Allotment Gardening Advice Help Chat
Chatting => Frugal Living => Topic started by: Chris Toker on June 24, 2008, 16:30
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Hello All.
just a quick one for you all.
i am looking to get my FIRST allotment some time soon, and was wondering if there would be any negitive effects from using wooden pallets in the plot.
chris
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The only negative effect would be if you had to pay for them otherwise get them to build sheds fences compost heaps etc. a multitude of uses to any allotment :wink:
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they're like gold dust. Everyone wants to get their hands on them :D You need four, all the same size, screwed together and et voile a compost bin. Line the insides with old fertiliser bags even better compost bin. Folks use em to make fencing and hen coops. They make great decking for the front of the shed :D
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For a reliable source of pallets ask your local B&Q , ours advertises in the local paper most weeks ( but doesnt actually publicise who is placing the add) - you do have to collect them.
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Hi Chris, welcome to the forum :D
I don't think anyone would object to you using palets - except, as has been pointed out a few times on this forum, just don't use the blue one's cos they belong to a company who will take action if they know you've got them :roll:
How long till you get yours, do you think?
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I recently went round my local industrial estate and retail park.
I didnt just take I did ask the owners and got permission so its not that hard to get free pallets.
Got plenty from firms on the ind estate that were going in the skip for disposal and on the local retail park the loading guys at Focus dropped me some none-blue pallets out the back to pick up when I wanted.
Ended up with 3 or 4 bootfulls in my 4x4, 20+ pallets in the space of an afternoon :)
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- except, as has been pointed out a few times on this forum, just don't use the blue one's cos they belong to a company who will take action if they know you've got them
who owns them as theres no info on them,,also does this count for red ones aswell.
our work has over 200 of these pallets in storage,storage we would like back, :(
and i bet we have to deliver them to the said company,thats not gonna happen :D
theres gonna be some happy plotters in aberdeenshire soon
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http://www.courierology.co.uk/courier-glossary.php#pallets
http://www.palletlink.co.uk/pallets/pallet-pools/
Hth for starters.
I know we get calls every so often to ask if we have any we need collected. Have just checked with son who works outside in the warehouse bit - he says anyone that delivers them is entitled to collect them back - presumably makes for easier collection by the CHEP folks from a more centralised collection point?
Jay Bee
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Blue Pallets are owned by GKN. To possess one you have to have a pallet account, and then you are charged 1p per day per pallet that you have. Therefore when you accept a delivery on blue pallets you have to give back empty one otherwise you're charged for them.
All blue pallets have a serial number on so they can be tracked.
Do not take, break or keep blue pallets or you are inviting trouble.
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I've got one. They can have it back any time they like. I don't expect a knock on the door any time soon
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Interesting about the blue pallets. We collect pallets for gates/compost bins/wood burning stove etc. Hubby told me that the blue ones (Euro pallets I believe) cost money which is why drivers get told off for giving them to you. I didn't know about the serial numbers.
Garden centres are another good source, our local Wyevale will let you take away non-blue pallets. We get cat food & litter deliveries, a pallet every time and everyone round here knows we never refuse wood. A builder has to pay to take a van/truck to the dump these days.
Last time someone offered us a load of offcuts it was all decking wood so really well treated and one piece was the perfect length for a veg garden plank. That made my week.