Saturday, September 26, 2009

Let's Make A Deal

Hey guys,

So I turned in a haul over the weekend, and I decided to do a closer inspection of my recyclables.

Some of you might be curious how fair the payouts by weight are. If you've been wondering how they convert per-piece prices ($0.05 cents a container, $0.10 if large) to per-pound prices, you're not alone. Let me clarify:

The photo below shows three different container, all of which were taxed at the same (5 cent) CRV rate:


However, it's clear that they are not all the same weight. The bottle on the left is an examples of the new "Eco-Shape". These bottles use less plastic- good for the environment, but bad if you're getting paid by the pound. The bottle in the middle weighed roughly twice as much (by just feeling it unscientifically). The miniature bottle on the right was somewhere in between.

I get paid $0.96 cents per pound, which assumes that there are roughly 19 bottles per pound. I'm guessing that the price is sent down from the State, because they are the "banker" in this scenario. The recycling center is really just a sort of middle-man in moving the recyclables back towards reuse.

So, when I dropped of my bottles this time I decided to do an exhaustive count first to compare with my payout. I counted 116 bottles (counting twice for large bottles), which would come out to $5.80. When weighed, I got $5.28. This means that I got underpaid by 52 cents, or roughly 9%.

I suppose that this is within a reasonable margin of error, and if I worked on getting huge containers, I could easily be overpaid. Either way, it's something to think about.

-Charles

Friday, September 25, 2009

Jackpot

Hey guys,

In the words of Jim Anchower, I know it's been a long time since I've rapped at ya, but things have been in flux. Two weeks ago I left UCSB to go to Baltimore to visit my girlfriend. I ended up staying longer than expected to give a talk about research and grad school. Then, I somehow ended up flying back to Chicago Sunday to drive out to LA with my friend (who's moving to Hollywood). A couple of highlights:

-On tuesday we went through Colorado, where 26 degrees (Farenhieght), snow and sleet made driving quite hazardous. The very next day is was 108 (midmorning) in Death Valley.

-Vegas is amazing. The mix of money and sadness is like a flurescent Earnest Hemmingway. Somehow, I actually broke even after a night of penny slots and $3 blackjack.

Anyway, I had left some bottles which I wasn't able to cash in, so I went today to a new spot- the recycling center in IV. It was busy but I was able to get in before closing and cash my $5.45 cents at the IV Market. I met a guy named George. He's been living in IV (Anisqovo Park) for 5 months, doing construction and collecting because he's "got habits", as he put it. I didn't get a photo because things were kind of hectic, unfortunately.

On the way back, I decided to cruise by Rob Field (apparently the name of the aforementioned "practice fields". I did my walk around the recyle bins and -BOOM!- I filled both IKEA bags in 20 minutes:


I guess now that kids are here and lots of sports are practicing, it's a good time to be a can collector. Tonight is the first Friday since school's started. I'll try to snap some pix, but I'm not sure I can hold any more bottles right now. In the words of my friend Emil (a UCSB alum), "when it rains, it pours."

Ok guys thanks for reading! Drop a comment if you're curious about anything!

-Charles

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Gimme The Loot!

Hey all,

So today's post goes out to all the little spots I've been hitting up for my cans. For those of you not familiar with UCSB, I hope this gives you a feel for the area. For alumni and students of UCSB, I hope you enjoy the post and maybe learn a little more some of the places you once rode past.

And a much deserved shout-out to Christopher Wallace for today's title.

Del Playa: The undergrads' mecca. Weekends can easily stretch out into 4 or 5 days in a typical week. On Holloween, some 80,000 in 2 square miles give IV a density roughly on par with Manilla or Bogor.


Pros: Not uncommon for massive house parties to overflow into massive street parties (like the photo above from last Friday night). Empties litter the streets (although the big money is to be had by actually going into a party and getting it from the source).
Cons: Lots of Gauchos all over. Sometimes it's too crowded to be on a bicycle safely.

Practice Fields: Where athletes and club teams practice soccer


Pros: Easiest; just walk the perimeter and check recycling bins. On the way to class. Near my home. No one else seems to be collecting from here.
Cons: Locked up early in the morning and late at night. Also, I'm not sure when the facilities people come and empty the bins.



On Campus: So close, yet so far away.



Pros: I'm already there, often with time to kill.
Cons: Can't get into the recycling bins (locked). Trash cans have a lot of goods, but it's hit-or-miss. Also, it's a little too awkward for me to be digging through trash during daylight.

Downtown Isla Vista:


Pros: Lot's of kids filtering through. In about the area of a quarter mile square there are at least a half-dozen liquor stores. (Yes, that is just about every varietal and size of Smirnoff imaginable)
Cons: This is the bums' post. It seems that Pirate, Wizard, and the other regulars keep this place relatively clear of cans. They don't seem as systematic or serious as the Gauchos, but they also don't do anything else all day.

Goleta Beach:


Pros: Family barbecues and beach volleyball. They allow cans, and just everyone has some sort of beer going (it warms my heart to see Keystone Ice being consumed by someone other than undergrads). This beach is also right in the flight path of 33L and 33R, so you can watch planes fly over at pretty low altitudes.
Cons: Everyone seems to keep their cans, no one here is rich or careless.

Thanks for reading! Remember to sign up for email notification (info in the sidebar) and tell your friends. Wherever you are, remember to recycle. Recycling an aluminum can requires 95% less energy than making a new one.

-Charles

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Weekend Update

Hey All,

So this past Friday was a huge success. After taking a week to fill up one IKEA bag, I was able to fill up two whole bags on Friday alone. I'm trying to smash the cans and crush the plastic bottles to save space.

I took in the recyclables and got $4.58. I used it toward some groceries.

On a side note, I ran into some friends on DP on Friday night. I took a break to hang, and we ended up getting to go up into Storke Tower. It's locked, but brain and brawn were able to overcome. I don't want to mention him by name but it was an impressive feat that got us up there. At the top, the view was spectacular (the photos were not):

You can see the U-Cen (Corner Store at the far left). There was some plexiglass preventing me from using a flash, so the pictures ended up blurry. Also I'm not sure if a flash would have really helped.

I did a little collecting later after things had died down. The dénouement of the evening had to be the a house-fire somewhere on DP. It smelled like burnt rubber and there was a suspicious cloud of whitish smoke floating though DP. Overall, I'm pretty pleased that I was able to so rapidly increase my take. It sort of feels like I'm living a play version of Deadliest Catch.

My brother Andrew is down visiting from SF this weekend, so I'm not collecting for the rest of the weekend.

Thanks for reading! Be sure to tell your friends!

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Payday

Hey all,

So today was a big day for C3. After class one last swing through some good on-campus spots, I collected everything together and got ready for the ride to the TOMRA center in Goleta. I got some stick-on velcro straps for the IKEA bag, so I could keep things together for the ride (note the black strip near the handle):


I was able to get it pretty neatly onto my bike. In the future I could wait longer and just pack more into my bike. I could have fit a few more in the basket underneath, and my backback was only about half full:

The bike ride was mostly uneventful, except that I saw "Wizard" napping under a tree by the Santa Catalina towers on my way back home. Wizard, who's real name is apparently Daniel Cardenas, is probably the second most famous bum in IV after the legondary Pirate. Wizard is one of a few permanent drifters who live in Anisqovo Park and help add to the lore of Isla Vista.

When I got to the center, I had to wait a few minutes for a couple of students in front of me to finish up. The whole operation is run out of two metal shipping containers with facing doors. On one side was aluminum (shown below) and the other one held class and plastic. The latter was pretty much empty, but I'll try to grab a shot next time.

The guy running it gave me two wire barrels to separate the plastic and aluminum. Then he weighed the baskets to find how much they were worth. (you can see the display for the scale on the left side of the next photo). As you might expect, TOMRA takes deductions for how wet your recyclables are- water's heavy, after all.


Because I had a good number of recyclables, I got paid by weight and not by item. For the sake of time, it seems that this is how just about everyone does it. The prices can be seen below on my receipt:

Aluminum and plastic pay out $1.57 and $0.97 cents per pound respectively. Glass, which is heavy, pays $0.10 cents a pound. I only had three glasses, so I got paid by the item for those (top line above). The proprietor of the center declined to be in the photo, but he did say "maybe another time". When I told him I was a grad student trying to learn about recycling, he just sort of chuckled.

You can read my total for the trip from the photo: $3.30. It probably works out to somewhere around $1 and hour. That's not a bad start, and I'm confident that I can probably get my totals up if I 1) figure out how to hold more on my bike and 2) find some good on-campus spots where the local Gauchos don't make it. Plus, students are beginning to trickle in, which will turn into a torrent in a about two weeks.

Thanks for reading! If you have any questions leave me a comment, and I'll try to comment back.

-Charles