recycling crimes in Sweden.  I am thrilled to have a partner in crime and proud that with Victor’s occasional contributions the blog will be even more international.

xoxo

Leila

“Rubbish is our life.”

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Regardless of the nuances of international debates, I think all sides can agree it sucks to live in Gaza.

Remeber the sewage floods a couple years ago?  Or that story about the Red Cross having so much trouble bringing contstruction materials into the area that they turned to recycling rubble?

Ever-resourceful, the people of Gaza are no strangers to recycling, reusing and selling scrap.  The Arab Times reports that since the latest violence, Gazans are increasingly turning to trash picking for much needed cash.

Shaaban, 27, walks by, his head down looking for a bottle or better still a container that he could sell on.

‘I used to work in construction before. But since I was wounded, my hand has been paralysed,’ says the father of three, showing a large scar on the arm from the Hamas-Fatah battle of 2007.

Today he relies on UN handouts, including several kilos of rice and flour every three months.

‘It’s nowhere near enough,’ he says.

‘Rubbish is our life. You might as well say we don’t have a life.’

dash weh yuh trash

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

I just saw this amazing reggae recycling video on Visible Trash.  Little Shiva always finds the quirkiest stuff.  And why does everything sound better in a Caribbean accent??

Tire Furniture

Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Brazilian nonprofit makes furniture from scrap tires

Brazilian nonprofit makes furniture from scrap tires

Keith R. over at The Temas blog sent me this link to photos he’s posted from a Brazilian organization called Vida Amiga whose members take old tires and fashion them into furniture, then sell the furniture.  Recycling plus skills building = double sustainable.  I love stories that involve selling things made of trash.  Thanks for the link, Keith!

P.S. The post includes a fantastic roundup of past Temas posts on creative recycling.

Lagosian bottle opener

Monday, January 26, 2009
Ok kids, I’m back from Nigeria.  The most everydaytrash-worthy item I came across while on the road in ever-resourceful Africa?  This handy bottle opener pounded out of a piece of Aluminum tubing that once served to line the windows of a nearby building.
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Pounded aluminum bottle opener

lagos-074

Neighborhood building

lagos-076

Bottle opener in action

Just look at all those leverage-producing surfaces, perfect for industrial use at such establishements as this roadside bar where I passed several lovely hours before my flight home.

Optimistic Trash

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

partyparty-146

I took a little road trip to DC these past 24 hours.  Getting to and from the National Mall without losing my people was chilly madness, but worth it to shed a few layers of pessimism, if only for the afternoon.  Enjoy the rest of the week, I’ll be back Monday if not before.

xoxo

Leila

Upcycling for the Inauguration

Monday, January 19, 2009

I’m heading to DC tomorrow to feel the streets. And then it’s off to Lagos through the weekend for the day job, so advance warning posting may be light this week. In the meantime, enjoy the side bar, archives AND this stellar new webisode from the suburbly-named Threadbanger.

Vodpod videos no longer available.

They pack a lot into six minutes, including two amazing upcycling facts:

1) Number six plastic—such as those clear clam shell containers from the salad bar—can be used to create superfly customized shrinky dinks! [More on this amazing recycling trick from Curbly]

2) You can create your own teeshirt stencil by printing out your design on an old clear plastic folder (finally a use for all that now-awkward A4 stationary aquired during my European junior year abroad).

I love everything about this episode: the shellacked name chain and Obama earrings, the DIY hipster tees, even the brief ad for wePCtv promoting an interview with my internet crush, hip hop DJ, blogger and vlogger Jay Smooth of Underground Railroad, Hip Hop Music and illdoctrine. If there have to be ads, let them be for quality content.

Redefining Trash

Saturday, January 17, 2009

By defining coal as a solid waste, the town of Babylon, Long Island is able to tap into sanitation funds to give its residents cash upfront for energy-efficient renovations.  The Times reports:

A few weeks ago the Chamberses became the first residents in Babylon to have energy-efficient improvements completed.

Any of Babylon’s 65,000 homeowners who qualify can receive up to $12,000 worth of energy-efficient work done by employees that the town contracts with.

Very cleaver, Babylonians.

Unsolicited Fashion

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

This sassy little number—a dress beautifully crafted from junk mail—has made the rounds of the internets.  My friend Rachel saw it on A Dress A Day via Recycle Runway.

Fan mail dress by Nancy Judd

Fan mail dress by Nancy Judd

According to the designer’s site (from which I ripped these photos):

“Colorful junk mail (catalogues, solicitations, newspaper ads) were folded into fans and sewn onto a skirt and dress made of scrap canvas and a mantilla for the hair. The vintage shoes are covered with old postage stamps. The inspiration for this outfit came from the origami peacock earrings- Nancy Judd made them in 1988 when she designed and sold origami jewelry for a summer job.”

She pairs her piece with some helpful info on how to reduce your junk mail.

Thanks for the tip, Rachel!

Weekly Compactor

Tuesday, January 13, 2009
financialtimes

Financial Times dress by Gary Harvey

It’s been a while since I’ve done a roundup.  Trash news has been exceptionally dry lately.  Luckily, there are blogs.  This week: