The rules of freecycling are simple: nothing obscene or illegal may be given away. Likewise, there can not be a price charged for the item given away. Payment transactions include bartering or trading for cash or money exchanging hands in the process. Freecycling can include a big item such as a car or a small item such as a pencil. As long as the rules apply to the process, freecycling is being performed.
The driving force behind freecycling is reducing the amount of trash that lines city streets and overfills landfills. Many cities maintain a freecycle website. Here users can log on and post bulletins about items they are looking to dispose of. Similarly, users can also find information on a particular item of interest. The two individuals with the desired items then meet and the exchange is made. The first freecycle network got its start in Tucson, Arizona back in 2003. Since then, freecycle clubs are popping up across the country like wildfire.
Some of the more interesting items given away in a freecycling program have included a fish tank, six cans of orange spray paint and a pair of guinea pigs. Larger items include a refrigerator and a community college in one city receiving 18 computers for a computer lab.
Written by Douglas Stillson. Find the latest information at
Freecycle Sites as well as
Freebies you can take advantage of.

