Any shame in trash picking?
#26
Senior Member


Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 17,687
Likes: 12
From: n.w. superdrome
Bikes: 1 trek, serotta, rih, de Reus, Pogliaghi and finally a Zieleman! and got a DeRosa
Nice find.
The only thing I might do is sand the top and put on a coat of shellac (which you have
from shellacing your handlebar tape).
marty
The only thing I might do is sand the top and put on a coat of shellac (which you have
from shellacing your handlebar tape).
marty
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#27
.


Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 12,769
Likes: 38
From: Rocket City, No'ala
Bikes: 2014 Trek Domane 5.2, 1985 Pinarello Treviso, 1990 Gardin Shred, 2006 Bianchi San Jose
I knew a man that was disabled from the Fire Dept. and he made extra cash by fixing up stuff he got people set out by the curb.
Around here, stuff does not sit long. If it even looks remotely usable, people will snag it. I had a guy stop in front of my house. I figured he'd spotted the pound or two of copper tubing from the plumbing job. He didn't just want that, he wanted all the galvanized and the cast iron stuff, too. I helped him load it up because I wasn't exactly sure if the city would get it.
My old harvest gold toilet, white globe living room lighting, avocado green stove exhaust hood, old front door, old screen door, box full of old switch plate covers, and a ton of old nails and screws in buckets all got picked up in less than two hours and I lived on a dead end street! I hadn't had time to put the door hardware out yet so I put it into a box with a sign on it. They came back and got that, too.
Nowadays, I have Purple Heart pick up stuff(they got our old washer and dryer that still worked fine). Or, I take stuff to Habit for Humanity. I've bought four houses in ten years so they've gotten a lot of old light fixtures, hardware, cabinets, doors, paint, and assorted leftover building supplies.
My wife and I supplied several rooms with furniture we found on the street. I once got 10 1 x 12 boards that were painted and in mint condition. Each one was over 6 feet long. Made perfect shelves in my storage barn.
If you can use it, grab it. I'm sure the people that put it there figured somebody would come get it.
Around here, stuff does not sit long. If it even looks remotely usable, people will snag it. I had a guy stop in front of my house. I figured he'd spotted the pound or two of copper tubing from the plumbing job. He didn't just want that, he wanted all the galvanized and the cast iron stuff, too. I helped him load it up because I wasn't exactly sure if the city would get it.
My old harvest gold toilet, white globe living room lighting, avocado green stove exhaust hood, old front door, old screen door, box full of old switch plate covers, and a ton of old nails and screws in buckets all got picked up in less than two hours and I lived on a dead end street! I hadn't had time to put the door hardware out yet so I put it into a box with a sign on it. They came back and got that, too.
Nowadays, I have Purple Heart pick up stuff(they got our old washer and dryer that still worked fine). Or, I take stuff to Habit for Humanity. I've bought four houses in ten years so they've gotten a lot of old light fixtures, hardware, cabinets, doors, paint, and assorted leftover building supplies.
My wife and I supplied several rooms with furniture we found on the street. I once got 10 1 x 12 boards that were painted and in mint condition. Each one was over 6 feet long. Made perfect shelves in my storage barn.
If you can use it, grab it. I'm sure the people that put it there figured somebody would come get it.
#28
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2008
Posts: 4,571
Likes: 16
From: Oxnard, CA
Bikes: 2009 Fuji Roubaix RC; 2011 Fuji Cross 2.0; '92 Diamond Back Ascent EX
At the equipment yard where I work, we have a dump pile in the back. People often set usable items near the pile and they disappear quite quickly. I'm definately not above grabbing a useful item out of the trash (my current commuter bike is a dumpster find). As kids, a friend of mine and I knew the trash pickup days for all the neighborhoods around us. We'd cruise up and down the alleys looking for bikes and other stuff right before the trash was picked up. This was late 60s/ealy 70s and the best find I remember was a Shwinn Stingray that was mint except for one broken spoke. And like many others, we shop at, and donate to, thrift stores on a regular basis.
#30
Keeper of the SLDB

Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 1,577
Likes: 6
From: Springfield, MO
Bikes: '75 Schwinn Paramount P-10, '86 Ritchey Commando, '87 Schwinn Cimarron, '91 Trek 990, '87 Schwinn High Sierra, '73 Schwinn Super Sport, '4? Schwinn New World, '76 Swing Bike.
I like to trash pick and would do it more often if my wife let me. She often tells the story of driving behind a Wal-Mart and seeing an old man rooting around in a dumpster. She thought "How sad ..." and then recognized him as her Grandfather! He was digging out the large plastic frosting buckets tossed out by the bakery. They are quite handy ...
Hang out here for awhile -- it's fun (or it was a couple of years ago anyway):
https://groups.google.com/group/alt.dumpster/topics
Bob
Hang out here for awhile -- it's fun (or it was a couple of years ago anyway):
https://groups.google.com/group/alt.dumpster/topics
Bob
#31
Senior Member
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 219
Likes: 1
From: Blaine, MN
Bikes: 92 Paramount Series 7 650c, 1984 Bianchi Alloro, 1995 Specialized Stumpjumper Cro-mo
I love this thread! I have made a hobby of turning people trash into profits for the past several summers. The highlight of my year is volunteering at one of the local clean up days in an uppity community near me. Since I started going 3 or 4 years ago I have cleared more than $2500 in "junk" that I turned around and sold on Craigslist. The best item was a 1 year old fully galvanized boat trailer that I sold the next day for $700! I don't have enough time or space to type it all up (I do keep spreadsheets showing every transaction!) but the best score yet was a Rainbow playset for my kids - new value is more than $6000 - FREE! I have built a shed and all the shelves in my garage out of materials salvaged from construction site dumpsters and I have sold off more truck toppers, lawnmowers, bikes, etc. than I care to think about. I have been mowing my lawn with a lawnmower than someone on my block had in the garage for the past 3 or 4 years - and several of my friends are mowing their lawns with my free lawnmowers too! I have gotten free or extremely cheap bikes for everyone I know from the trash, garage sales and thrift stores and everyone loves it. The funny part is that my friends and family make fun of me in one breath and in the next they want me to find them stuff! It is all good fun and I hate to see useful stuff get thrown in the garbage. My 3/4 ton Dodge pickup even runs on FREE waste vegetable oil I get from a local restaurant! Anyway - don't worry about what anyone else thinks. Good times.
#32
First, good save! My 1920 home has two such workbenches that remained from the previous owners when we bought it in 1990. You will use your workbench daily.
Second, re: trashpicking in general -- my wife has long picked useful items from the trash in our neighborhood, which is a historic district. She used to supply her sister's antique shop with items found on the curb. I, too, have rescued a couple of bikes in the distant past -- don't remember what they were now. The scrappers our neighborhood regularly. Now that I have discovered this site, I now understand better the value of bicycles, so I'll be more active in checking the curbs on trash day.
Second, re: trashpicking in general -- my wife has long picked useful items from the trash in our neighborhood, which is a historic district. She used to supply her sister's antique shop with items found on the curb. I, too, have rescued a couple of bikes in the distant past -- don't remember what they were now. The scrappers our neighborhood regularly. Now that I have discovered this site, I now understand better the value of bicycles, so I'll be more active in checking the curbs on trash day.
#33
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 2,638
Likes: 14
From: Maidstone, Kent, England
Bikes: 1970 Holdsworth Mistral, Vitus 979, Colnago Primavera, Corratec Hydracarbon, Massi MegaTeam, 1935 Claud Butler Super Velo, Carrera Virtuoso, Viner, 1953 Claud Butler Silver Jubilee, 1954 Holdsworth Typhoon, 1966 Claud Butler Olympic Road, 1982 Claud
Nice find!
#35
Senior Member

Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 4,035
Likes: 2,116
From: NW Ohio
Bikes: 1984 Miyata 310, 1986 Schwinn Sierra, 1987 Ross Mt. Hood, 1988 Schwinn LeTour, 1988 Trek 400T, 1981 Fuji S12-1977 Univega Grand Rally, S LTD, 1973 Sears Free Spirit 531, 197? FW Evans
Around here, some people put things out a couple days early if they might be useful to someone. That gives the trash pickers time to get it before the garbage man does.
#36
#37
Around my way we have regular 'hard waste' days several times each year, for people who want to dispose of stuff like that work bench. Such items can be put out front several days in advance, those people interested will cruise around town checking for items they can make use of, and what's left over by the scheduled collection day will be carted away free of charge.
#38
Here is my ghetto workbench that I made from a dead washer, an old platform bed, and odds and ends that people left on the corner with a "free" sign.
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"Real wars of words are harder to win. They require thought, insight, precision, articulation, knowledge, and experience. They require the humility to admit when you are wrong. They recognize that the dialectic is not about making us look at you, but about us all looking together for the truth."
#39
A friend of mine was moving and he gave me a crate full of mtb parts, said he was ging to throw it away. I am looking at the boxes, ready to ship, of about 250$ worth of his stuff. Probably split the money with him, it was about 400$.
My first road bike a few years ago was found by my brother in law in the garbage near Boston. Gave it to me with new tires for xmas and I've been riding ever since. Cannondale with 105 parts, still using brake levers on another bike.
I am now a regular at a local bike shop dumpster: free old tires and tubes! people get new tires and tubes and the store guys get free or cheap new ones, so they throw them out.
I live where there is no middle class, and people have gear, regardless of class, and they get new gear. this provides a good supply of thrift store/yardsale/garbage items that can go straight to ebay and make me money.
My first road bike a few years ago was found by my brother in law in the garbage near Boston. Gave it to me with new tires for xmas and I've been riding ever since. Cannondale with 105 parts, still using brake levers on another bike.
I am now a regular at a local bike shop dumpster: free old tires and tubes! people get new tires and tubes and the store guys get free or cheap new ones, so they throw them out.
I live where there is no middle class, and people have gear, regardless of class, and they get new gear. this provides a good supply of thrift store/yardsale/garbage items that can go straight to ebay and make me money.
#40
I just remebered: Hiker boxes. When you are thru hiking the Appalachian Trail, hostels, POs, everywhere hikers frequent has hiker boxes. when you get mail, or just go thru your pack, and find something you don't want, that is still good, you leave it in the hiker box. Food, gear, everything. Example: I am at the store, and don't want a whole tub of peanut butter, I just take what I want in my pack in my main container, mixed with jelly, and leave the rest for someone else to use. Or, I might find both in another town and use them from the hiker box and not have to $pend.
Too bad there's not much like that in real life...
Too bad there's not much like that in real life...
#41
That looks like an amazing work bench! There is a nearly identical one for sale at a antique store in town for $850. I'd probably be interested in it if I had a place for it.
All of the stuff in my house, except my bed, was given to me prior to curbing it, or picked up curbside.
Kitchen table, coffee table, couch, chairs, silverware, teapot, dresser, porch light............even a couple of bikes
All of the stuff in my house, except my bed, was given to me prior to curbing it, or picked up curbside.
Kitchen table, coffee table, couch, chairs, silverware, teapot, dresser, porch light............even a couple of bikes
#43
Senior Member
Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 754
Likes: 0
From: Enola, PA
Bikes: Too many to count. Changes on a frequent basis.
I have been collecting bikes out of the trash for almost 5 years. A friend of mine recently opened up a CO-OP in our area for low income kids with all the bikes he and I have and a local Bike club have collected over the years. So yes, I find no problem in dumpster diving. I wish I had a shirt like The Figment has. I would wear it with pride.
#44
Full Member
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 431
Likes: 13
Found this one leaning next to a dumpster the other day...figured I'd grab it to build another gravity bike for my buddies:

While I was loading it in the car I noticed an unexpected suprise:

Shame it's just the drive side crank, but trash pickers can be too choosey.
My wife yells at me all the time for trying to watch the trash cans and the road at the same time, but I can't help myself. Something about rescuing cool old stuff from an eternity in a landfill just makes me all fuzzy inside.
Steve
While I was loading it in the car I noticed an unexpected suprise:
Shame it's just the drive side crank, but trash pickers can be too choosey.
My wife yells at me all the time for trying to watch the trash cans and the road at the same time, but I can't help myself. Something about rescuing cool old stuff from an eternity in a landfill just makes me all fuzzy inside.
Steve
#45
www.theheadbadge.com



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From: Southern Florida
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#46
Thrifty Bill

Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 23,639
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From: Mans of NC & SW UT Desert
Bikes: 86 Katakura Silk, 87 Prologue X2, 88 Cimarron LE, 1975 Sekai 4000 Professional, 73 Paramount, plus more
+1 the shame is that we are in a disposable, throw away society.
+1 keep the old top in tact, its part of the character of the bench. If you must have a smooth top, cut a sheet of plywood or OSB to fit over it, but I would leave it as is.
My neighborhood is full of lazy folks that throw out all kinds of reusable stuff. Why they are too lazy to drop it off at Goodwill, which is less than a mile away, escapes me. We talk about being green, then we fill up the landfill with totally usable, recyclable stuff. I picked up a bottom end bike yesterday, that I will drop off at the local Goodwill. If you can't use it yourself, pass it on!!
+1 keep the old top in tact, its part of the character of the bench. If you must have a smooth top, cut a sheet of plywood or OSB to fit over it, but I would leave it as is.
My neighborhood is full of lazy folks that throw out all kinds of reusable stuff. Why they are too lazy to drop it off at Goodwill, which is less than a mile away, escapes me. We talk about being green, then we fill up the landfill with totally usable, recyclable stuff. I picked up a bottom end bike yesterday, that I will drop off at the local Goodwill. If you can't use it yourself, pass it on!!
#47
Dances With Cars
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 10,527
Likes: 0
From: Toronto, Canada
Bikes: TBL Onyx Pro(ss converted), Pake SS (starting to look kinda pimped)
I got a nice set or rollers from the trash , all that it needed was a new band. If it can be liberated from potential landfill and given a new lease on life no shame in that. I recently scored about 400$ in ceramic tiles (still in their boxes) that will help make the new shower as well. Those were damned heavy bringing home in several trips on my bike, luckily it was only a few blocks from the house.
All our old clothing and stuff like that goes to Goodwill, or the Diabetes Assoc.
All our old clothing and stuff like that goes to Goodwill, or the Diabetes Assoc.
Last edited by TRaffic Jammer; 07-04-08 at 07:07 AM.
#48
Senior Member
Joined: May 2008
Posts: 294
Likes: 0
From: Portland, Maine
Bikes: '85 Univega Safari-Ten (fixed), '84 Univega Supra-Sport, '85 Univega Gran Turismo, '86 Bianch Giro, '93 Cannondale R300, '68 Raleigh Gran-Prix (S3X fixed), '74 Schwinn Sprint (fixed), '5? Raleigh Lenton, '73 Raleigh Sprite, '36 Three Spires... etc.
My old computer ran on 2 sticks of ram that I rescued from the garbage and a CDR drive that I found in the parking lot of my building.
I don't trash pick very often, and I never pick things that I don't have a personal use for, but if I see something I need that's just waiting for the garbage truck, I see no shame in grabbing it.
I don't trash pick very often, and I never pick things that I don't have a personal use for, but if I see something I need that's just waiting for the garbage truck, I see no shame in grabbing it.
#49
Full Member
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 431
Likes: 13
You and I think alike...that was the first thing that crossed my mind when I saw the DuraAce arm. I know BITD guys used to run DA on their BMX race bikes, but this Schwinn is pretty far removed from those days...wonder what else is laying around the garage it came from...
Steve
#50
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 2,383
Likes: 22
From: Calgary
Bikes: 2018 Ghost Square Trekking B2.8 e-bike; 2015 MEC Cote gravel/touring bike; 1985 Boyes-Rosser tourer, now outfitted as Winter Trundle-bike
No shame in trash picking... you're recycling! My boyfriend and his family, on the other hand, are HORRIFIED at the very thought - call it a cultural difference (they have money; my family does not). If I find anythign good in the alleys I plan on saying it came from Craigslist. They are OK with that, marginally.
(The Boy's Dad came over while I was working on bikes today. He was gobsmacked. He knew I tinkered - but when he saw the bike I had cleaned up for my sister, he realized that I can make something old look close to new again and perfectly functional. He does love a bargain so maybe we are approaching common ground here
)
(The Boy's Dad came over while I was working on bikes today. He was gobsmacked. He knew I tinkered - but when he saw the bike I had cleaned up for my sister, he realized that I can make something old look close to new again and perfectly functional. He does love a bargain so maybe we are approaching common ground here
)







