
HAPPY NEW YEAR, SKIP FANS!
Dumpster diving bears? Cross-dressing Skip Chicks? Dumping your load? It can only be another fantastic issue of Britain’s favourite publication dedicated to the world of skip hire – “The Skip” magazine (we can say that with complete confidence, as it’s actually Britain’s ONLY publication dedicated to the world of skip hire!)
It’s not all about cheering you up with a giggle and getting you through those long days at work though, there’s lots of informative stuff written by industry experts to help you stay ahead of the game and up to date with current legislation etc. Not to mention a bumper stash of resources to help your business operate as efficiently as possible, and plenty more too…
Posts Tagged ‘Skip Hire Industry News’
“The Skip” Issue 42 January 2009
“The Skip” Issue 39 October 2008

It’s no joke, read the true story of the couple who made their vows and rode off in a skip!
In another amazing skip hire story, a man was reunited with his cousin he hadn’t seen for ten years, when the skip wagon he was travelling toppled over onto his cousin’s garden wall!
There’s a cracking Skip Chick this month, as well as the “Diet Coke break” Skip Hunk.
More delightfully overloaded skips for you to drool over.
Artist, Oliver Bishop-Young, shares his incredible skip conversion art with us.
Get the lowdown on compactors and balers.
Loads of great pics from September’s show at the NEC in our RWM’08 scrapbook.
Credit crunch beating tips from The Garbage Guru, as well as more invaluable updates from our team of industry experts.
All this and much more from the voice of the skip hire industry.
GRENADE FOUND IN SKIP!

Skip hire firm director, Craig Williams, got a surprise lunchtime date with a hand grenade, which fell out of one of their skips whilst it was being emptied.
Paul Grantham, also a director at M and M Skip Hire on Baker Street, Attercliffe, Sheffield, said:
“Craig Williams spotted the grenade and recognised what it was immediately so he rang the police.”
“He picked it up and put it into an empty skip so that if it did blow up it might contain the blast.”
“At this stage we don’t know where it came from but we will be able to go through our records and work out where we picked the skip up from.”
Once on the scene, police officers called in the bomb squad, fearing that the grenade could be live.
An hundred metre safety cordon was established, which meant that the skip yard and all neighbouring businesses had to be evacuated. The Door Warehouse, Patterson Brothers Engineering, Young’s Butchers and Burnt Tree Car and Van Rental were among the other firms affected.
The grenade was eventually blown up in a controlled explosion and the investigation is continuing to discover where the extended-lunch-break-creating device came from.
Anyone for a bit of Muff?

Our August Skip Hunk has been sent in by some admiring colleagues at ABL Skip Hire, in Llanelli, South Wales. Here’s what they have to say…
“Dear The Skip,
After months of browsing your magazine, we have decided that we have our very own Skip Hunk down here in South West Wales and have decided that we should share him
with everyone…
Here are some statistics on our Mr Martin Julian Evans or, as we like to call him, “MUFF”:
1. Born 30th August 1970 – now at the tender Age of 38 – don’t you agree he looks well?!
2. Martin is a fun-loving man who works hard – but plays even harder!!!
3. His hobbies include going to the gym, playing golf, and socialising around the local town of Llanelli with all his mates. Unfortunately, Martin is single at the moment and is in desperate need of a good woman… we love him in the office, he is always up for a laugh and the life and sole of the party keeping us entertained all day long.
We would be most grateful if you would give our Muff the opportunity of being Skip Hunk of the Month, as this would really make his day. He is very self conscious of his looks and we would love all the ladies who read your magazine to agree with the ABL girls…
Many Thanks,
Natalie & Anica, ABL Skip Hire”
Your wish is our command, girls! If any of you ladies out there are interested in Muff, get in touch with us at The Skip and we can pass on your details. Email pr@theskip.net
SKIP WATCH
You know the increasing need to consider the environment, right? Well, it got me thinking (doesn’t happen often, but it gets me through the ad breaks when I don’t have a Pot Noodle to tend to) while we indulge in the sheer delight of all these gloriously overloaded skips, are we missing an altogether more important issue – underloaded skips?
I was on a bus into Manchester after a long lunch yesterday afternoon (I left the car at The Red Lion – for the sake of the environment, of course), when I saw a typical 8 yard builder’s skip being collected from the road outside a house refurb. From my vantage point upstairs, desperately clinging to the bars of the swaying seat in front, I was able to peer down at the contents of the skip. I was amazed – but for all the wrong reasons. Barely covering the base of the skip, I saw about a dozen broken paving slabs, a couple of paint cans, the obligatory newspaper and what looked like a discarded kebab (hence the kebab I immediately purchased when I arrived at my destination). And let’s face it, I was p***** again so there may only have been half the amount of stuff I actually thought I saw through that sweaty bus window!
My point is this; even without considering the extra cost of hiring an overly-large skip these days, it’s surely just plain wrong to go hiring a skip that ends up being barely half-filled? To get incisively environmentalist about it, there’s still the same pollution caused by the truck that drops and collects it… the same sliver of tree used for the paperwork… the same drain on the National Grid when the customer makes a brew for the driver, and so on (that’s an unwritten law, by the way, so make sure you’re getting your collection brew or you’ll just be furthering the problem by stopping off for drinks that come in disposable containers – make sure the customer understands that they are helping the environment by furnishing you with your beverage of choice).
A handful of paving slabs can cripple a car, so I’m not suggesting that a skip was unnecessary in this case, but a bit of homework and basic ‘guestimation’ would probably have saved the customer some money, and the environment some abuse.
One way of reducing this kind of wasteful, over-sized skip ordering is to provide customers with a guide to what kind of skip they should order for the job at hand – the TopSkips web site does this job very well, whilst also giving the customer some reassurance that they are dealing with a company who wants to meet their needs, rather than push the most expensive option.
Here’s another idea I had (that’s two in one month – I’ll be on “The Apprentice” soon, I reckon). It’s a bit radical as it involves people actually making contact with their neighbours, but I’ll throw it out there anyway…
It’s basically the opposite of ‘skip-jacking’ (when you hire a nice empty skip, and then find that one of your lovely neighbours plucked up the Stella-fuelled, midnight courage to fill it with their entire life’s possessions). What if there was a scheme to encourage ‘skip-sharing’? A special deal could be offered to neighbours who book a shared skip – gaining new business from people who wouldn’t consider ordering a skip for their amount of waste alone, but might take advantage of an opportunity to share the cost with a neighbour. A simple leaflet drop could inform a whole street of the opportunity to get rid of their waste at an affordable price, as well as outlining the environmental benefits of skip-sharing (not to mention the fact that it might even go some way to reviving a sense of ‘community’). Your business gets to promote its environmental commitment, skip hire becomes affordable to people who would otherwise feel out-priced, and skip-jacking/fly-tipping could even be reduced.
Is it a rubbish idea? (That’s the oldest pun in the industry, so believe me when I say it’s not intended.) Let me know what you think anyway – it could be completely unworkable as you will know better than me.
If you’ve made it this far through my ramblings, you may well be thinking “Get on with it, man, you’ve made your point!” (In fact, you’re probably thinking something far more unprintable, as even I’m thinking that!) So, not wanting to disappoint those of you who share my ultimate passion, below is an overloaded skip from Centro Waste Skip Hire in Birmingham. It reminds me of a party I went to recently, where the ‘buffet’ was basically some breadsticks and cheese straws crammed into an undersized glass (which was appropriate, as the girl who’s party it was looked surprisingly similar in her outfit – it’s okay, she’s too busy lying to her ‘friends’ on Facebook to be reading The Skip).

So, let me know your thoughts on skip-sharing, keep those overloaded gems coming, and snap any outrageously underloaded skips you pick up. I’m going to start keeping a tally of which is more rife (unless someone can suggest a better reason for my life) As usual, email pr@theskip.net or post them to – The Skip, Baxall Business Centre, Adswood Road,Stockport, SK3 8LF.





















