by blukatzen » Sat 22 Dec 2007, 01:28:51
Personally, I would be very leary of eating food that's been thrown away. I don't think mostly anything in cans unless it's severly dented gets thrown out. (and then there are other spoilage concerns there w/canned food.) With perishables like rotten food, it's inedible.
There's a smallish local food market/greengrocer close by that I shop at (I don't shop at major chains), and he discounts food, very well, in fact he is famous for it.
A LOT of people buy these "gently bruised" fruits/veggies. He repackages things into things like a "almost gone" carrot, tomato, parsley, parsnip, et al into "soup stock starter" package for maybe 99 cents. FRESH instead of packaged soup stock.
Right now, I got half of a cantaloupe (for hubby, not me) and half of a pineapple (for me) for 99 cents each. He throws away very little, as he discounts at the drop of a hat, and it's fair to him and fair to the customer. I expect with any store selling perishables, there is waste, but he takes care to creatively discount things and he has a lot of customers, young folks, seniors, etc. shop there.
Where I "dumpster dive" (and I don't really"dumpster" dive per SE) but garbage pick is when folks throw away a good little table, or bookcases, etc. I use them in my garage, or my garden center stores, etc. I found a beatiful piece of marble slab in the alley that someone was throwing out. I don't even remember how I got something that heavy into my jeep, it was determination! It just seemed to slide in! I can't tell you HOW MANY customers wanted that little piece of marble, I used it for displays this Summer. (it sits in my backyard right now).
A neighbor down the way was having a new fence put in (he just moved in, had little kids, wanted a privacy fence for the backyard for safety). He was throwing out some very old cement decorative lengths one would make a tree ring from, and we put in around our old Maple out in front, and everyone says that it looks like it grew around the tree forever (not to worry it girdling, it is very wide). He didn't care, he just wanted it "gone". It is amazing to me what people throw out! I am also a hard-core thrifter.
Lots of people throw things out, college kids included, I am more likely to grab things like that. If it can be washed/sanitized, I have NO PROBLEM with taking things like that. With food, which is more questionable, I am hesitant on. I do not want a case of food poisoning, or Hepatitis. Yuch, no bargain there.
Blu