L1011 wrote: » Based on the stories from scout groups picking over them to see if theres anything worth taking for their own use or for charity use - yes; but very very very few of them. The effort in finding the one or two that are both decent and not damaged by being put up by a drunk monkey (or fallen on by someone very heavy, breaking poles) is probably not worth it. I left a €30 Millets 2-man one at a festival once but even my current really awful Halfords 6-man is worth taking down and bringing home.
Ubbquittious wrote: » Broken poles wouldn't be the end of the world if the tent is good. If you got a few similar models you could even cannibalise a few bad ones for spares
BDI wrote: » We have generation disposable disposing everything after one use. Music clothes and equipment. This generation also spends its time blaming old people for being wasteful with the environment.
Always Tired wrote: » Yeah considering the young people invented all the cheap disposable crap and created the current economy, didnt they? Oh right, they didnt. Literally every large corporation is owned by someone 50+. Muppet
L1011 wrote: » That's even more effort, particularly if you're hanging yourself and are trying to do this without festival security noticing. Or so I'd imagine *walks away whistling*
Ubbquittious wrote: » I was more thinking along the lines of scooping up as many as you can of a particular type and when you're home and in good spirts you see how many good ones you can build from your harvest, bin any parts that are too bad to use and maybe buy a few spare poles to make tents out of whats left. Repairs is a numbers game might be a nuisance to repair a particular tent but once you have a few the possibilities open up.
caff wrote: » Left a large 6 man behind at ep 2011 I think it was. It had a large central porch and three double blisters. Someone had pissed in one the blister tents.
Neyite wrote: » It's such an entitled bratty thing to do I think.
Ruraldweller56 wrote: » I think an entire thread on how the older generation were more efficient and less wasteful and more resourceful with what they had is warranted. My own tuppence is that the younger generation (the eco warriors) are far more materialistic. Corporations know this and as a result don't build things to last, and release crap under the guise of being better every week so they'll buy it. Phones being a good example. Does today's HD LED smart curved screen 3D live VR 100800p television really do much that a TV from 6-7 years ago couldn't?
Ruraldweller56 wrote: » Does today's HD LED smart curved screen 3D live VR 100800p television really do much that a TV from 6-7 years ago couldn't?