Who knew a person could learn so much from junk? Wallace Stegner's "The Town Dump" and Lars Eighner's "On Dumpster Diving" are two good examples of lessons learned from garbage. They both focus on junk, but they are very different stories and teach different lessons.…
Junk yard is a treasure place where you can rebuild a car or look for a cheap car.People who find difficult to buy new cars can go for this option.But the cars in yards will be usually damaged.You should have some experience in fixing the car or go for a mechanic.It can save you lot of money.For this I will guide with some tips. First search for the right yard.Before you make sure of it,compare it with other yards and then fix it.Always try to negotiate price at the yard.Continue to negotiate until it feels fair.Make sure about the methods of payment.Once you are satisfied with everything go for it.It is fun…
When I originally saw the title of the article, I immediately had an idea that the selection was going to be a sob story about how someone became a dumpster diver. To my surprise, there was so much more to this than I thought. Lars Eighner, to me, had a sense of adventure to “scavenging”. It was fascinating to him to “acquire many things from the dumpsters.” He categorized things in an advanced system that reminded me of a computer filing system. No matter how sophisticated a system is, there is always an error. No matter how careful Eighner was he would “contract dysentery at least once a month.” If the categories were not enough, he implicated different sectors society for being overly wasteful. He implicates college students for wasting…
After reading “On Dumpster Diving” by Lars Eigner, I found out a lot of new things including how people on this earth manage to live. In the beginning of the essay, there has been some information provided to us about the writer which states that he lived in Austin and was a student of University of Texas. He described how life was on streets and showed us his interest towards dumpsters. He used description in the beginning and explains about term ‘Dumpster’. His tone is basically descriptive in the opening. Slowly he becomes like an escort in explaining dumpster diving. The author discovers new things about dumpsters. I think he wants to show the readers, the life of dumpster divers. Usage of words like scavenging and scrounging makes us think…
Lars Eighner states, “I began Dumpster diving about a year before I became homeless.” (Page 107). through this quote, we know that Eighner undoubtedly has had experience on the experience of Dumpster diving. through the essay, he speaks from his own personal experiences and views about society. “I have learned much as a scavenger. I mean to put some of what I have learned down here, beginning with the practical art of Dumpster diving and proceeding to the abstract.” (Page108). And by “abstract”, Eighner simply means the ideas and thoughts that he derived from his experience as a Dumpster diver. Her later perceives the world in a new light, seeing society as materialistic, and that he himself has gone through a “transience of being materialistic”.…
Doug Bandow in “Recycling is Wasteful” claims recycling does not help the environment and is too costly to fund. He gives evidence and reasoning to explain why recycling is more harmful than we think. The authors sub claims are: recycling creates more pollution, resources are not scarce, an easier way of handling garbage, and lastly, recycling costs too much money.…
I prefer the term “scavenging” and use the word “scrounging” when I mean to be obscure. I have heard people, evidently meaning to be polite, using the word “foraging,” but I prefer to reserve that word for gathering nuts and berries and such which I do also according to the season and the opportunity. “Dumpster diving” seems to me to be a little too cute and, in my case, inaccurate, because I lack the athletic ability to lower myself into the Dumpsters…
In the essay by Lars Eighner he explains that, Dumpster diving is outdoor work, often surprisingly pleasant. Yet in spite of the element of change, scavenging more than most pursuits tends to yield returns in some proportion to the effort and intelligence brought to bear. ThePuckett 2author further writes that he thinks of scavenging as a modern form of self-reliance and states that the work rewards initiative and effort refreshing. Although it was a way of survival for Lars Eighner and a solution to the poverty he was facing, it is definitely not a normal way of life for the general population. I speculate that most people would not find the method of…
It is common for people to throw away belongings that were once important to them. This is because our society has a tendency to be wasteful. In the essays “The Town Dump” by Wallace Stegner, “On Dumpster Diving” by Lars Eighner, and “The Town Dump” by Howard Nemerov, the authors all display their opinions when it comes to the topic of value, and items that have been thrown away. Through the use of imagery, the three authors depict their attitudes towards the idea that one man’s trash may or may not be another man’s treasure. Therefore showing that every object can have a value to a person that others see as invaluable.…
Who throws away the best stuff? Is dumpster diving really necessary to people living on the streets? In the text book, Lars Eighner, “On Dumpster Diving”, tells about when he was homeless out on the streets. He told that students usually had the best things because they threw out whatever they did not want because they have their parents to buy everything for them. He had two rules while living out on the street. Rule number one was, take only what is of use. The second rule was, material things that are not required are not necessary.…
Who would have thought that people would resort to “dumpster diving” as a means of filling their bellies? It turns out freeganism, dumpster diving, is the result of years of protest against big business and is a logical way to help reduce consumer waste.…
Allocated sepparate boxes for storing biodegradable and non-biodegradable, which they ultimately sell to junkyards. As for the garbage from markets, a pit was dug near the municipal MRF where market wastes are combined with farm manure to turn into fertlizer. These are given away to vegetable farmers fo free. Since then, they renamed the MRF as Integrated Solid Waste Management Facility (ISWMF). In the new ISWMF, the production of hollow blocks takes place. The plastic waste is pulverized. Then, two sacks of the pulverized plastic are mixed with a bag of cement and 15 pails of sand. The mixture is then poured into a molder. This procedures about 140 to 150 hollow blocks. Aside from hollow blocks, they also mold paving brick, wall cladding, cement tiles, paving blocks, and cement balusters. However, environmentalists have raised concerns regarding the durability of the product. They said plastics aren’t perfect for holding construction materials together.…
Around the world for centuries, the buying and selling of food has been transacted in public market places open to all. In the broadcast definition, a public market is any place where buyers and sellers of food meet regularly for trade. From simple gatherings of farmers at country cross roads to 19th century cathedrals of glass and iron, market were once a primary channel of food distribution in cities both in the Philippines and abroad.…
As urbanization progresses, the disposal of trash has become an enormous problem to America and the world. Although there has been progress in decreasing the amount of waste by limited recycling and reuse, most trash is still thrown away to fill landfill sites. To list just a few staggering facts, every year, 13.4 million tons of food waste, 28 billion bottles, 36 billion aluminum cans, and 200 million tons of garbage are landfilled in America each year 1. As trash is piling up, environmental concerns rise because of landfills’ large production of leachate and landfill gas.…
In my own opinion, it’s the responsibility of everyone to have a proper waste disposal. But because of unconcern people with this matter there must be a rule to be followed.…