⚡♾️ HOW TO PRODUCE FREE ENERGY FOREVER: https://3b751qiei96o28qes6mgfyev7t.hop.clickbank.net
🌱 🌟 BECOME SELF-SUFFICIENT ON ¼ ACRE:
https://d8a10qp9ua6qy8png5ki5w35e5.hop.clickbank.net
Turn “trash” into free gardening gold. In this video I break down 10 things stores throw away every day that you can reuse in your garden as containers, soil amendments, weed barriers, seed-starting gear, and more—often better than what you’d buy new.
You’ll learn what to ask for, which stores to check (bakeries, cafés, nurseries, appliance/furniture shops, print shops), and exactly how to use items like food-grade 5-gallon buckets, cardboard sheets, coffee grounds, milk crates, HT pallets, nursery pots, bakery trays, burlap sacks, egg cartons, and newsprint for no-dig beds, compost, seed starting, drainage, and easy garden organization.
✅ Try one or two on your next store run and you’ll save money fast.
💬 What’s the best “free” thing you’ve ever scored for your garden? Drop it in the comments.
#GardeningHacks #GardeningTips #Composting #SeedStarting #ZeroWasteGardening

32 Comments
⚡♾ HOW TO PRODUCE FREE ENERGY FOREVER: https://3b751qiei96o28qes6mgfyev7t.hop.clickbank.net
🌱 🌟 BECOME SELF-SUFFICIENT ON ¼ ACRE: https://d8a10qp9ua6qy8png5ki5w35e5.hop.clickbank.net
Many stores will allow you to take pallets. Not all reuse them or have pallet recovery services. If you remove the nails, these planks are excellent for making small garden beds. There are also a ton of YT videos with great DIY ideas. Just make sure the wood is untreated if you plan to use them. gardening.
*Edit: I just posted this before I heard you mention pallets! Lol oops!
Our grocery store sells the 5 gallon buckets for $4 each and they're still dirty, not even washed out.
Heads up pfas in cardboard. Use paper grocery bags. Glue isclean, worms like eating the glues seams
Cut drainage slits in a burlap sack ???????
Now with everyone using Spotify,Youtube and other services for entertainment you can find CDs galore for free hung in trees they can help dissuade birds to clear out the all you can eat buffet you created in your garden completely ,
a solid carton with a bag of soil inside, away from direct rain ,can stand in for a flowerpot for one season plants ,
put a note on the infoboard in shops asking for excess plants or flowerpots ,
pay people a compliment for their gardening and create a barter system with them
Old paper feed bags 🎒 work very well from ground cover, the bags we get have 3 layers. You could also use those bags to make paper pots and such. I have been using tye paper feed bags to help cover my goat's hut 🛖 walls, between pallets, she does eat some of it but not like you would think she would. She has a feed bags door way cover and its been the same bad for over one year.
Thank you, good information!
"5-gallon buckets are.."
video shows what is obviously a HALF GALLON BUCKET
I do believe in New York State.They made it illegal for commercial entities to give away their cardboard and have forced to use recycling businesses.
So there's probably kickbacks involved…. to the politicians that is…
This Is sad, sick in not freedom
Feed hasn't come in burlap bags since the late 60's/early 70's.
I got three blue rain water drums, a rabbit cage ,a kids pool,organic coal,many terracotta pots intact and broken
Make fire starters with coffee grounds too.
Beautiful Knowledge. Thank you 🙏 Brother
All I need is sunshine in my backyard.
Great ideas!
I like rolling my own paper pots out of store flyers that aren’t glossy. I tend to go to the grocery store or wherever they have them out for people to take the day or two before the end of the sale when they’re going to be throwing them out anyway and just grab several and toss them into my cart and then go shopping in the store.
I actually knew about coffee.
In some places is the mere possession of a milk crate without official paperwork is a misdemeanor crime.
1. Food Grade Five-Gallon Buckets
2. Large Cardboard Sheets.
3. Coffee Grounds
4. Plastic Milk Crates
5. Only HT Wooden Pallets
6. Nursery Pots and Seedling Trays
7. Bakery Bread Trays & Produce Trays
8. Burlap Coffee Sacks & Grain Sacks
9. Egg Cartons
10. New Paper Rolls
Italian restaurants buy giant heavy plastic DRUMS OF OLIVE OIL 🛢
RAINWATER COLLECTION FROM THE ROOF….CUT IN HALF, FILL WITH SOIL MIX,
PLANT YOUR
BUTTERNUT IN ONE
I HAVE NEVERpaid for a 5gallon bucket i get pickle buckets from a local restaurant free with lids. We live in the wilderness so they’re great for storing things to keep wildlife out
I like to collect plastic milk crates and use them to build raised beds for vegetables. They are stackable to build various container structures to fit your garden and it’s easy to move around and re-arrange. I particularly prefer the square ones.
I have many of these free items in my garden. 1) regarding pallets…if you see HT it means heat treated. Sometimes you’ll see HT KD..that means heat treated kiln dried. My research shows those are the only 2 types of pallets that are safe to use in veg gardens. 2) Using burlap from “just any” source, including the coffee bean bags — unless marked otherwise, burlap often contains harmful chemicals that most people would not want in their vegetable gardens. Be safe!
Food Pantries always have tons of rotting food scraps for use as compose or hog feed.
As far as newspapers, is the ink printed on them "harmfull"??
If you need these things, great. However, lets all look around our gardens and see how much plastic we are using. Even the "safe" plastics leach and breakdown in the sunllight. This leaves microplastics that get into your food.
Walking around my complex the day/night before garbage day sometimes yields Garden Gold.
Great info. Thanks.
Might be a crazy question but are you supposed to remove the grass under an open raised bed?
I asked bakeries for the 5 gallon buckets and they said no. They're worried I might sue them for whatever possible things that could go wrong.
The egg cartons are my favorite! I use them for worm bedding and seed starting…You local McDonald's breakfast manager will usually save them for you PROVIDED, you religiously pick them up at agreed upon intervals…They compost quickly!
Worms love the styrofoam cartons😊