This invention is directed to groundskeeping receptacles with improved means to retain a trash picker. People who collect trash on the side of the road, in parks, or in the woods, typically carry trash pickers and empty plastic garbage bags. They also wear protective gloves. They lean over, grasp a piece of trash off the ground, stop, hold open a bag to collect the trash, then release the trash into the bag. They walk further scoping out the next object to grasp. In the online outdoor navigation game called Geocaching, players regularly schedule “Cache In, Trash Out” events to clean their local parks, trails, forest preserves and neighborhoods. Most players have their own trash pickers for just such occasions.
We know from firsthand experience that cleaning a site is a lot of just carrying the trash picker and garbage bag in between scattered beer cans, plastic bottles, cigarettes and gum wrappers. Not all trash is easy to pick up from a standing position. Many times, the person needs to lean over or squat and physically dislodge the item from the soil, all while maneuvering the trash picker and the increasingly heavy garbage bag. Someone still needs to hold the bag open to drop in the trash. Sometimes a person has a friend to help hold the bag open; other times not. Over the course of an entire cleanup event, all of those moves add up to a lot of repetitive movement. It gets exhausting.
We should be encouraging people to get out and remove trash, but it is tiring and back-breaking work. Ordinary trash bags, while cheap, are difficult for one person to hold open while simultaneously operating the trash picker. We need a way to make trash collection easier and more ergonomic. To that end, I created a reusable groundskeeping receptacle with trash picker storage built right into the side of the receptacle. So, there is less to carry, I made an indentation in the sidewall of a groundskeeping receptacle, this indentation dimensioned to accept by tight snap fit, the jaws and lower stem of a trash picker. This allows the person to carry both the receptacle and the trash picker with a single hand, or even hands-free. I make the receptacle even more convenient by adding multiple female accessory attachment points on the sidewall. People can add any number of storage pockets or carrying straps to these points.
This is a groundskeeping receptacle with integrated trash picker storage. The receptacle comprises a continuous sidewall attached to a generally flat bottom, thereby defining an interior space. You can optionally add a lid. A key feature of the receptacle is a trash picker-shaped indentation molded into the sidewall. This indentation is oriented with the jaws of the trash picker facing the bottom of the receptacle, and the upper stem of the trash picker extending upward beyond the top of the receptacle. The indentation extends partway into and further defines the interior space of the receptacle. A removable rigid divider completely divides the interior space in half from top to bottom. This allows the person to separate trash as they collect it, even liquid trash.
The receptacle comprises a bottom 60 and sidewall 5 attached to and rising vertically upward from the bottom, thereby defining an interior space. The sidewall has an exterior surface, an interior surface, a top circumferential edge opposite the bottom, and an indentation of a lower stem of a trash picker made into the top circumferential edge, this indentation extending downward along the sidewall toward the bottom and branching out into two jaws, this indentation dimensioned to selectively accept and retain by snap fit a pair of jaws and lower stem of a trash picker. So, the top circumferential edge is not a perfect circle; it is indented at the top.
I mount to the exterior surface of the sidewall two diametrically opposed buttons 25 and a plurality of female accessory attachment points 20. In the model illustrated, there are 6 female accessory attachment points 20. In the model illustrated, when viewed from above, I mount a pair of female accessory attachment points 20, 90 degrees to the right of the indentation, when viewed from above. We mount another pair directly opposite the indentation, and a third pair mounded 90 degrees to the left of the indentation. Also in this model, the female accessory attachment points are positioned one directly above the other. It is possible to add more or fewer female accessory attachment points and position them in different places on the sidewall 5, without departing from the spirit of the invention.
I indent the exterior surface of sidewall 5 in the shape of the jaws and lower stem of a trash picker. This indentation 10 extends into the interior space. I mount to the interior surface of the sidewall two diametrically opposed vertical guides 40. I attach a first vertical guide 40 to the interior surface of the sidewall, directly against the indentation. I attach a second vertical guide 40 to a diametrically opposed interior surface of the sidewall. Together, these surface and shape elements define an interior space of the receptacle. Removable divider 30 slides into the vertical guides and completely subdivides the interior space in half. Divider-bottom joint 70 is a tight joint-no liquid is able to pass between the two halves. Please see
The female accessory attachment points 20 are integral and molded as one with and onto the sidewall of the receptacle. They are not separate pieces to affix to the sidewall. Preferably, the female accessory attachment points secure pockets and other accessories to the sidewall by a slide-and-lock mechanism, and this is what is shown for purposes of illustration. These pockets and other accessories have male accessory attachment points that couple to the female attachment points. Other accessory attachment mechanisms are possible and fall within the scope of the invention. In the model shown, slide-and-lock style female accessory attachment points project from the exterior surface of the sidewall. Each female accessory attachment point comprises a back, two opposing arms projecting from the back, defining a space into which a male counterpart slides. The arms of the female accessory attachment point secure the male counterpart from moving left and right; the bottom of the female accessory attachment point supports its male counterpart against gravity.
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Preferably the receptacle, the divider and the female accessory attachment points are made from high-density polyethylene (HDPE), but one can easily substitute other materials that are equally rigid, durable and easy to reproducibly manufacture. Preferably, the receptacle is 12 to 15 inches tall, 10 to 12 inches across and holds 3.5-5.2 gallons, but these are only preferences. Other sizes and dimensions are possible. Preferably, the HDPE has a density of 0.0358 lb/cu-in, tensile strength of 21.9 MPa, modulus of elasticity 0.995 GPa, elongation at break of 581%. A matching lid, if desired, should also preferably be made of the same material chosen for the receptacle, divider, and female accessory attachment points.
The indentation tightly grabs the jaws and lower stem of the trash picker and retains it tightly against and into the receptacle. It is a tight, snap fit, which retains the trash picker even when the person swings the receptacle or turns the receptacle upside down. The upper stem of the trash picker, not shown, extends straight upward beyond the rim of the receptacle sidewall 5. The person simply pulls the trash picker out of the indentation when he wants to use it again.
Indentation 10 is preferably positioned midway, 90 degrees, from and between the buttons 25 and female accessory attachment points 20. Positioned in this way, the upper most stem of the trash picker does not catch the handle or, carrying strap, if used. Because trash pickers vary in size and shape, the receptacle would be custom molded to fit a specific model of trash picker. Preferably the trash picker and receptacle are sold together as a complete kit.
Although embodiments and examples of the invention have been shown and described, it is to be understood that various modifications, substitutions, and rearrangements of parts, components, steps, as well as other uses, shapes, construction, and design of this system can be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the novel spirit and scope of this invention.
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