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Only got me burds and foxes. Me crockerdyuls in me mote are plastic.Hain't you gottid any pets or wild animals that might eat it?
Got me thinking about how bins have changed since I were a nipper. We had one bin, galvanised steel which lasted forever. Everything including hot ashes went in. The council bin men used to tilt them and roll them on the bottom rim to the bin wagon, lifted them up manually and tipped the contents into the wagon. They must have been knackered after a days work.Shud me left over aggis go int garden bin or burnable bin?
Your blokes were wusses! Our blokes, in Hull, used to bring an empty bin with them to ours at the end of the garden near the house, they'd tip our bin into theirs then very cleverly lift and spin so the bin ended up on a shoulder. They'd then walk it to the truck and chuck the contents in. So that way they never needed to make a return trip to each house. Two trips down the garden rather than 4 each time.Got me thinking about how bins have changed since I were a nipper. We had one bin, galvanised steel which lasted forever. Everything including hot ashes went in. The council bin men used to tilt them and roll them on the bottom rim to the bin wagon, lifted them up manually and tipped the contents into the wagon. They must have been knackered after a days work.
Wusses. Didn't they know how to run?They'd then walk it to the truck
TBH, and you'll find this hard to believe, some of them did run, or nearly. guess if they finished early they could just go home!!Wusses. Didn't they know how to run?
When eye were a nippa we had a plastic black round bin wivva black plastic bin bag innit. Bin men would come round un take said bag oot and leave er nuvva one chucked somewhere. Later ont bin twuk would come and different bin men would chuck bags int twuk.Got me thinking about how bins have changed since I were a nipper. We had one bin, galvanised steel which lasted forever. Everything including hot ashes went in. The council bin men used to tilt them and roll them on the bottom rim to the bin wagon, lifted them up manually and tipped the contents into the wagon. They must have been knackered after a days work.
We had that anorl, before wheelie bins arrived. Still got a couple of the bins, use them to store things like spare builders bags and small bits of scaffold tower.When eye were a nippa we had a plastic black round bin wivva black plastic bin bag innit. Bin men would come round un take said bag oot and leave er nuvva one chucked somewhere.
Eye is int sainsberrys. Just spottid a haggis. Gorrit. Never had one before.
eh???? No such thing as left-over haggis. That's tomorrow's breakfast!
Mornin all.
New rad looks nice, now temp gauge has packed up.
Always summink
How's @Dippypud doing today?
Our guys carried a wicker basket which they emptied 2 or 3 bins into then over the shoulder and back to the dust cart. Less waste in those days mind, as any that burned went on the coal fire.Got me thinking about how bins have changed since I were a nipper. We had one bin, galvanised steel which lasted forever. Everything including hot ashes went in. The council bin men used to tilt them and roll them on the bottom rim to the bin wagon, lifted them up manually and tipped the contents into the wagon. They must have been knackered after a days work.
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