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Prices for non metal items

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    hobo finds started this thread.
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    Prices for non metal items

    So AZ prices



    #2 plastic clear (milk / water gal) .10 lb
    #2 plastic color .02 lb
    #1 plastic bottles .30 lb
    Glass bottles / jars .03 lb
    Cardboard .02 lb

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    pecans- .63 lb

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    Quote Originally Posted by Bear View Post
    pecans- .63 lb
    LOL. yesss finally I can sell my hoard. Hahah
    If I didn't have bad luck, I'd have no luck at all...

    GC Metal Recycling & Recovery
    Barrie, Ontario.

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    hobo finds started this thread.
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    .63 for pecans! Time for Pecan Pie!

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    Quote Originally Posted by jord0690 View Post
    LOL. yesss finally I can sell my hoard. Hahah
    better sell em fore Christmas, after that the price goes back to nothin (just like the good ol Christmas spirit ; )
    Last edited by Bear; 11-18-2013 at 11:49 PM.

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    hobo finds started this thread.
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    Funny thing during this last bulky / trash neighborhood pick up, all metal was gone but there was a guy with his wife filling up his truck with tree trunks and logs, 1st time I ever saw this...

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    Acorns $.50 a lb
    crab apples .50 a lb
    firewood $ 300 a cord dry split delivered
    $ 250 a cord green split delivered

    posted right after you people make some cool stuff out of tree stumps
    Last edited by NHscrapman; 11-18-2013 at 04:58 PM.
    There ain't nothing wrong with an honest days work. Anyone who says otherwise is a fool.- Old Man

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    Quote Originally Posted by hobo finds View Post
    Funny thing during this last bulky / trash neighborhood pick up, all metal was gone but there was a guy with his wife filling up his truck with tree trunks and logs, 1st time I ever saw this...
    Maybe it was special type wood, maybe they were artists, maybe they needed firewood ; )

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    I see folks grab the logs all the time. Maybe he lives up on the mountain Hobo!

    Gets cold up there even if it is Tucson!

    Sirscrapalot - Doesn't like pecans, an misses camping out up in Oracle an up on Mt. Lemmon.

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    Hobo...is that for small.amounts or quantity? Once toy start dping that stuff it is almost always better to do the ultra large bales....just is that chicken and the egg thing...need the space and have to rent the right baler...then have enough you can do in a reasonable amount of time to fill a tractor trailer load...I know...I am looking into it here as no one around here ecen buys any of that locally...so talking with one of the large recyclers on pricing for paper, plastics, and old clothes (for industrial rags)

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    Quote Originally Posted by webuyselltradestuff View Post
    Hobo...is that for small.amounts or quantity? Once toy start dping that stuff it is almost always better to do the ultra large bales....just is that chicken and the egg thing...need the space and have to rent the right baler...then have enough you can do in a reasonable amount of time to fill a tractor trailer load...I know...I am looking into it here as no one around here ecen buys any of that locally...so talking with one of the large recyclers on pricing for paper, plastics, and old clothes (for industrial rags)
    Just small time . And old clothes textiles should be good money if you have the space for them...

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    Also I am riding the coat tails of our City wide Blue Barrel Recycling program that I pay $16.95 a month for with my garbage / recycling and twice a month bulky waste pick up. If the city can get rid of this stuff then why wouldn't I help a business try and do the same thing without the subsidy!

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    Quote Originally Posted by NHscrapman View Post
    Acorns $.50 a lb
    crab apples .50 a lb
    firewood $ 300 a cord dry split delivered
    $ 250 a cord green split delivered

    posted right after you people make some cool stuff out of tree stumps
    REALLY??? We're at $150-180/green and $190-220seasoned(dry)/cut/split&delivered. I read the other day that firewood supply is down due to rainy summer. Expect price spikes.
    People may laugh at me, but that's ok. I laugh all the way to the bank.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Mick View Post
    REALLY??? We're at $150-180/green and $190-220seasoned(dry)/cut/split&delivered. I read the other day that firewood supply is down due to rainy summer. Expect price spikes.
    Your prices are right on if i sell to a local homeowner but...
    I sell to a high end market of condo owners and mansion owners at ski resorts I can't get it up there fast enough lol. The crazy part is Mick that most of them will buy debarked firewood for there mansions at $450+ a cord just so they don't have the "mess". definitely worth hauling/cutting a log load or two it's not easy money but worth it selling to these folks.
    I am in the door at two major sub divisions that have just been started and am hauling wood as fast as I can get it. My Father is set for a couple years and a couple of friends had free wood (paid with labor) this year. right now it's a free wood free-for all for the foreseeable future.

    It is great that you found a paying outlet for these items hobo if i had the space and connections i would do the same.
    Last edited by NHscrapman; 11-19-2013 at 06:53 AM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by NHscrapman View Post
    Your prices are right on if i sell to a local homeowner but...
    I sell to a high end market of condo owners and mansion owners at ski resorts I can't get it up there fast enough lol. The crazy part is Mick that most of them will buy debarked firewood for there mansions at $450+ a cord just so they don't have the "mess". definitely worth hauling/cutting a log load or two it's not easy money but worth it selling to these folks.
    I am in the door at two major sub divisions that have just been started and am hauling wood as fast as I can get it. My Father is set for a couple years and a couple of friends had free wood (paid with labor) this year. right now it's a free wood free-for all for the foreseeable future.

    It is great that you found a paying outlet for these items hobo if i had the space and connections i would do the same.
    I've heard of that. A few years ago when I was selling firewood, a guy told me he sold debarked firewood to condo owners in Boston. Just like you're saying,they were REAL picky but paid about twice what he got around here. Sticks had to be exactly uniform length. no crooks etc,etc.

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    How long do you season it and how do you debark it?

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    Bear, I don't know how everybody does it but I season wood (meaning cut to the length you're going to burn - usually 16", 18" or 24"; split and left to dry) for two "seasons" (usually summer and fall). Burning sooner is considered "green" (too high of moisture content for efficient burning). Each species dries at a different rate but, generally, two seasons is the average. I've got some oak and maple this year that I've been drying in a covered shed for two years. As for debarking - The "wood" and the "bark" dries at different rates due to physical makeup. As it dries, the bark falls off or is easily stripped off.

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    You guys are talking a full cord right? Most of what we sell around here is by the face cord.

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    There is no legal measurement of "face cord" "truck load" or anything other than "cord" which is 128 cu ft - typically 4'x4'x8' and tightly stacked. Face cord simply means 4'x8'x whatever depth the logger chooses. That's why it's not given any legal status.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Mick View Post
    There is no legal measurement of "face cord" "truck load" or anything other than "cord" which is 128 cu ft - typically 4'x4'x8' and tightly stacked. Face cord simply means 4'x8'x whatever depth the logger chooses. That's why it's not given any legal status.
    Right, its usually 16 inches around here which makes it a third of a cord. I've seen it go anywhere from 60 bucks to 125 bucks depending on the type.

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