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My blackberries and cherry tomatoes are coming in and I get to use my stashed “disposable” grocery store plastic berry containers for them for the umpteenth year in a row
Youcant recycle them but you can reuse them! 


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If you’re talking about rechargeable power tool batteries, yes, that will temporarily fix them. You’re essentially forcing a charge into the cells that are messing with the charger to bring them back to a level that’s about the same as the others and will allow the charger to function.Oh, yes! I want to tell ya’ll about raising rechargeable batteries from death!
I tore off the end of an old cell phone charger and carefully laid the bare wires onto the corresponding poles. Hold it there about 2 mins. Plug in the phone charger. Take care not to zap yourself. Place the battery back on its charger. If it still shows error, zap it again, try on charger. Do this until you give up or have enough charge on the battery for it to trigger the recharge chip of the charger. I extended my Makita battery about 5 years doing this.
What about a crock with a dipper, like the Old days…
f you’re talking about rechargeable power tool batteries, yes, that will temporarily fix them. You’re essentially forcing a charge into the cells that are messing with the charger to bring them back to a level that’s about the same as the others and will allow the charger to function.
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Typically only one or two of these will go bad and interrupt charging cycles, but that’s enough to get error codes or really shorten battery life.
Battery refurbishment companies will crack open the case, unsolder the batteries, replace the one or two bad cells and resell the battery.
If you’re handy and motivated you can do the same thing. And last time I checked, stores like Batteries + Bulbs actually stock the sub-C batteries. Just make sure not to mix nicad, nimh, or lithium. It’s also better to have similar amp hour cells for best performance from the charger and the pack.
Oh, man, I love pickled eggs.On the gardening thread, someone mentioned that I could use leftover pickle juice from an empty jar of pickles and pickle hard boiled eggs in that juice. I'm going to try that tonight.
Never had pickled hard boiled eggs, so don't know if I will like it. If it turns out good, it's a great way to reuse that pickle juice before you dump it down the drain. IIRC, they suggested only using the pickle juice once for the eggs and then dumping it.
I'm thinking the pickled eggs might go good on a salad. I like pickled beans and beets, so maybe pickled eggs will be tasty as well.
Oh, man, I love pickled eggs.
I’ve never reused old pickle juice. I typically go from scratch. The only reason that may matter, the liquid I use is warm. I don’t know how well reheating pickle juice would hold up.
Throw in a couple sliced jalapeño peppers.
Never heard of using a crock with a dipper for butter. I'm pretty old, but I only remember getting butter in plastic bowls. When the butter was gone, the plastic bowls were washed out and used as cereal and soup bowls. They were nice big bowels, too, not small like our regular dishes.
Thinking about that, it's too bad that we don't have more plastic items that can be reused at home instead of being tossed out as trash or sent to a recycling center at best. Was there not something like mayonnaise jars with handles that you could use as mugs when empty?
I would certainly like to see more food packaged in reusable containers instead of a one use and throw it away in the landfill.
FWIW. after years of asking Dear Wife not to throw out plastic food grade containers with lids, like Cool Whip bowls, she finally got warm to the idea of saving them for leftovers to give away at parties. Not that I had anything to do with changing her mind. She would toss out all those plastic food grade containers and buy cheap plastic stuff at WalMart. Then, she went to a party with her friends and the host sent some leftovers with my wife in a Cool Whip bowl.
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Hey, that's a great idea! Why didn't I think of that!?
So, now we are saving the Cool Whip containers to give away, too.
Oh, man, thanks for the memories! We had a cupboard FULL of the plastic bowls. My mom would try to buy the butter that was in "our favorite" colors. I recall red, olive green, a brighter green, yellow, and once! a blue one. They were heavy duty plastic too.I'm pretty old, but I only remember getting butter in plastic bowls. When the butter was gone, the plastic bowls were washed out and used as cereal and soup bowls. They were nice big bowels, too, not small like our regular dishes.