Wednesday 15th August:The whole shebang went on one lorry, but sorted into cardboard, glass, tins, paper as well as plastic and food.
Ben Owen ● 5011d5 Comments
I've changed to wind-up or shake for torches They were always a problem in the past with batteries leaking in them They always need to be in place in case the lights go outI did research what sort of rechargeable batteries I should get and made my decision on what I read on that (can't remember now)! So many things come with their own chargers now as wellMany people still don't bother to separate them Shops that sell more than a certain amount have to have a collection point for spent ones Most supermarkets seem to have these now
Philippa Bond ● 5010d
I have very rarely used non rechargeables for at least 20 years
George Knox ● 5010d
I do have a re-charger here somewhere but they are odd batteries that seem to appear from (mostly) other people's gadgets and cameras. I'm not aware of anything that uses a lot of batteries in the house now on a regular basis. I can't oversee everyone else! I assiduously charge the batteries for FIL's magnifiers for him overnight while I'm there. (I'm not really sure what I'm doing on this but I'm doing it. He always needs those batteries changing when everyone else would consider they have a lot more use in them but I don't have any other use for those size B batteries - so buying rechargeable and recharging became an even better solution - and I'm still looking for a use for some size B batteries with some juice left.)Rechargeable AA batteries are fairly easy to get from a supermarket but I have found that the bigger rechargeable batteries are easier to buy online.So I have looked at this! :) You?
Err, please explain why rechargeable batteries do not suit you?
...and household batteries? My little see-through bag of them is now nearly full.