bdhsfz6
Elite Member
- Joined
- Apr 11, 2015
- Messages
- 3,422
- Location
- Northeastern Pennsylvania
- Tractor
- Kubota MX5800 HST & L6060 HSTC Formerly L6060 HST B7100 HST, L2550, L3010 HST, L3430 HST
I have no experience with using a chipper to shred paper but there are places where you can rent an industrial shredder. Might be cheaper than hiring a shredding service.
When I come across a large quantity of unwanted paperwork, I do use a burn barrel sometimes but the material needs to be added to the fire a few pages at a time or it doesn't burn completely and clumps up at the bottom of the barrel.
On a couple of occasions, for very large quantities, I dug a pit and buried it. Takes a few years but mother nature eventually takes care of it.
I also take advantage of public shredding events which take place every few years around here. Some are free and run by the county, but most charge a nominal fee.
My brother lives in a large townhouse development and once a year, the HOA hires a shredding service. They get a quantity discount and the rates are very reasonable.
This won't help for disposing of an existing mountain of material but going forward, try this:
I discovered that much of the paper I was shredding contained no sensitive information and could be recycled intact. I now keep a box next to my shredder for non sensitive documents, junk mail, etc. Sometimes, all I need to do is tear off a portion of the document that has the sensitive info and throw the rest in the recycle box. I take it to the county recycle center every few months along with bags of shredded documents.
When I come across a large quantity of unwanted paperwork, I do use a burn barrel sometimes but the material needs to be added to the fire a few pages at a time or it doesn't burn completely and clumps up at the bottom of the barrel.
On a couple of occasions, for very large quantities, I dug a pit and buried it. Takes a few years but mother nature eventually takes care of it.
I also take advantage of public shredding events which take place every few years around here. Some are free and run by the county, but most charge a nominal fee.
My brother lives in a large townhouse development and once a year, the HOA hires a shredding service. They get a quantity discount and the rates are very reasonable.
This won't help for disposing of an existing mountain of material but going forward, try this:
I discovered that much of the paper I was shredding contained no sensitive information and could be recycled intact. I now keep a box next to my shredder for non sensitive documents, junk mail, etc. Sometimes, all I need to do is tear off a portion of the document that has the sensitive info and throw the rest in the recycle box. I take it to the county recycle center every few months along with bags of shredded documents.
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