Sat. Nov 2nd, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

From saving bags of hair from the vacuum cleaner to burn in his fire, to soaking corn chip bags to remove the non-recyclable lining, no feat of waste reduction is too great (or small) for Gerry Lavell. 

Decades after an epiphany on the Isle of Wight set him on the path of least landfill, Mr Lavell is more dedicated to his cause than ever.

Gerry Lavell stands in front of his landfill wheelie bin smiling and with his thumbs down.
Most of us have a few cobwebs on our wheelie bins, but Gerry Lavell’s hasn’t been used in years.(ABC Radio Perth: Alicia Bridges)

In the past seven years, the Perth man has taken out his landfill bin once — four years ago.

Mr Lavell is the self-proclaimed best household recycler in Perth.

“Someone has to set the standard,” he said.

“And people need an example to look to, to see just how far they can go.”

Mr Lavell’s neglected wheelie-bin sits at the top of his driveway, draped in thick layers of cobwebs, with the words “Waste Master” printed on the side.

Gerry Lavell smiles as he stands behind a box of rubbish that he plans to recycle.
Faced with an item that many would think is destined for landfill, Gerry Lavell says “that can’t happen.”(ABC Radio Perth: Alicia Bridges)

But Mr Lavell himself is the one dedicated to mastering waste.

He hammers, soaks, scrapes, peels, buries and burns to avoid sending waste to landfill, and to remove the recyclable parts of items that would otherwise not be recyclable.

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