Kidlington & Woodstock Freecycling Group allows you to freecycle your unwanted items and declutter your home. The main rule of the group is keep it free, legal and suitable for all ages. This group is for people in and around Kidlington & Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England. This includes Cassington, Yarnton, Begbroke, Bletchindon, Kirtlington, Hampton Poyle, Hampton Gay, Long Hanborough, Shipton-on-Cherwell, Weston-on-the-Green, Islip etc - and even Oxford!
Wednesday, 19 December 2007
Aircrash in Eynsham
Monday, 17 December 2007
Take care near the water's edge!
Friday, 14 December 2007
What to do with your old computer?
Taxi strike spreads over Christmas and New Year
Monday, 10 December 2007
An incinerator for Oxfordshire?
Sunday, 9 December 2007
Kidlington Action Plan
- First there is the background - a reminder of what the Healthcheck is supposed to achieve, and in particular its importance in setting out local priorities for
- Then a summary of what the first stages of the Healthcheck, carried out by local working groups, highlighted as important issues facing the village.
- Next are the significant priorities brought out in the public consultations that have been carried out, and how these form the basis of a vision for the kind of community people would like to see in the future.
- Then this vision is translated into a set of strategic aims for action.
- The next section looks at how the Action Plan ties in with the themes of wider strategies - the District-wide Community Strategy and Local Area Agreement, and how it needs to be a building block and a starting point for a Local Area Plan as part of the Local Development Framework.
- Lastly in the main document the strategic aims are developed into specific objectives and projects. The Action Plan table begins to set priorities and targets. It includes as a specific action area the continuation of partnership work, and identifies where other players need to be involved and influenced.
- The results of the questionnaire surveys are included as appendices.
Battery recycling
In the end though all batteries go past their use-by date and we must consider how to dispose of them. The starting point of batteries, especially ones we use in the house, is that they are so small. We think small, insignificant, chuck 'em in the bin and forget about it. The problem with that approach is that batteries if dumped in landfill are about as bad as it gets. All those heavy metals...
It is really important to work out a way to recycling batteries properly - and that starts in the home. What I would recommend is using an old plastic bottle with a wide mouth, perhaps the kind that you get fresh squeezed fruit juices in. Put that in a safe place, say near your kitchen and simply pop any old batteries therein.
The batteries that can be recycled include AAA , AA , C ,and D size batteries as well as button, mobile phone , laptop batteries and rechargeable batteries.
When the bottle is nearly full then you can pop to your local recycling point and empty your bottle. So where are the battery recycling points? In Kidlington we have one at Sainsbury's, another in the Tesco shopping car park. For a complete list check out the relevant WRAP page.
Thursday, 6 December 2007
Father Christmas flies into Kidlington
Wednesday, 5 December 2007
Watch out, there may be a textile thief about
Climate X hits Kidlington in full gale force
Tuesday, 4 December 2007
Bomd Squad relocates to Bicester
Why do you think Jeff Halsey died on the towpath
Monday, 3 December 2007
Gosford Hill School gets £2m scientific facelift
Sunday, 2 December 2007
Grouply, a better way to use Yahoo groups
Taxi drivers voting on strike...
Saturday, 1 December 2007
GEO who manage Campsfield are closed down
Alternative jewellery presents?
Thursday, 29 November 2007
Shipton on Cherwell Quarry development
Homes without power
Where the Thames meets the River Cherwell
Tuesday, 27 November 2007
Blow & Separate
Walking off those Christmas blues
Taking a walk down the ecology street!
Saturday, 24 November 2007
A keystone example to us all
Friday, 23 November 2007
Cherwell District is 27th for recycling
High St & Church St kerb resurfacing
Who are our local bobbies?
Thames Valley Police computer systems to be run by a finance computer boffin
How does Cherwell District bucking the trend so successfully?
If you are wanting a taxi this weekend, think again!
Thursday, 22 November 2007
Well done to St Thomas More
Putting the finger on Ardley Quarry
Wednesday, 21 November 2007
Please support your LOCAL freecycling group
We take the view that some people may wish to join our group because they work in the area, or even have relations who live here and perhaps those relations do not have access to the Internet.
Whatever the case we work hard to ensure that when an item is offered that both the person potentially taking that item and the offerer consider travel costs as part of the equation. There seems little point in spending a couple of pounds worth of petrol in a car, never mind the maintenance, and any associated ecology downsides such as carbon emissions, noise pollution etc if the item to be collected does not justify the journey.
If the journey is a "local" one then of course such issues pale into insignificance, and that is the main reason we ask people to add their location (a village name or the first 3 characters of your postcode) at the end of the subject.
This of course is only a guideline. Neither do we, nor do we wish to enforce this guideline. We leave it up to the offerer and the taker to decide in their own minds whether such issues are relevant and how important they are.
If you are concerned about travelling then we recommend you might also wish to consider joining other local groups. To the north we have Cherwell Valley group, to the south we have Oxford group, to the west we have the Witney group and to the east we have Bicester group.