Hippie Christmas... love that! I go out trolling around with my friend's dad, who lives right next door to a campus, cuz we both love sifting through all the discarded dorm/apartment debris (and it's a private uni, so lots of good stuff)!!
It’s been a few times that we show her the button and try to get her to turn it on, but it’s a finicky button, hard even for humans to turn on, so it was very fun when she managed it!!
Really depends on where you are, unfortunately the majority of Canadian cities are nearly as bad as US cities. Certain parts of Montreal are one of the few exceptions. Not Just Bikes is a fantastic city planning channel that talk a LOT about walkability and good vs. bad city design, and he's originally from London, Ontario (a city he rants about on a regular basis). Great channel, highly recommend!!
@@ShannonMakes Shannon, I'm not far from London to the point many specialist appointments are made through London. I CANNOT stand driving in London!! My son actually lived there for 5 years for university and the only good thing, there are two Value Villages to choose from! lol
@@robintheparttimesewer6798 one out by the 401 off of Wellington Rd and the second on Dundas (hwy 2) st on the east end of town. They have a few other second hand stores including new-ish Goodwill book stores in the last ten years or so!
@@cecilehoare3053 yeah I keep forgetting how much time has passed. She went to London after high school and that was a good number of years ago. These days I don’t go much past Woodstock. They have a wonderful Len’s Mills store that I go and ogle maybe drool as well. So many pretty fabrics!
The suburbs of Minneapolis have annual clean up days where folks can put out anything for garbage collection. I loved those weekends when I lived there, tho to be honest, I indulged in regular alley shopping in the city proper, as they allowed folks to put out large items anytime. 20 years later, I still have antique furniture I picked up then.
If I lived in Montreal I'd definitely be out treasure hunting. We always picked up stuff by the side of the road with my mother - she still has some road-side furniture that we picked up 30 years ago. I'd absolutely love to know if there's a particular legendary item that's been doing the rounds on moving day for the last 50 years that Montrealers know to look out for. Something that someone put out on the curb in the 70s that got picked up, and put out a few years later, only for someone else to pick it up and repeat the cycle for 50 years. (That would make a fantastic short story - some really distinct object like that green couch - and you could tell the lives of all the different owners of the object over the years during the years that they owned the object. Happy stories of couples starting out, couples getting divorced or starting over again, children playing with/on it, pets taking naps on it, the things that got lost in the couch, etc. )
What a fabulous idea! I recently picked up a plan chest from Facebook marketplace for my threads and notions and art supplies, I looked it up and it was made in the 1930’s , for the last few years it had belonged to the sellers elderly farmer uncle, he had horses and it had horse gear, tools and gun parts in it and I love that it has history and that it has held many items and served many people and businesses over its 93 or so years xx
omg, that's such a lovely and whimsical idea, I absolutely love it, and I would LOVE somebody to write that story... I'd sure read it (even better if I found it in a little free library)!!
I think you created a new urban phrase: waste archeology😂❤!! I'm with you, at 7 mos pregnant, I saw a young man throwing boxes of what looked like VINTAGE FABRIC! I found boxes of quilts not completed (so fun!), and lots of scraps!! I still have much of it - 36 years later😅🎉! Hugs Shannon & Phil;)
Similar happenings in major college towns like Ann Arbor Michigan when dorm rooms empty out for the summer break. My sister found a working computer and reems of paper still in original packaging.
OK, that's impressive! The flat screen TV in our living room is also from the side of the road - it just had a minor electronic glitch that was easily fixable!
Boston has "Allston Christmas" with ~70% of leases begin September 1, and most of the people moving are college students. We don't have a specific day but lots of people will just put a bunch of items outside then post their address on local facebook groups, sometimes I'm amazed at what nice stuff is being given away!
Greetings from Berkeley where the post-graduation street score is an absolute feast. I used to live in Davis and it was the same. Definitely a college town thing. :)
My daughter lived in Montreal for 5 years and i helped her move a number of times, we used a wheel barrow, shopping cart and our truck to move her from one house to another. Moving day is amazing chaos!
Dang this really makes me miss living in a walkable/bike-able city. When I lived in Santa Cruz (California) the streets during the summertime were a treasure trove from the combination of upper-middle-class homeowners & the annual exodus of students from the nearby university.
Walkable city is the main reason I love Montreal. I hate cars, and much prefer walking or biking... so much nicer (and better for long term health, generally speaking)
In Boston, it's September 1st. Particularly because Boston is a college town. They call it Allston Christmas. (Allston being a neighborhood of Boston with a high percentage of students) Your finds are much higher quality than a bunch of students leave behind Also a common event is Storrowing. Named after a famously low clearance bridge, it means to ram your truck into an overpass or bridge because you thought the cars only sign was just a suggestion.
You're not the first to mention Allston Christmas (although you were the first to give the etymology, so I thank you extra for that)... sounds like so much fun! Living next to a campus is SO good on at the end of the school year... I go out trolling around with my friend's dad, who lives next to one, cuz we both love sifting through all the discarded dorm/apartment debris (and it's a private uni, so lots of good stuff)!!
Haven't been to Montreal (yet). I live in a college town so the first of every month the street score is pretty good but 1 June (usually two weeks after graduation) it's exceptional. With enough time and patience and some helping hands you could absolutely furnish an entire apartment with what you find on the sidewalks. But my favorite street score/moving day story was years ago, helping a buddy move out of a place and a family was moving in down the hall. They saw us moving the furniture (we were either going to take it to donate or leave outside, can't remember) and they took it all! No stairs required which was great because that was a fifth floor apartment with no elevator. On another note, as a Californian, I'm fascinated that the large appliances (fridge, stove, washer, and dryer) don't come with the apartments. Everywhere I've lived here it's part of the lease.
Oh yea, my entire living room/kitchen area (short of the actual appliances, and even a couple of those) are furnished entirely off the streets. Not even thrifted in a secondhand shop, but actually 100% free. It's NUTS. Also, huzzah for not having to move all that furniture out of the building... that's fantastic. And it's not unusual at all to have to bring your own appliances in many of the countries I've lived in Europe. Kinda annoying, but also kinda great that you don't get stuck with total shit appliances!
I've lived all over the US. To my understanding, kitchens MUST be furnished with stove / oven and fridge to be considered rentable. I've never seen any listing of an apartment or house that didn't. When we purchased a house, we had to pick out a fridge, but the stove, oven, and dishwasher were already installed. Washers and dryers can be hit or miss - we've carried our own set through the last few rental houses.
If I were there...I most definitely would be cruising the streets! Sometimes a person can be lucky enough to find usable items put out by the road in some of our towns in the rural area of East Texas. If time allows, I always stop to pursue the possibilities!
In our area of the Midwest US, many communities have a “community yard sale” where homes have their yard sales at the same time. It makes for a pretty cool event. The following days/week is “large trash pick up day” and people leave their leftovers on the roadsides and treasure hunters go about. I have picked up some cool stuff for free and have left a lot of things out for others.
In the USA but I love this idea of communal sharing in a sense. Allowing the things one no longer needs to be taken by the one who does need them or has a use for them with zero cost or zero ties. A complete letting go, moving on, and recycling. If I was you, I would invest in a little cart on wheels for adventures such as this!
We have a "Reuse Rendezvous" once or twice a year. Residents are encouraged to put boxes of gently used goods for people to come by and take as needed. I find searching for stuff fun and it's great to put out things that are still in good shape without having to garage sale it.
I love treasure hunting. Here in Berlin people also put things on the street, but on more random days. Sundays we sometimes go out and check out bixes in out neighbourhood.
Reminds me of Berkeley ca, where I lived for almost 40 years. Every day was “moving day”. I walked everywhere (the gym, grocery store, etc); and I always took an empty backpack with me to pick up any useful items left on the sidewalk (bags of clothes-sometimes new with tags still attached, and anything else that one could want or imagine.
What an interesting phenomenon. People leave items on the curb around here sometimes and I have gotten several nice pieces of furniture to upcycle. Just got a little tale the other day. But it's so cool that you found such a diverse selection of items. That velvet was nice, and the quilt! It amazes me what people just throw away sometimes.
Yea, so many good things get thrown away, it's kinda nuts! My entire living room is pulled from the curb. I was looking at it the other day, and realized that there wasn't even anything thrifted in there, it was literally all free... 😳
My mom had a Singer machine with those cams. They’re for various stitches, a precursor to sewing machines with computers. If I remember correctly, there was even one for embroidered letters.
Oh, my! That brings back some memories! I lived 10 years in Montreal, moved 5 times, most of the time on the first of July. Once from a 3rd floor to a 3rd floor in 30C weather. Once waited a bit too long to book a rental a vehicle, ended up with a smaller SUV, had to leave a lot of good furniture behind because it did not fit in the trunk..Feels so good to see images of Montreal, been living in France for 20 years now, never went back. Thanks for the hard work on your videos Cheers! xx
In my state we have a city wide neighborhood cleanup that’s putting anything you don’t want on the curb and either letting the trash or other people pick it up. We drive around every year to see the find goodies!
I find it quirkily reassuring that, even in the face of globalization, cities maintain some distinct customs and weird traditions. And I admire your restraint. My husband would have been prying my claws off so much stuff. Me: "Look! An orange floor lamp / green sofa / [add long list of other stuff you nobly passed up]!" Husband: "Noooooooo! Back away from the stuffed ostrich / tiger castration kit / grand piano with missing keys!" etc. What a great way to spend a day!😂
@@BeMoreBarnaby to be fair that's a nice way of putting it! Also I'm sort of understanding a little better about the cultural differences here - I'm England it feels a bit more risky picking up rejected items, just because we don't have an actual day where this is acceptable !
I can only imagine the traffic jams that must ensue, with all those moving trucks parked on the streets as people are loading and unloading their goods. 😱
I used to work at a library and we had to have special training on how to handle items that had been returned with bed bugs. It scared the life outta me 😅
Shannon, your videos are ridiculously fun to watch. You could be a professional! I am also a scavenger and am often amazed at the things that people throw away. I have also renovated an old house, circa 1901. It wasn't as distressed as yours, but it took us 9 years. I wish you well in this project and wish I had the means to help financially, but that is not an option. I am a senior, in southern California and am looking forward to watching your journey. Thank you for the giggles!
I was born in Montreal but my parents moved back to California when I was about a year old. I've heard stories about the Moving Day chaos. I lived in Isla Vista for a few years and when UCSB let out for the summer a lot of students moved back home and left an incredible amount of stuff. I found a surfboard an ugly but very comfortable sofa, so many books.
I always check out the donation bags or piles on my walks with my dogs. In fact at this moment I am wearing a dress I made of blue, yellow and white seersucker 5 yards score I found recently. Yes, the fabric is cotton.
Ashland, Ohio has a spring clean-up every April. They divide the town into quadrants and each has one week to put their stuff out free of charge. It's so fun to look for treasures and it became a family event! Often, we would take good stuff we couldn't use and donate it to a thrift store because the trash trucks and metal scrappers pick up often.
Fun! We don’t have anything like that where I’m at. I used to dumpster dive a lot, and was one of my favorite outings lol. But the county put a shed at each green box site and they guard the garbage, no dumpster diving for many years now. It’s so sad all the things that could be diverted from the landfill, and it’s sickening to have our tax dollars go to a person guarding what people discard. Occasionally on a Sunday I’ve gotten lucky and the guard wasn’t there. I wish they had a specific covered area that people could put things that are still useable. We do have a clearance thrift store here, a branch of the main thrift store. They have bins of things. You can get a basket of stuff for $5, a black garbage bag full for $10. Single items are like .10-.50 or so. It’s such a blessing and one of my favorite things to do while in town.
New subscriber from the GTA in southern Ontario. Your house purchase came up in my feed on TH-cam and I love it! Editing and posting videos takes time, keep up the great work!
Yea, I'm sure it would have been even better if 1.) it hadn't rained, and 2.) I could have gone out in the few days following as well... still not bad though
I live in a college town in the US and every semester we have “Riff Raff” where we can put out anything for trash. It’s amazing the things people throw away
Thank you so much, so interesting. Montreal looks beautiful, and what a fun tradition; so cool that recycling and re-using is given esteem in your city. Loved the video, as always. Take care, be well
Ok, just discovered you and want to say how amazing and cute you are! )have never said this about anyone before 😂) I had to come on my phone just to comment and subscribe as was watching you on a tv. Have to say I loved it when you put on your suncream - I screamed you go girl! 😂 👍 But really wanted to say, I live in a country where nothing is left on the streets, we have charity companies and private ones who come and collect your ‘treasure trash’ for free, to be sold in large warehouses. Anyway, mentioned you to my 25 year old daughter, she is a mini you in the sense foraging for those amazing things. She’s also a fashion designer and she collects all sorts and makes all sorts 😂 she’s done this since she was four! I always loved it and encouraged her to do whatever makes her happy! Anyhow, love and blessings upon you! Btw THAT orange lamp 😭 ❤❤❤
There definitely are people that go out with large trucks and collect stuff to sell privately, but in a city of 2 million people (and lots of congestion in the streets on these days, with everyone moving), it's quite hard for them to get everything, so there's lots left to private individuals, thankfully!!
We have a couple of those Portis racks that add to our closet space. We bought wooden hangers with swivel heads, hang them on the bottom horizontal pole and t-shirts sit almost flat against the wall in the bedroom. We can get about 15 or so shirts on each.
If I had at house, I would do exactly guys did. How fun and all of the treasures that you can find. I know around the big towns people will leave things out for others or the garbage. Happy hunting!❤
I think it would be really fun to forage! I definitely think though afterwards we would need a very nice quiet tea break. I think the Velvet was one of your best finds. I went out thrifting a few days ago and definitely got a great fabric haul (which had royal blue velvet :o ). I think my only concern would definitely be the bedbugs but I think you made out really really well! Everything is definitely good and usable!
@@ShannonMakes How anyone can get rid of velvet is beyond me! I'm going to make myself a Renn Fair dress, I know that you're going to save some for the lining of your train case, but if you can make yourself something fancy, a victorian-style drawstring purse would be really neat with some scraps.
YESSSS!! Living next to a campus is SO good on at the end of the school year... I go out trolling around with my friend's dad, cuz we both love sifting through all the discarded dorm/apartment debris (and it's a private uni, so lots of good stuff)!!
We keep our eyes open every trash day in my neighborhood (Tuesday and Friday) for finds. We've gotten many treasures that way. I live in Mississippi, USA.
It's just sad when those same friends get older and can't justify throwing out their back for free pizza and beer anymore! Surely, I'm not that old yet! 😂
Where i live we just have a routine bulk pickup for Trash, but a lot of people leave really good stuff out and it's normal to see someone with a trailer going around picking stuff up
You know I would totally have been there, if I lived in the vicinity. 😄 My city has a reuse centre, where all usable recycling from the genbrugsstationer gets diverted to. It is only 2 km from where I live. That is very dangerous. 😅 I have to limit my visits. Montreal looks so... I was going to say Danish, but: European. What a surprise. Is it the French connection? /Stine
oh my gosh, NOTHING is more dangerous than a good genbruggstation... there were a couple pretty close to our place in KBH, and I literally never left empty handed. SO dangerous!! 🤣 Also, re: European-ness, the area that I live in, the Plateau, is known for being very European... the rest of Montreal is less French and more North American.
We don't have this in the UK. I wish we did, as I have a living room of trash I need gone but can't afford a removal guy at the moment. Also, I appreciate the doggo fun 😂
Sure! If I had been in Montreal, I would definetly go Tresore hunting. I even do it in Germany. As a Student it is the best way to same Monet and get ikeaish vintage furniture!
Ow yes I would go! You wouldn’t believe it but earlier this week a fashion store was moving and they got rid of so much stuff! I got a brand new dress form as a result! The second after a professional dumpster diver came and took all the good stuff, but still incredibly happy with what I found! Thanks for documenting this it was incredibly nice to watch!
My Moms old machine uses the disk, I still have that machine, it’s the forerunner to the electronic embroidery machine😹😹. Lol during the summer time I can change up to 4 times a day😹😹😹what a clever little lady your pup was getting the water park working. When I lived in Sydney we would have 2 free council cleanup days a year, when I first left home to live on my own my parents told me to wait for then to move out, I setup my very first apartment using cleanup day, got a wardrobe, chest if draws, bed frame, I decided to buy a new mattress, a lounge suit, coffee table, dinning table with 4 working chairs 2 were broken. Best place to look for furniture that was still in good working order was the rich side of Sydney, that’s where I got the bedding and towels from and I’m talking about the luxury sheets 1000 thread count 🙀🙀 oh man the rich folks sure know how to waste stuff😳😳😳 even got a good working dishwasher and a sideboard. My parents were right once we found everything I needed they stored it in the garage for me so I could then go looking for a place to live. That was 35 years ago 😹😹 once I no longer needed the items I gave them to one of the many good will places that up cycles so others could use them. I still check it out when I am in the city and if I find anything I take it to the good will places as most times they get put into land fill. Not so much now as council have set aside an area for items that can be used still. Just not sure if all councils do this.
Wow, it must be quite chaotic!! I'm from Melbourne & many of our town councils here have a "hard waste collection" once a year but all at different times. So here, we have a similar thing with people putting unwanted furniture, small items & appliances on the nature strip outside their homes. Then you see other people driving around going through the piles & turning someone's discards into their own treasures!! Good way to recycle! Enjoyed your history of Montreal's Moving Day!😊
This is similar to the end of the winter/spring semester at the U of Wisconsin Milwaukee, but for the date. Good pickings, including countless unused waste baskets, my very-first immaculate 3" feather mattress topper, art, books, cookware, etc. Not all were chosen, but most were admired. It's been too long; gotta remember to make a run next June!
Love this. We have a neighbor who is cleaning out a relatives home and they just throw everything away. We have saved two bags of brand new winter coats, vintage tea glasses, nuts and bolts, embroidered pieces, etc. Then when they found out we were saving things they put a nasty note in the trash telling us to stop. UGH!
OK, see that is the part that I don’t understand to any degree… like I can sympathize with someone who maybe ran out of time or is super overwhelmed in their life and doesn’t have the time to donate (as per your other comment), but what I have zero concept of is then scolding others for taking your garbage and giving it a second life… I truly think I will never understand that type of person
@@ShannonMakes They have been coming once a week for several months so time isn't the issue. They are so-called Christians too and we have a church you can donate to just blocks away. Even the trash collectors think they are crazy. We try to keep things out of the landfill. We also go into over a hundred year old houses and take the wood trim, doors and anything usable out.
I cleaned out my childhood home, and I left the good stuff on the curb. Cars would be stopping and taking it, and it would make me happy. Less for the landfill and a new life for this stuff I can't take. Win -win. I donated, and gave away most of it. I miss my parents, not the stuff!
Does Cannelle bark at toys that manage to fly past her when she's trying to block/catch them? Mine dog will yell at toys that get past her- how dare they! Such chaos but such chances for treasures! If I lived there I would be scouring the streets leading up to/after it for goodies! I was lucky my free couch find did not have bed bugs but I kept in in the garage for 2-3 months and kept checking it just to be sure before it went into the house. 17:46 "Feed me Seymour!"
Not exactly... we make sure that the stick is very far in front of her (to minimize chances of her running ONTO the stick and impaling herself on it, which would be horrible), so instead she barks when she inevitably sprints PAST where the stick has landed. Which happens Every. Single. Time. She is incapable of slowing down as she approaches the stick, she's too excited, so she just sprints all-out, but then always bypasses, and barks in frustration. 🤣
I would be out looking because the thought of all of that just going to landfill upsets me. That trim is gorgeous! and red velvet is always a good score!
Yes, the thought of how much of that stuff is still good and useable (a LOT of it) and how much of it will end up in the landfill (a LOT of it) is really frustrating and sad.
My husband HATES that I want to pick up curbside items. SO! If I were in Quebec instead of Kansas… I’d just go along to help you! Besides, I could fill a curbside with plenty of unused and unneeded items of my own.
While we don’t have a collective moving day here, we have a thing where one person calls for the garbage truck to haul away large things and as soon as others see the first person put things out, they all add their large stuff (we mostly all have separate wheely bins for regular trash, paper, and compost, the glass, plastic, and chemicals are communal bins). And many people will leave the still useful things stacked nicely, so others can take it if they want. Also, at the glass bins people usually put nice things on the ground or on top so people can take it (I have taken many glass sheets from picture frames to use as palettes for paint). We have clothing, shoes and linens bins (only good things are allowed) but the stuff needs to be bagged so no rummaging there (plus it’s for charity, feels a bit wrong to take it). I love finding treasure, and have found a few good ones. In my teens (in the 90s) I found the most perfect 80s leather jacket I wore until it literally disintegrated.
Love this. I am from Melbourne Australia and we have 'Hard Rubbish' where your suburb is allowed to leave unwanted items out on your nature strip for an allotted week. It allows for scavenging and then the rest is collected by the councul Rubbish collection.
I have two Singer machines that use those cams. They date from the mid 50s. The plastic box is identical to the one that came with my mother's 1958 Singer. I have many but don't use most of them. I am sure there are people who would want them. Mom used to do the curbside scrounge when I was a teenager -- soooo embarrassing :)
I wish I was in Montreal for this! I always loved grabbing things to resell when I lived in a very affluent neighborhood, even bought myself a car when I was overseas for grad school with the money!
Twice a year there is a town near us that has what they call Bulk Days. Anything that can't fit in the trash can will be picked up only on those two weeks. So I start my hunt the day before and always score a lot of great things. A lot of my home is furnished with my finds. And I sell the rest. It is loads of fun.
Commenting from Wisconsin, USA. Which happens to be the home state of Patrick Rothfuss who wrote The Name Of The Wind. I also despair of ever getting the last book in that series. Our usual moving day is August 15th to coincide with the start of the school year on September 1st. People often do a lot of curb shopping during moving season here as well. Where I live people tend to call it hippie Christmas. 😆
I'm sorry you're also in Patrick Rothfuss Pergatory... it's the worst 😩😩 I found the first book in the KingKiller series a couple years ago, ordered the others second hand, and then discovered (to my horror, and continuing a trend that I seem to have started) that the last one wasn't released and MAY NEVER be released, and I'm so bummed.
You betcha I'd be out looking for treasure! I've never seen anything like it anywhere, BUT historically, as a genealogist I have seen these moving days, sometimes moving week, the week farm workers etc left one position for another, had time to visit family etc, either around mother's day, or after the harvest. I don't know if t is to be considered good or bad that there's nothing of the kind here. Stuff left on the side of the road really is trash, things that can't be repaired or salvaged. Your glimpses of Montreal makes it look so pretty and make me want to visit it and see what goodies I could find.
In Norway, the traditional moving days for farm workers were Summer Day (14th April, traditionally the first day of the summer half of the year) and Winter Day (14th October). Those were also the days when the runic calendar was flipped to the summer and winter side, respectively.
If you are in the US finals week of your local college/university or August 1st weekend those can be almost as fun. Probably a lot less on the quality but definitely worth a try if you are also a member of the dumpster diving club
The entire concept of the whole city moving on the same day sounds chaotic and perfect at the same time. You found a lot of great things!!!
Thank you!! :-D :-D
It sounds like move in/move out day when the kids go back/leave college.😊😊😊
you said it perfectly - like, WHO AND WHY does an entire city move at the same time? What the - ???
I'd love to see more of these types of videos on your channel ;)
Most college towns have a "moving day". In my town we call it Hippie Christmas.
Hippie Christmas... love that! I go out trolling around with my friend's dad, who lives right next door to a campus, cuz we both love sifting through all the discarded dorm/apartment debris (and it's a private uni, so lots of good stuff)!!
Okay, the scavenging content was fun and fascinating, but can we just talk about your clever girl turning the water park on on her own? 😍
It’s been a few times that we show her the button and try to get her to turn it on, but it’s a finicky button, hard even for humans to turn on, so it was very fun when she managed it!!
Phillippa Gregory is a good writer
I second this request!!! 💙💙💙💙💙💙
Moving day sounds like a dream for us fellow foragers, that handsewn quilt is quite the treasure! Thanks for sharing your moving day adventure.
You're very welcome, thanks for watching!!
Man, Canadian cities seem like such great places to live, they seem like they were built with residents in mind and to promote quality of life.
Really depends on where you are, unfortunately the majority of Canadian cities are nearly as bad as US cities. Certain parts of Montreal are one of the few exceptions. Not Just Bikes is a fantastic city planning channel that talk a LOT about walkability and good vs. bad city design, and he's originally from London, Ontario (a city he rants about on a regular basis). Great channel, highly recommend!!
@@ShannonMakes Shannon, I'm not far from London to the point many specialist appointments are made through London. I CANNOT stand driving in London!! My son actually lived there for 5 years for university and the only good thing, there are two Value Villages to choose from! lol
Two! When the daughter was down there I only remember 1. Salvation army had a bit bad store there as well
@@robintheparttimesewer6798 one out by the 401 off of Wellington Rd and the second on Dundas (hwy 2) st on the east end of town. They have a few other second hand stores including new-ish Goodwill book stores in the last ten years or so!
@@cecilehoare3053 yeah I keep forgetting how much time has passed. She went to London after high school and that was a good number of years ago. These days I don’t go much past Woodstock. They have a wonderful Len’s Mills store that I go and ogle maybe drool as well. So many pretty fabrics!
The suburbs of Minneapolis have annual clean up days where folks can put out anything for garbage collection. I loved those weekends when I lived there, tho to be honest, I indulged in regular alley shopping in the city proper, as they allowed folks to put out large items anytime. 20 years later, I still have antique furniture I picked up then.
If I lived in Montreal I'd definitely be out treasure hunting. We always picked up stuff by the side of the road with my mother - she still has some road-side furniture that we picked up 30 years ago.
I'd absolutely love to know if there's a particular legendary item that's been doing the rounds on moving day for the last 50 years that Montrealers know to look out for. Something that someone put out on the curb in the 70s that got picked up, and put out a few years later, only for someone else to pick it up and repeat the cycle for 50 years.
(That would make a fantastic short story - some really distinct object like that green couch - and you could tell the lives of all the different owners of the object over the years during the years that they owned the object. Happy stories of couples starting out, couples getting divorced or starting over again, children playing with/on it, pets taking naps on it, the things that got lost in the couch, etc. )
What a fabulous idea! I recently picked up a plan chest from Facebook marketplace for my threads and notions and art supplies, I looked it up and it was made in the 1930’s , for the last few years it had belonged to the sellers elderly farmer uncle, he had horses and it had horse gear, tools and gun parts in it and I love that it has history and that it has held many items and served many people and businesses over its 93 or so years xx
omg, that's such a lovely and whimsical idea, I absolutely love it, and I would LOVE somebody to write that story... I'd sure read it (even better if I found it in a little free library)!!
That's super cool, love that you were able to find a bit about it's history!
I think you created a new urban phrase: waste archeology😂❤!! I'm with you, at 7 mos pregnant, I saw a young man throwing boxes of what looked like VINTAGE FABRIC! I found boxes of quilts not completed (so fun!), and lots of scraps!! I still have much of it - 36 years later😅🎉! Hugs Shannon & Phil;)
Love it!!
Similar happenings in major college towns like Ann Arbor Michigan when dorm rooms empty out for the summer break. My sister found a working computer and reems of paper still in original packaging.
A computer? Gee... And so many people go without, too!
OK, that's impressive! The flat screen TV in our living room is also from the side of the road - it just had a minor electronic glitch that was easily fixable!
Boston has "Allston Christmas" with ~70% of leases begin September 1, and most of the people moving are college students.
We don't have a specific day but lots of people will just put a bunch of items outside then post their address on local facebook groups, sometimes I'm amazed at what nice stuff is being given away!
Greetings from Berkeley where the post-graduation street score is an absolute feast. I used to live in Davis and it was the same. Definitely a college town thing. :)
Yup. I lived in Berkeley, CA for many years. May was always a great time to upgrade furniture. :)
The black top hat cams are for the 400 & 500 series Singers. The white ones are for the 600 series.
Ooooh, thank you, that’s good to know - I need to find someone with those machines, as mines from the 300 series
@@ShannonMakes if you know someone with one of those series, they will be grateful. The whole set gets expensive.
How much would you sell the sewing cams for?
Aw man that orange lamp 🧡😭
Right?! So fun! (although I admit, I'd probably have painted it, just to match our living room a bit more)
My daughter lived in Montreal for 5 years and i helped her move a number of times, we used a wheel barrow, shopping cart and our truck to move her from one house to another. Moving day is amazing chaos!
Amazing chaos is right!
Would enjoy being there on July. Love the quilt, beautiful find!!!❤❤❤❤❤
In Boston, it’s referred to as 'Alston Christmas' when the college kids arrive/rotate in September. The local news channels often do a story on it.
Love that!! A few comments here mentioning the Alston Christmas! 🗑🎄
Taking couch covers for the velvet is so smart 🤯
Dang this really makes me miss living in a walkable/bike-able city. When I lived in Santa Cruz (California) the streets during the summertime were a treasure trove from the combination of upper-middle-class homeowners & the annual exodus of students from the nearby university.
Walkable city is the main reason I love Montreal. I hate cars, and much prefer walking or biking... so much nicer (and better for long term health, generally speaking)
I LOOOOVE that little corgi butt!!❤ It’s so refreshing to see a corgi that isn’t grossly overweight. What a sweet little girl !
Yes, we like to keep her nice and trim 🥰
In Boston, it's September 1st. Particularly because Boston is a college town. They call it Allston Christmas. (Allston being a neighborhood of Boston with a high percentage of students)
Your finds are much higher quality than a bunch of students leave behind
Also a common event is Storrowing. Named after a famously low clearance bridge, it means to ram your truck into an overpass or bridge because you thought the cars only sign was just a suggestion.
You're not the first to mention Allston Christmas (although you were the first to give the etymology, so I thank you extra for that)... sounds like so much fun!
Living next to a campus is SO good on at the end of the school year... I go out trolling around with my friend's dad, who lives next to one, cuz we both love sifting through all the discarded dorm/apartment debris (and it's a private uni, so lots of good stuff)!!
ahahaha I have not thought about that bridge in years!
I was coming to the comments to basically make this same comment so thanks!
I think your videos are the only ones that don't even make it to my to watch later list these days, I just watch them immediately 😊
Wow, that’s such an amazing compliment, thank you so much!! 🥰🥰🫶
Haven't been to Montreal (yet). I live in a college town so the first of every month the street score is pretty good but 1 June (usually two weeks after graduation) it's exceptional. With enough time and patience and some helping hands you could absolutely furnish an entire apartment with what you find on the sidewalks. But my favorite street score/moving day story was years ago, helping a buddy move out of a place and a family was moving in down the hall. They saw us moving the furniture (we were either going to take it to donate or leave outside, can't remember) and they took it all! No stairs required which was great because that was a fifth floor apartment with no elevator. On another note, as a Californian, I'm fascinated that the large appliances (fridge, stove, washer, and dryer) don't come with the apartments. Everywhere I've lived here it's part of the lease.
Oh yea, my entire living room/kitchen area (short of the actual appliances, and even a couple of those) are furnished entirely off the streets. Not even thrifted in a secondhand shop, but actually 100% free. It's NUTS.
Also, huzzah for not having to move all that furniture out of the building... that's fantastic. And it's not unusual at all to have to bring your own appliances in many of the countries I've lived in Europe. Kinda annoying, but also kinda great that you don't get stuck with total shit appliances!
I've lived all over the US. To my understanding, kitchens MUST be furnished with stove / oven and fridge to be considered rentable. I've never seen any listing of an apartment or house that didn't. When we purchased a house, we had to pick out a fridge, but the stove, oven, and dishwasher were already installed. Washers and dryers can be hit or miss - we've carried our own set through the last few rental houses.
Not that way here is Montreal, and it’s not uncommon in Germany either, for “unfurnished” to mean FULLY unfurnished
If I were there...I most definitely would be cruising the streets! Sometimes a person can be lucky enough to find usable items put out by the road in some of our towns in the rural area of East Texas. If time allows, I always stop to pursue the possibilities!
In New Zealand people move dairy farms on June 1st - their household, their machinery, herds of cows, everything. Also called Mooving day 😅
MOOving day... I love that 🐮🐄
In our area of the Midwest US, many communities have a “community yard sale” where homes have their yard sales at the same time. It makes for a pretty cool event. The following days/week is “large trash pick up day” and people leave their leftovers on the roadsides and treasure hunters go about. I have picked up some cool stuff for free and have left a lot of things out for others.
Very fun!!
In the USA but I love this idea of communal sharing in a sense. Allowing the things one no longer needs to be taken by the one who does need them or has a use for them with zero cost or zero ties. A complete letting go, moving on, and recycling. If I was you, I would invest in a little cart on wheels for adventures such as this!
If I was in Montreal, I would definitely be out on Moving Day! You have some great finds. Oh and your fur baby is super cute!
Thank you!!
We have a "Reuse Rendezvous" once or twice a year. Residents are encouraged to put boxes of gently used goods for people to come by and take as needed. I find searching for stuff fun and it's great to put out things that are still in good shape without having to garage sale it.
I love treasure hunting. Here in Berlin people also put things on the street, but on more random days. Sundays we sometimes go out and check out bixes in out neighbourhood.
Do you have any specific places/areas in Berlin where you go for some hunting? Here in the South of Berlin I find those kind of boxes very rarely. 🤔
@@sophieb.1287 I always found a lot (especially furniture) in Wedding/Gesundbrunnen
@@linemonssi4108 Thank you very much 😊
I found more in areas whith family houses, but maybe it's just my area 😄
@@mellisartandcrafts As soon as I have a Sunday off, I'll check this out. 😁
Reminds me of Berkeley ca, where I lived for almost 40 years. Every day was “moving day”. I walked everywhere (the gym, grocery store, etc); and I always took an empty backpack with me to pick up any useful items left on the sidewalk (bags of clothes-sometimes new with tags still attached, and anything else that one could want or imagine.
Love that!
What an interesting phenomenon. People leave items on the curb around here sometimes and I have gotten several nice pieces of furniture to upcycle. Just got a little tale the other day. But it's so cool that you found such a diverse selection of items. That velvet was nice, and the quilt! It amazes me what people just throw away sometimes.
Yea, so many good things get thrown away, it's kinda nuts! My entire living room is pulled from the curb. I was looking at it the other day, and realized that there wasn't even anything thrifted in there, it was literally all free... 😳
My mom had a Singer machine with those cams. They’re for various stitches, a precursor to sewing machines with computers. If I remember correctly, there was even one for embroidered letters.
Makes me grateful to have always lived in places where the appliances came with (and stayed with) the apartment. Those staircases are gorgeous though
Oh, that quilt!
Right?! So beautiful!!
Oh, my! That brings back some memories! I lived 10 years in Montreal, moved 5 times, most of the time on the first of July. Once from a 3rd floor to a 3rd floor in 30C weather. Once waited a bit too long to book a rental a vehicle, ended up with a smaller SUV, had to leave a lot of good furniture behind because it did not fit in the trunk..Feels so good to see images of Montreal, been living in France for 20 years now, never went back.
Thanks for the hard work on your videos
Cheers!
xx
You're very welcome, glad you enjoyed!
In my state we have a city wide neighborhood cleanup that’s putting anything you don’t want on the curb and either letting the trash or other people pick it up. We drive around every year to see the find goodies!
So nice!!!
Does this really happen in one day?! That sounds super overwhelming...!
It absolutely does! I mean, obviously some people move the days before or after, but most move on the 1st!
I find it quirkily reassuring that, even in the face of globalization, cities maintain some distinct customs and weird traditions. And I admire your restraint. My husband would have been prying my claws off so much stuff. Me: "Look! An orange floor lamp / green sofa / [add long list of other stuff you nobly passed up]!" Husband: "Noooooooo! Back away from the stuffed ostrich / tiger castration kit / grand piano with missing keys!" etc. What a great way to spend a day!😂
@@BeMoreBarnaby to be fair that's a nice way of putting it! Also I'm sort of understanding a little better about the cultural differences here - I'm England it feels a bit more risky picking up rejected items, just because we don't have an actual day where this is acceptable !
Yes it does really happen lol the entire province of qc moving day is july 1 lol
Yes yes it does really happen that specific day lol... the only province in Canada to have this spesific day for renting dates lol...
I can only imagine the traffic jams that must ensue, with all those moving trucks parked on the streets as people are loading and unloading their goods. 😱
Yes, the traffic can be just HORRIBLE!
@@ShannonMakes ...cause Montreal traffic isn't hellish enough on a normal day...
I left Montreal to live in the boonies closer to Quebec City! I would gladly go back to chaos Montreal anytime, just miss it so much!
IF I was there, you better believe it I would go out.
I used to work at a library and we had to have special training on how to handle items that had been returned with bed bugs. It scared the life outta me 😅
Even books 😳😳Oof 🙁
Those sewing machine cams would be perfect for my vintage singer 🥰
Oh wow, the orange lamp was awesome, I would have figured some way to get it home.
A hope those folks who really need these items have access and know about this.
I love this sneak peak into a to different culture that would be absolute second hand heaven to me!
Thank you!!
Shannon, your videos are ridiculously fun to watch. You could be a professional! I am also a scavenger and am often amazed at the things that people throw away. I have also renovated an old house, circa 1901. It wasn't as distressed as yours, but it took us 9 years. I wish you well in this project and wish I had the means to help financially, but that is not an option. I am a senior, in southern California and am looking forward to watching your journey. Thank you for the giggles!
Montreal seems like an absolutely gorgeous city
The city looks so gorgeous. Thanks for showing us around, while also picking up some neat pieces.
My pleasure 😊
I was born in Montreal but my parents moved back to California when I was about a year old. I've heard stories about the Moving Day chaos.
I lived in Isla Vista for a few years and when UCSB let out for the summer a lot of students moved back home and left an incredible amount of stuff. I found a surfboard an ugly but very comfortable sofa, so many books.
College campuses at the end of term (or beginning) are amazing for this sort of thing too, so true!
thx for the walk down memory lane
I always check out the donation bags or piles on my walks with my dogs. In fact at this moment I am wearing a dress I made of blue, yellow and white seersucker 5 yards score I found recently. Yes, the fabric is cotton.
Ooooh, that's a fantastic find! LOVE that!!
Ashland, Ohio has a spring clean-up every April. They divide the town into quadrants and each has one week to put their stuff out free of charge. It's so fun to look for treasures and it became a family event! Often, we would take good stuff we couldn't use and donate it to a thrift store because the trash trucks and metal scrappers pick up often.
That's amazing!!
Fun! We don’t have anything like that where I’m at. I used to dumpster dive a lot, and was one of my favorite outings lol. But the county put a shed at each green box site and they guard the garbage, no dumpster diving for many years now. It’s so sad all the things that could be diverted from the landfill, and it’s sickening to have our tax dollars go to a person guarding what people discard. Occasionally on a Sunday I’ve gotten lucky and the guard wasn’t there. I wish they had a specific covered area that people could put things that are still useable. We do have a clearance thrift store here, a branch of the main thrift store. They have bins of things. You can get a basket of stuff for $5, a black garbage bag full for $10. Single items are like .10-.50 or so. It’s such a blessing and one of my favorite things to do while in town.
New subscriber from the GTA in southern Ontario. Your house purchase came up in my feed on TH-cam and I love it! Editing and posting videos takes time, keep up the great work!
Wow the quilts were a great find. Not a bad haul considering the weather. When we lived in Ottawa I remember seeing news stories about moving day.
Yea, I'm sure it would have been even better if 1.) it hadn't rained, and 2.) I could have gone out in the few days following as well... still not bad though
I love treasure hunting! I’m all about reduce, reuse, recycle!
And it's so much fun!
Shannon, I always look forward to viewing your videos. Thank you for sharing your endeavors.
You are so welcome! So glad you're enjoying them, and thank you for checking out the older videos, there are some good ones there!!
The train case and quilt are my favorites, besides your adorable dog.
I live in a college town in the US and every semester we have “Riff Raff” where we can put out anything for trash. It’s amazing the things people throw away
Ahhh, I love the name! Riff Raff!
Thank you so much, so interesting. Montreal looks beautiful, and what a fun tradition; so cool that recycling and re-using is given esteem in your city. Loved the video, as always. Take care, be well
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching! 🫶
Ok, just discovered you and want to say how amazing and cute you are! )have never said this about anyone before 😂) I had to come on my phone just to comment and subscribe as was watching you on a tv. Have to say I loved it when you put on your suncream - I screamed you go girl! 😂 👍
But really wanted to say, I live in a country where nothing is left on the streets, we have charity companies and private ones who come and collect your ‘treasure trash’ for free, to be sold in large warehouses.
Anyway, mentioned you to my 25 year old daughter, she is a mini you in the sense foraging for those amazing things. She’s also a fashion designer and she collects all sorts and makes all sorts 😂 she’s done this since she was four! I always loved it and encouraged her to do whatever makes her happy! Anyhow, love and blessings upon you!
Btw THAT orange lamp 😭
❤❤❤
There definitely are people that go out with large trucks and collect stuff to sell privately, but in a city of 2 million people (and lots of congestion in the streets on these days, with everyone moving), it's quite hard for them to get everything, so there's lots left to private individuals, thankfully!!
@@ShannonMakes oh wow, you even had time to reply to my message filled with grammatical errors - so sorry but amended now with the help of 🤓 💕
We have a couple of those Portis racks that add to our closet space. We bought wooden hangers with swivel heads, hang them on the bottom horizontal pole and t-shirts sit almost flat against the wall in the bedroom. We can get about 15 or so shirts on each.
ooooh, nice tip!! thank you
Omg we had bedbugs 2 years ago because they came through the walls from a neighbor's apartment. It was horrific.
If I had at house, I would do exactly guys did. How fun and all of the treasures that you can find. I know around the big towns people will leave things out for others or the garbage. Happy hunting!❤
In Florida moving day is after a hurricane hits. This is the first I ever heard of such a thing. Sounds amazing!!!
it IS amazing!!
I think it would be really fun to forage! I definitely think though afterwards we would need a very nice quiet tea break. I think the Velvet was one of your best finds. I went out thrifting a few days ago and definitely got a great fabric haul (which had royal blue velvet :o ). I think my only concern would definitely be the bedbugs but I think you made out really really well! Everything is definitely good and usable!
ooooh, royal blue velvet... be still, my beating heart!
@@ShannonMakes How anyone can get rid of velvet is beyond me! I'm going to make myself a Renn Fair dress, I know that you're going to save some for the lining of your train case, but if you can make yourself something fancy, a victorian-style drawstring purse would be really neat with some scraps.
I took part in the MMF (Montréal moving festival) 6 times over 15 years, until we left for the subburb. You are making me nostalgic!...
Nice! 💪
I live in the USA and i do the same thing here😊
Love that!
I remember the treasure finds from college moving days. Good times.
YESSSS!! Living next to a campus is SO good on at the end of the school year... I go out trolling around with my friend's dad, cuz we both love sifting through all the discarded dorm/apartment debris (and it's a private uni, so lots of good stuff)!!
We keep our eyes open every trash day in my neighborhood (Tuesday and Friday) for finds. We've gotten many treasures that way. I live in Mississippi, USA.
If I was there I would find some way to get that orange lamp home, obsessed
It’s becoming the unexpected superstar of the video!! 🧡🧡🧡🛋️
C’est aussi la tradition de remercier les amis qui aident à déménager en faisant livrer de la pizza et de la poutine pour tout le monde !!
une tradition universelle, je crois 🍕🍻💪
It's just sad when those same friends get older and can't justify throwing out their back for free pizza and beer anymore! Surely, I'm not that old yet! 😂
True in America too.
Dang right!
I'm a huge thrifty-frugality fan, but daaaang, the Canelle content in this one is priceless.
LOL love this comment, thank you!
Always nice to see content from Quebec… and yes, unfortunately, if you ask me, moving day is a thing here!
I wish we had moving day in Australia. I'd definitely be out there!
love that!!!
If I lived there, I would definitely be scavenging! Also, what an adorable pup!
Thank you! She’s the best!!
Where i live we just have a routine bulk pickup for Trash, but a lot of people leave really good stuff out and it's normal to see someone with a trailer going around picking stuff up
Nice!
You know I would totally have been there, if I lived in the vicinity. 😄
My city has a reuse centre, where all usable recycling from the genbrugsstationer gets diverted to. It is only 2 km from where I live. That is very dangerous. 😅 I have to limit my visits.
Montreal looks so... I was going to say Danish, but: European. What a surprise. Is it the French connection?
/Stine
oh my gosh, NOTHING is more dangerous than a good genbruggstation... there were a couple pretty close to our place in KBH, and I literally never left empty handed. SO dangerous!! 🤣 Also, re: European-ness, the area that I live in, the Plateau, is known for being very European... the rest of Montreal is less French and more North American.
We don't have this in the UK. I wish we did, as I have a living room of trash I need gone but can't afford a removal guy at the moment.
Also, I appreciate the doggo fun 😂
Doggo fun is the best!!
Look for Freecycle on the internet for the UK.
Sure! If I had been in Montreal, I would definetly go Tresore hunting. I even do it in Germany. As a Student it is the best way to same Monet and get ikeaish vintage furniture!
💪💪💪
Ow yes I would go! You wouldn’t believe it but earlier this week a fashion store was moving and they got rid of so much stuff! I got a brand new dress form as a result! The second after a professional dumpster diver came and took all the good stuff, but still incredibly happy with what I found! Thanks for documenting this it was incredibly nice to watch!
omg, that's absolutely amazing... SUPER glad that you were able to get to it in time (and snag it before the reseller did)!! Huzzah!
@@ShannonMakes Hahaah yes getting it just in time definitely added to the whole adrenaline experience :)
This was a great adventure! Thank you for taking us along!😊❤
Our city's downtown does this on August 14-16 every year. Come on over to Madison, WI, USA.
My Moms old machine uses the disk, I still have that machine, it’s the forerunner to the electronic embroidery machine😹😹.
Lol during the summer time I can change up to 4 times a day😹😹😹what a clever little lady your pup was getting the water park working.
When I lived in Sydney we would have 2 free council cleanup days a year, when I first left home to live on my own my parents told me to wait for then to move out, I setup my very first apartment using cleanup day, got a wardrobe, chest if draws, bed frame, I decided to buy a new mattress, a lounge suit, coffee table, dinning table with 4 working chairs 2 were broken. Best place to look for furniture that was still in good working order was the rich side of Sydney, that’s where I got the bedding and towels from and I’m talking about the luxury sheets 1000 thread count 🙀🙀 oh man the rich folks sure know how to waste stuff😳😳😳 even got a good working dishwasher and a sideboard. My parents were right once we found everything I needed they stored it in the garage for me so I could then go looking for a place to live. That was 35 years ago 😹😹 once I no longer needed the items I gave them to one of the many good will places that up cycles so others could use them.
I still check it out when I am in the city and if I find anything I take it to the good will places as most times they get put into land fill. Not so much now as council have set aside an area for items that can be used still. Just not sure if all councils do this.
Love that you find things for the sole purpose of taking them to the Good Will... sounds like something I could see myself doing too!!
Wow, it must be quite chaotic!! I'm from Melbourne & many of our town councils here have a "hard waste collection" once a year but all at different times. So here, we have a similar thing with people putting unwanted furniture, small items & appliances on the nature strip outside their homes. Then you see other people driving around going through the piles & turning someone's discards into their own treasures!! Good way to recycle! Enjoyed your history of Montreal's Moving Day!😊
Thank you!
This is similar to the end of the winter/spring semester at the U of Wisconsin Milwaukee, but for the date. Good pickings, including countless unused waste baskets, my very-first immaculate 3" feather mattress topper, art, books, cookware, etc. Not all were chosen, but most were admired. It's been too long; gotta remember to make a run next June!
Love this. We have a neighbor who is cleaning out a relatives home and they just throw everything away. We have saved two bags of brand new winter coats, vintage tea glasses, nuts and bolts, embroidered pieces, etc. Then when they found out we were saving things they put a nasty note in the trash telling us to stop. UGH!
OK, see that is the part that I don’t understand to any degree… like I can sympathize with someone who maybe ran out of time or is super overwhelmed in their life and doesn’t have the time to donate (as per your other comment), but what I have zero concept of is then scolding others for taking your garbage and giving it a second life… I truly think I will never understand that type of person
@@ShannonMakes They have been coming once a week for several months so time isn't the issue. They are so-called Christians too and we have a church you can donate to just blocks away. Even the trash collectors think they are crazy. We try to keep things out of the landfill. We also go into over a hundred year old houses and take the wood trim, doors and anything usable out.
Once it is in the trash it is fair game! It is legal to dumpster dive in the US, unless posted not to do it.
I know. That is what makes it so absurd. We even checked with city hall to be sure. We still do it. @@Nwladylaura369
I cleaned out my childhood home, and I left the good stuff on the curb. Cars would be stopping and taking it, and it would make me happy. Less for the landfill and a new life for this stuff I can't take. Win -win. I donated, and gave away most of it. I miss my parents, not the stuff!
This is fascinating, je suis née au Québec - but I had never heard of this before. Moving day....for an entire city, chaotic for sure!
Same in the US on the last day of college.
Does Cannelle bark at toys that manage to fly past her when she's trying to block/catch them? Mine dog will yell at toys that get past her- how dare they!
Such chaos but such chances for treasures! If I lived there I would be scouring the streets leading up to/after it for goodies!
I was lucky my free couch find did not have bed bugs but I kept in in the garage for 2-3 months and kept checking it just to be sure before it went into the house.
17:46 "Feed me Seymour!"
Not exactly... we make sure that the stick is very far in front of her (to minimize chances of her running ONTO the stick and impaling herself on it, which would be horrible), so instead she barks when she inevitably sprints PAST where the stick has landed. Which happens Every. Single. Time. She is incapable of slowing down as she approaches the stick, she's too excited, so she just sprints all-out, but then always bypasses, and barks in frustration. 🤣
I would be out looking because the thought of all of that just going to landfill upsets me. That trim is gorgeous! and red velvet is always a good score!
Yes, the thought of how much of that stuff is still good and useable (a LOT of it) and how much of it will end up in the landfill (a LOT of it) is really frustrating and sad.
22:30 i gasped when i saw the name of the wind!!! one of my favorite book series of all time💜💜💜
Then you must be as bitterly disappointed/impatient as I am… it has literally become a running joke during my Vlogmas 🤣😭
My husband HATES that I want to pick up curbside items. SO! If I were in Quebec instead of Kansas… I’d just go along to help you! Besides, I could fill a curbside with plenty of unused and unneeded items of my own.
We used to love coming to Montreal just for this day!!!
While we don’t have a collective moving day here, we have a thing where one person calls for the garbage truck to haul away large things and as soon as others see the first person put things out, they all add their large stuff (we mostly all have separate wheely bins for regular trash, paper, and compost, the glass, plastic, and chemicals are communal bins). And many people will leave the still useful things stacked nicely, so others can take it if they want. Also, at the glass bins people usually put nice things on the ground or on top so people can take it (I have taken many glass sheets from picture frames to use as palettes for paint). We have clothing, shoes and linens bins (only good things are allowed) but the stuff needs to be bagged so no rummaging there (plus it’s for charity, feels a bit wrong to take it). I love finding treasure, and have found a few good ones. In my teens (in the 90s) I found the most perfect 80s leather jacket I wore until it literally disintegrated.
Great video
Thank you!!
Love this. I am from Melbourne Australia and we have 'Hard Rubbish' where your suburb is allowed to leave unwanted items out on your nature strip for an allotted week. It allows for scavenging and then the rest is collected by the councul Rubbish collection.
ahhhh, I love that! Seems like a great compromise between allowing for recycling, and just letting all chaos reign!
I grew up in Perth, where hard rubbish collection day is known as "Bring Out Your Dead". Unfortunately it doesn't seem to be a thing in Tasmania.
omg, not only is that amazing, both in concept and in naming, but also, now I'm having flashbacks to Monty Python 🤣
This looks like a furniture flipper's paradise!
Oh, totally!
I have two Singer machines that use those cams. They date from the mid 50s. The plastic box is identical to the one that came with my mother's 1958 Singer. I have many but don't use most of them. I am sure there are people who would want them.
Mom used to do the curbside scrounge when I was a teenager -- soooo embarrassing :)
Yea, I'm going to hang onto them in case I end up finding someone who would want and use them!
I wish I was in Montreal for this! I always loved grabbing things to resell when I lived in a very affluent neighborhood, even bought myself a car when I was overseas for grad school with the money!
Wow, that’s fabulous!
Twice a year there is a town near us that has what they call Bulk Days. Anything that can't fit in the trash can will be picked up only on those two weeks. So I start my hunt the day before and always score a lot of great things. A lot of my home is furnished with my finds. And I sell the rest. It is loads of fun.
Love that! And yes, our apartment is almost entirely furnished with free things from the streets!
Commenting from Wisconsin, USA. Which happens to be the home state of Patrick Rothfuss who wrote The Name Of The Wind. I also despair of ever getting the last book in that series.
Our usual moving day is August 15th to coincide with the start of the school year on September 1st. People often do a lot of curb shopping during moving season here as well. Where I live people tend to call it hippie Christmas. 😆
I'm sorry you're also in Patrick Rothfuss Pergatory... it's the worst 😩😩 I found the first book in the KingKiller series a couple years ago, ordered the others second hand, and then discovered (to my horror, and continuing a trend that I seem to have started) that the last one wasn't released and MAY NEVER be released, and I'm so bummed.
You betcha I'd be out looking for treasure! I've never seen anything like it anywhere, BUT historically, as a genealogist I have seen these moving days, sometimes moving week, the week farm workers etc left one position for another, had time to visit family etc, either around mother's day, or after the harvest.
I don't know if t is to be considered good or bad that there's nothing of the kind here. Stuff left on the side of the road really is trash, things that can't be repaired or salvaged.
Your glimpses of Montreal makes it look so pretty and make me want to visit it and see what goodies I could find.
Oooh, I love that idea of moving days/weeks/seasonal worker migrations, etc.... such a lovely parallel to the QC Moving Day tradition!
In Norway, the traditional moving days for farm workers were Summer Day (14th April, traditionally the first day of the summer half of the year) and Winter Day (14th October). Those were also the days when the runic calendar was flipped to the summer and winter side, respectively.
If you are in the US finals week of your local college/university or August 1st weekend those can be almost as fun. Probably a lot less on the quality but definitely worth a try if you are also a member of the dumpster diving club
Yes, so true!! In other areas, it's early September... the timing depends, but campuses are SO good for this kind of scrounging!