Posts from that day

Arboleas Activa.

From. Arboleas Activa.

 

Shared by Juan Cristóbal García Molina 

 

The JDPs are back. Yesterday was the opening day for our Benjamin women's basketball team and for the Benjamin futsal team. The basketball girls began their experience in Olula del Río with great enthusiasm for the consecration of the local female basketball sports school, where around 20 girls have participated during the course and in which some compete in this league. 11. For the City Council of Arboleas it is a success to have this large group of girls practicing sports, which we hope will increase. On the other hand, the Benjamin futsal team made its debut with a 6-1 victory against Serón and a 3-6 defeat against Chirivel. We thank all the mothers and fathers who came to encourage their children and the children of Arboleas for their good behavior during the day. From the City Council of Arboleas we welcome these children and let them know that they will have the full support of this entity to promote healthy habits. Finally, next week will be the debut of the other two teams that this year participate in the futsal JDP. Congratulations for this good day to the girls and boys and see you in the next one!

 

Los JDP están de vuelta.  Ayer fue la jornada inaugural de nuestro equipo de baloncesto femenino Benjamín y del equipo de fútbol sala Benjamín.  Las chicas de baloncesto comenzaron su experiencia en Olula del Río con mucha ilusión por la consagración de la escuela deportiva local de baloncesto femenino, donde han participado durante el curso unas 20 chicas y en la que algunas compiten en esta liga.  11. Para el Ayuntamiento de Arboleas es un acierto contar con este numeroso grupo de chicas practicando deporte, que esperamos se incremente.  Por su parte, el equipo benjamín de fútbol sala debutó con una victoria por 6-1 ante Serón y una derrota por 3-6 ante Chirivel.  Agradecemos a todas las madres y padres que se acercaron a animar a sus hijos ya los niños de Arboleas por su buen comportamiento durante la jornada.  Desde el Ayuntamiento de Arboleas damos la bienvenida a estos niños y les hacemos saber que contarán con todo el apoyo de esta entidad para fomentar hábitos saludables.  Finalmente, la semana que viene será el debut de los otros dos equipos que este año participan en la JDP de fútbol sala.  ¡Felicidades por este buen día a las niñas y niños y nos vemos en la próxima!FB_IMG_1644757581146FB_IMG_1644757588071FB_IMG_1644757591951FB_IMG_1644757596548FB_IMG_1644757603810

History lesson from Jos Biggs.

History lesson for you today from Jos Biggs !!

 

I’ve just opened up and seen that I’ve not done anything new for this week! So you’ll have to make do with something from 2014.

Anyway, it’s very educational, so it will be good for you?!?!

There are many things in this life that we can do without, such as cold sores, and many things that we can’t do without, such as dustbins.

Which led me to wonder – who invented the dustbin?

My sense of national pride winced when I discovered it was a Frenchman - Eugène Poubelle. 

It was in Caen in 1831 that Madame Poubelle first lamented the lack of some sort of receptacle for the disposal of rubbish as she struggled with the domestic refuse created by her new baby, Eugène.

Her trials must have made an impression on her offspring, because as he grew up Eugène became a very highly regarded figure in public life. So much so that in 1884, when he was prefect in charge of Paris, he decreed that all Parisian landlords must provide receptacles for their tenants’ rubbish.

He even went further than that, specifying that there must be three separate containers: one for biodegradables, one for paper and rags, and one for glass, pottery and oyster shells. So he not only invented the dustbin, he also invented recycling!

The average Parisian thought his idea was a load of rubbish. They shrugged their shoulders, spread their hands, pulled down the corners of their mouths, and muttered ‘Pourquio?’ 

However, by 1890, they had been won over, so much so that the word poubelle officially entered the French language. 

So it was a Frenchman who invented the dustbin? Not so fast, Batman! Eugène put forward his idea in 1884; In the United Kingdom, the Public Health Act of 1875 authorised municipal authorities to ‘remove and dispose of waste’, and made it compulsory for household owners to take out their household waste once a week for collection in a 'moveable receptacle'.

Now according to my maths, that means that we had dustbins 9 years before the French! Eugène simply copied the English! Ah! That’s better!

So who did actually invent the dustbin? The bin as we know it today was invented by Jesse Dawes, born in Wolverhampton in 1878. 

His dustbins reigned supreme until George Dempster invented the Dempster-Dumpster system in the 1930s for automatically loading the contents of ‘standardised mobile steel containers’ onto the dustcart. 

This in turn led to the invention in the 1950s of the Dempster Dumpmaster waste collection vehicle, which in turn was shouldered aside when the Germans came up with the wheelie bin in the 1970s. 

But why are they called dustbins? The last thing they contain is dust! 

Not back then in the 1870s – then the most prominent forms of household waste at the time was coal fire ash, hence the name dustbin!

Did you hear the joke about the dustbin?

No? Never mind, it’s a load of rubbish!

History lesson from Jos Biggs.

History lesson for you today from Jos Biggs !!

 

I’ve just opened up and seen that I’ve not done anything new for this week! So you’ll have to make do with something from 2014.

Anyway, it’s very educational, so it will be good for you?!?!

There are many things in this life that we can do without, such as cold sores, and many things that we can’t do without, such as dustbins.

Which led me to wonder – who invented the dustbin?

My sense of national pride winced when I discovered it was a Frenchman - Eugène Poubelle. 

It was in Caen in 1831 that Madame Poubelle first lamented the lack of some sort of receptacle for the disposal of rubbish as she struggled with the domestic refuse created by her new baby, Eugène.

Her trials must have made an impression on her offspring, because as he grew up Eugène became a very highly regarded figure in public life. So much so that in 1884, when he was prefect in charge of Paris, he decreed that all Parisian landlords must provide receptacles for their tenants’ rubbish.

He even went further than that, specifying that there must be three separate containers: one for biodegradables, one for paper and rags, and one for glass, pottery and oyster shells. So he not only invented the dustbin, he also invented recycling!

The average Parisian thought his idea was a load of rubbish. They shrugged their shoulders, spread their hands, pulled down the corners of their mouths, and muttered ‘Pourquio?’ 

However, by 1890, they had been won over, so much so that the word poubelle officially entered the French language. 

So it was a Frenchman who invented the dustbin? Not so fast, Batman! Eugène put forward his idea in 1884; In the United Kingdom, the Public Health Act of 1875 authorised municipal authorities to ‘remove and dispose of waste’, and made it compulsory for household owners to take out their household waste once a week for collection in a 'moveable receptacle'.

Now according to my maths, that means that we had dustbins 9 years before the French! Eugène simply copied the English! Ah! That’s better!

So who did actually invent the dustbin? The bin as we know it today was invented by Jesse Dawes, born in Wolverhampton in 1878. 

His dustbins reigned supreme until George Dempster invented the Dempster-Dumpster system in the 1930s for automatically loading the contents of ‘standardised mobile steel containers’ onto the dustcart. 

This in turn led to the invention in the 1950s of the Dempster Dumpmaster waste collection vehicle, which in turn was shouldered aside when the Germans came up with the wheelie bin in the 1970s. 

But why are they called dustbins? The last thing they contain is dust! 

Not back then in the 1870s – then the most prominent forms of household waste at the time was coal fire ash, hence the name dustbin!

Did you hear the joke about the dustbin?

No? Never mind, it’s a load of rubbish!