HistoryBuilding materials and solvents have been packaged in large metal pails, but in recent decades plastic buckets have been greatly favored. Plastic buckets have more uses due to the popularity of plastic for food products and the tendency of metal pails to rust.[1] UsesMany restaurants receive products in food-grade 5-gallon buckets, which cannot be reused for their original purpose. These small businesses usually use trash removal services, so the emptied buckets are thrown into their dumpsters and then into landfills. Even if a locality offers plastics recycling, it is unlikely that a fast-food manager will transport a few empty buckets to the recycling center each week. Typically, a restaurant will empty a bucket in less than two days, so thousands of buckets are discarded across the U.S. every day. ReuseWhile many products arrive or are supplied by five gallon buckets, seldom are the buckets thrown away in rural areas. They are put into service in common and imaginative ways. They have been called the ultimate recyclable. A five gallon bucket's use for just about anything is an outlet of creativity and resourcefulness. Comically, it has been noted that no farm pick-up has fewer than two five gallon buckets in the back performing various utilitarian needs. It is more efficient to find a reuse for empty buckets than to shred them for making more plastic. Toward this end The International Pickle Bucket Rescue League[1] was founded in 2007 by Samuel H. Overman of King George, Virginia, U.S.A.1 to encourage ordinary citizens to collect free, clean, sturdy, locally-available used pickle buckets. They offer them for reuse to their neighbors, boaters, gardeners, landscapers, foresters, livestock farmers, Civilian Emergency Response Teams, scouting troops, Little League sports teams, Animal Rescue League and SPCA chapters, and charities that use the buckets to collect, sort and distribute contributed clothing and household items to the needy. Third party items are marketed to help consumers utilizes their 5 gallon buckets. Seats, tool caddies, hydroponic gardens, chamberpots, "street" drums, livestock feeders, and more have all been adapted from five gallon buckets. SafetyDue to the risk of small children drowning a pictorial warning label is often impressed into the side of a five gallon bucket. Small toddlers can topple in head first and not have the strength or weight to tip the bucket over. See alsoReferences1. Earth Day 2008 article, Fredericksburg, VA, Free Lance-Star Newspaper, http://fredericksburg.com/News/FLS/2008/042008/04222008/373116 2. Warning http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml89/89065.html External linksArticles on 5 gallon bucket as Americana
| |