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Get in touch

Call us on 01273 322 398
Email us at hello@rickshawtravel.co.uk

Festive opening hours:

Thursday 19th December: 9am – 12pm

Saturday 21st December: Closed

Christmas Eve: 9am – 2pm

Christmas Day & Boxing Day: Closed

New Year’s Eve: 9am – 2pm

New Year’s Day: Closed

 

Normal opening hours:

Monday – Friday: 9am – 5pm

Saturdays: 9am – 2pm

Sundays: closed

Our Recycling Policy

At Rickshaw, we think recycling is just ace. Why? Because it solves 2 global problems:

1. What to do with our waste
2. What to make super shiny brand new stuff out of.

It’s also incredibly easy to do, you just have to pop your waste in a different bin, often situated next to the general waste bin (if yours isn’t, perhaps you could be a dear and move it a little closer? Ta).

Our recycling guru is Clare, our office manager. She’s so into recycling that she once climbed into her own recycling bin. Alright, she may have had a few drinks at the time, but that’s by the by. You can often spot her over by the recycling bins, perhaps fishing something out that shouldn’t be in there. It makes her very cross when she finds crisp packets in the food waste bin. And rightly so!

While we’re on the subject of bins, here’s how our set up in the office looks. It’s working pretty well so far. Last time we checked we were recycling 92% of our waste. That’s actually 6% off our target of 98%, but we have some rather ingenious plans to improve this. One of the more eccentric ones involved a series of elaborate padlocks and codes required to open the regular waste bin. This wasn’t popular amongst the rest of the team for some reason…

But you might well be wondering what we recycle and why we bother. We’re fortunate enough to work with a local company, Paper Round, who deal with all our recycling and are rather fantastic in that they’re able to recycle a whole plethora of waste. Let’s take a look:

Paper

Recycling paper means less trees need to be chopped down, which makes for more happy trees and healthier air quality. The paper we recycle is sorted into 4 grades: white paper, sorted office waste, newspaper and magazines, and cardboard. Any unusable residues that can’t be recycled (mainly because they’re too small or too heavily contaminated) are known as sludge and these are burnt by the recycling plant to generate energy or used as a soil conditioner by farmers. Oh yeah, and we only buy recycled paper from Paper Round for office use, so it’s closed loop.

Cans

Reusing metals from cans means less pollutants – again, great for air quality. We’re able to recycle mixed cans, aluminium and steel and it’s pretty amazing what you can make out of an old can. Not just those amazing string telephones we used to have as children, but also new drink cans, car parts and some are even used in aircraft production. See, there is a travel theme after all!

Glass

Did you know that the earliest known glass objects were beads, believed to have been made in the mid second millennium BC? While we may not have known about these beads if they’d been recycled, that’s not an excuse to throw your glass in the landfill. The glass we recycle is sorted into 3 main colours: clear, brown and green, before being crushed and sold to bottle and jar manufacturers to make new, well, bottles and jars.

Plastic

The sad thing is that plastic never biodegrades. Never. It just gets smaller and smaller and smaller and ends up polluting the entire ecosystem, with plastic found in fish that have ingested it from the ocean, and even trace amounts recently found in tap water. Plastic is therefore one of the most important materials to recycle (if you really do have to use it, that is). Once sorted, our recycled plastic is flaked and sold to plastic manufacturers. Using recycled plastic rather than virgin material saves 2 tonnes of CO2 per tonne of plastic used.

Food waste

Woah, wait a minute, isn’t food waste biodegradable? Well, yes, but food waste in landfill sites just rots away releasing methane into the atmosphere. Our food waste is instead taken to a specialised anaerobic digestion biogas plant. Pretty fancy. This breaks down the organic matter into fertiliser and biogas. A combined heat and power engine converts the biogas into electricity and heat which enters the National Grid.

Anything else?

Yes! We’re always trying to recycle rather than simply throw away, so we also recycle the following:

IT equipment, appliances and sundry ferrous (you know, like fridges and that), toner cartridges, batteries, wood, fluorescent tubes, polystyrene, CDs and VHS tapes.

So, that’s how we handle our recycling at Rickshaw. We’re pretty passionate about it too, so we’d encourage you to recycle wherever you can, whether it’s at home or during your travels. Because if Clare catches you, there’ll be hell to pay!

PS… If you want to find out more about how we make life more meaningful at our home, visit our blog.

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