sisterofbloomerjunior: The Green Bay Packer logo shoveled into some snow (Green Bay Packers)
[personal profile] sisterofbloomerjunior
We sorted through and donated Christmas ornaments! 🥳🎄 Now to wash out the containers we held those in and see how many can store blankets or other items! We also donated bedsheets and pillowcases to the Epilepsy Foundation.

Brought up and scrubbed out some vases, which clears off quite a few of the shelves in the basement’s former pantry. Oh, and I just recycled my copy of this year’s Packers media guide. #sighpackers_sigh

If I haven’t mentioned it yet, I’m participating in this year’s Hennepin, Ramsey and Washington Counties’ Zero Waste Challenge and will be in the Plastic-Free Challenge yet again in February.
tanaqui: Illumiinated letter T (Default)
[personal profile] tanaqui
This post was inspired by a conversation in the comments of one of November's daily posts. I volunteer in a (UK) charity shop and have some tips for how to help your chosen charities get as much money as possible for your donations.

I'd like to start by saying that I don't want to add to anyone's guilt or stress when decluttering by making them worry about not being "perfect" about how they donate. If that clutter needs to be gone, get it gone in whatever way is easiest (including general trash).

So here are my tips. These are all based on what we do at my shop; other charity shops may do things a little differently and it may work differently in your country's equivalent (op shop, kringloop, Goodwill etc.) — please do comment if you have insights into how it works where you are.

1. Ask the people in the charity shop you're donating to what they can and can't accept — ideally before you walk in with your donations.

For example, my shop can't take electrical items that plug into a wall outlet, because we can't get them safety tested, but we can take battery/USB powered items. We also can't take furniture, because the shop isn't big enough to display it. And we don't take things like child car seats or bicycle helmets because of the liability issues if it's faulty.

We're more than happy to suggest other places where people can donate some of those things. (We're next door to another charity shop that can take both electricals and furniture, for example, and we have no problem sending people there.)

2. To avoid frustration, check what times or days the shop is able to take donations. My shop's policy is to take donations all day every day and never turn donations away (with the exceptions listed in the first point) but some shops only accept donations on certain days or at certain times of day. If you want to donate large items like furniture, you can also ask them if they do pickups (or even house clearances).

3. If you have clothes, shoes, accessories, bedlinen etc that are very worn or stained, bag them up separately and tell the shop staff when you donate that they're in poor condition and only fit for recycling. They can then send the bag straight to recycling without sorting through it. (We're even happy to give people bags to fill with straight-to-recycling clothes.)

4. If you're donating seasonal clothes and accessories (summer dresses and sandals; winter coats and boots), please try to donate them near the start of that season. We can only keep "the best of the best" of out-of-season clothes, so we're likely to send more of your donations to recycling if they're the wrong season rather than being able to put them out in the shop (and get 100 times the money for selling them than we get sending them to recycling).

5. Please check pockets and the insides of bags etc before you donate. One reason is that you might accidentally donate something you want to keep — we had a donation of handbags where every bag had at least £2 in change in it (currently the price of a single bus fare) which netted us an extra £23, but probably wasn't intentional. Another reason for checking pockets is that it's really not fun as a volunteer to check the pockets of a good quality coat in good condition. only to find half a dozen dirty tissues!

6. Please put your donations in a bag or box that you are willing to donate. It's awkward and time-consuming to have to decant items from a donor's box/bag into another one. If you're willing to leave the items in the bags you brought but would like similar replacement bags (e.g. really strong re-usable grocery bags), we can usually offer you ones that came in as part of another donation (possibly even from the same brand!)

7. Please don't bring in very heavy bags/boxes: it makes it hard for volunteers to move them into the storage areas in the back of the shop and then get them out again to be sorted. (We don't sort everything immediately because we may not have enough volunteers at that point to get through everything being donated that morning or afternoon or we may not have volunteers who specialise in and are knowledgeable about those kinds of donations.)

8. Books, fragile ornaments, china and glass are usually better donated in boxes (again, please keep in mind the weight of each box) as these items can more easily be damaged and no longer suitable for sale if they're put in bags. Clothes are better donated in bags (preferrably trash bags that can be tied).

9. If you're in the UK and you pay tax, please sign up for gift aid. The government will give the charity an extra 25p for every pound the charity makes from your donations, at no extra cost to you. (You need to sign up separately with each charity.) I don't know if there are similar schemes in other countries — if you know about one in your country, please tell us about it in the comments.

10. Please consider volunteering in your local charity shop! It obviously depends on the shop and the shop's managers, but it can be a lot of fun working with other volunteers and satisfying to see happy customers leaving with their bargains. If you love talking to people, working on the till is great fun. If you're the shy or introverted type, there's always plenty to do in the back of the shop. You don't need any particular skills, just a willingness to get stuck in and follow instructions.

If you're out of work, it's an excellent way to build confidence and useful skills that will help you get a paid job — several of our volunteers have moved on to paid jobs over the last year and our shop manager was very happy to provide references for them. If you're in school, it looks great as an extra-curricular.

If you have any questions, please ask and I'll do my best to answer them.
sisterofbloomerjunior: A Facebook button with a sideways thumb (Meh)
[personal profile] sisterofbloomerjunior
Just washed some sheets and a blanket. Tomorrow I’ll wash the rest of them and possibly make my bed. I wish Mom would allow me to donate the Christmas items we don’t use so we’d have enough room to store blankets, sheets and other items that we do use seasonally. We’ll decide most of blankets we’re keeping after I wash them - except for one of the goose feather comforters that I know has a small hole in it since feathers keep falling out of it. That, and I’m allergic to the feathers.

I wonder why Target doesn’t ship Rubbermaid storage containers. Wal-Mart has other brand’s containers available for shipping, but not Rubbermaid. I also wish Rubbermaid listed sizes of their containers and totes. I’m planning on getting possibly two of them, but would prefer to reuse other people’s unwanted containers rather than buying new ones because I’m trying to cut down on how much new plastic we create demand for.

I did bring up a porcelain doll and more small items to sort through. Now I wish I had kept one of the larger doll stands so we could display it. 😕
sisterofbloomerjunior: The Rocket of the Montreal Canadiens (Maurice Richard)
[personal profile] sisterofbloomerjunior
I finally managed to clear out the area underneath the basement stairs so we can take shelter there during tornadoes. Really the most labor intensive part was bringing the five gallon bucket of carpet adhesive up the back stairs to the garage - will have to take that to the hazardous waste disposal center.

Thankfully the Rubbermaid Roughneck was easier to get to the curb. Also placed a couple of metal things for scrappers on top of it. I’ll have to wash the blankets and bolts of fabric that were stored in there, then ask Mom if we could donate some of the blankets. I know she’d allow me to donate the fabric.

Came back from donating a closet organizing kit. The box was damaged during a flood, but I have two weeks to cut it up for recycling.

And the rest was just moving a floor scrubber and other tools to another corner.
sisterofbloomerjunior: The Green Bay Packer logo shoveled into some snow (Green Bay Packers)
[personal profile] sisterofbloomerjunior
So cleaning- mostly the basement- has basically helped me find a heck of a lot of our tools and battery chargers. The ones I can’t find either parts or no longer work have been disassembled and had the internal batteries removed. (The county does offer repair clinics, but those are usually too far away from me.). I’ll drop off the batteries and other hazardous waste at a collection happening in my neighborhood about two weeks from now.

We have a donation table in the neighborhood for clothes and other items that I’ve been leaving items at pretty much all summer. About the only items I’ve taken are a hockey book I haven’t read yet and a Chicago Bears daily calendar from 1990(? I haven’t seen it a while. Maybe Mom tossed it?). Most of the cleaning I’ve done in the garage so far has been sorting through tools and I haven’t done much in any other room since April.

I’ve joined a challenge that runs throughout August to stop food waste in my county and two neighboring ones. Depending on the weather, I’ll relocate some day lilies away from the air conditioner.

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