Piles of tyres

According to the CLMOOC week 4 Make Cycle 4 email a pile of tyres is just a pile of tyres and nothing more.

Really?

 

This is a pile of tyres waiting to be recycled. The mountain in the background is a pile of shredded tyres.  According to Wikipedia:

tires are among the largest and most problematic sources of waste, due to the large volume produced, their durability, and the fact they contain a number of components that are ecologically problematic.

 

Tyres take up valuable space at landfill sites (hence the shredding above), tyre stockpiles can be a health and safety hazard, and tyre recycling and storage can apparently sometimes be associated with illegal activities. Eek!

 

Some piles can tell  a story or remind one of our shared history.

A pile of tyres is never just a pile and nothing more.

 

Tyres can also make great swings.

As I was writing this, Simon posted this great post.

 

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9 Responses to Piles of tyres

  1. sensor63 says:

    Amazing coincidence, telepathy … ?

  2. Susan says:

    nothing is ever just nothing

  3. It might not be just a pile, but the example given by the Make Cycle Leaders would help people understand systems. The pile simply viewed without thought seems just a pile; caring about the pile shows it’s place within a system.

  4. Pingback: Find Five on Friday | Five Flames 4 Learning

  5. Pingback: Make Cycle #4: All Systems Go! Reflections and Connections — CLMOOC 2015

  6. scottx5 says:

    Tires in piles seem to be in a category of things we expect no further contribution form. A stopping point in systems is really on oddity that flusters us so much that the best we can do is make a messy pile into an orderly pile. I have a one square meter slab of used tires made into a pad for standing on. It’s so heavy I can barely move it and suspect space/time in that corner of the garage is slightly warped such that only the cat dares venture there.

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