chorecycle · by Absolutely Plausible Solutions · Orlando, FL
Everything has a path. We know the way.
We are the most psychotic people on the planet when it comes to recycling. Nothing gets thrown away without a fight. Learn, search, and act — this is the last recycling resource you will ever need.
Three pillars
Learn. Look it up. Take action.
Myths we destroy
Popular recycling beliefs that are simply wrong.
"Plastic bags go in the curbside recycling bin — it's fine."
TruthFALSE. Plastic bags and film wrap destroy sorting equipment. A single bag can shut down a processing facility for hours. Use store drop-off bins only — never the curbside bin.
"If I'm not sure, it's better to put it in the recycling bin just in case."
TruthThis is the most dangerous myth in recycling. Wishful recycling — putting something in "just in case" — contaminates entire loads of legitimate recyclables. When in doubt, leave it out.
"If it has the recycling symbol, it can be recycled."
TruthThe ♻ symbol on plastic (#1–#7) indicates the resin type, not that it's accepted in your program. Only #1 PET and #2 HDPE are accepted in most US curbside programs.
"Electronics can go in the regular trash."
TruthE-waste contains lead, mercury, cadmium, and beryllium — heavy metals that leach into groundwater from landfills. It's illegal in many states. Always use certified e-waste recyclers.
Ready to make recycling a chore — in the best way?
Search anything in the Recyclopedia. It's free, it's fast, and it's accurate.
Academy
The most complete recycling education on the internet.
Six modules. Real information. No greenwashing. No corporate spin. Just the honest, actionable truth about what to do with the things you own.
Module 01
Recycling 101
The basics of why recycling matters, how it actually works inside a materials recovery facility (MRF), and what happens to your materials after the bin.
Content coming soon
Module 02
Electronics & E-Waste
The fastest-growing waste stream on earth. What to do with your old devices, how to properly wipe data, and where to take everything — from phones to CRT TVs.
Content coming soon
Module 03
Hazardous Materials
Motor oil, paint, batteries, fluorescent bulbs, pesticides, medications — some waste can't go in any bin. Know the rules before you make a dangerous mistake.
Content coming soon
Module 04
Zero Waste Lifestyle
The goal is to never need the recycling bin. Refuse → Reduce → Reuse → Repair → Recycle. Learn to redesign your habits from the source up.
Content coming soon
Module 05
The Myths — Debunked
Ten widely-believed recycling myths that are flat-out wrong — and some of them actively hurt recycling programs. This is the most important module on this site.
↓ Content live below
Module 06
Local Regulations
Recycling rules vary dramatically by municipality. How to find your local program's exact rules and navigate state-by-state regulations for hazardous waste.
Content coming soon
Module 05 · The Myths
Ten recycling myths that are costing us the planet.
Every myth below is believed by millions of people. Some are harmless misunderstandings. Others actively contaminate recycling loads and send entire truckloads to landfill.
"The recycling symbol on plastic means it can be recycled."
TruthThe ♻ symbol on plastic indicates the resin type (1–7), not that your local program accepts it. Only #1 PET and #2 HDPE are widely accepted curbside. Always check your municipality's list — not the symbol on the bottom of the container.
"Plastic bags go in the curbside recycling bin."
TruthNever. Plastic bags, film, and wrap clog and destroy sorting equipment — causing facility shutdowns that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Use plastic film drop-off bins at grocery stores (Target, Walmart, Publix). Never in the curbside bin.
"When in doubt, toss it in the recycling bin — it can't hurt."
TruthWishful recycling is the most destructive myth in this list. A single non-recyclable item can contaminate an entire load, sending hundreds of pounds of legitimate recyclables to the landfill. The rule is simple: if in doubt, leave it out.
"Pizza boxes can't be recycled."
TruthPartial myth. The greasy, cheese-stained bottom cannot be recycled — grease destroys paper fibers. But the clean top half usually can. Tear the box in half: top half goes in recycling, greasy bottom goes in compost (or trash if no compost). Don't throw both away.
"You need to crush aluminum cans before recycling."
TruthDo not crush cans. Sorting facilities use automated equipment that identifies cans by shape. A crushed can can fall through conveyor screens and miss the aluminum recovery line. Leave them uncrushed.
"Paper coffee cups are recyclable."
TruthMost hot-drink paper cups are lined with a thin plastic or wax film that makes them non-recyclable in virtually all standard programs. Only a handful of specialized industrial facilities can process them. The plastic lids are typically #6 PS — also not accepted curbside.
"Glass is always recyclable in the curbside bin."
TruthMany municipalities have stopped accepting glass curbside due to contamination and breakage — broken glass ruins paper, plastic, and metal at sorting facilities. Use dedicated glass drop-off containers or check your program at earth911.com before putting glass in the blue bin.
"You need to remove staples and paper clips from paper."
TruthNo. Modern sorting facilities use industrial magnets to remove staples, paper clips, and binder rings from the paper stream. You do not need to remove them. This is wasted effort that discourages people from recycling paper at all.
"Electronics can safely go in the regular trash."
TruthE-waste contains lead (especially CRT screens), mercury, cadmium, and beryllium — heavy metals that leach into groundwater and soil from landfills for decades. It's illegal in many US states to put e-waste in regular trash. Use certified e-waste recyclers. Use our Recyclopedia to find out where.
"Recycling is always the most sustainable option."
TruthRecycling is near the bottom of the sustainability hierarchy. The actual order is: Refuse → Reduce → Reuse → Repair → Refurbish → Recycle → Rot (compost) → Dispose. Recycling uses energy and water. Not buying the thing in the first place is always better.
Put your knowledge to work
Look up any item in the Recyclopedia to find out exactly what to do with it.
Recyclopedia
What can you do with that?
Search any material or item. Instant answer: recyclable or not, how to prepare it, and exactly where it goes. 60+ items across 10 categories.
Donate Electronics
Give your devices a second life.
Working or broken — we accept all electronics. Every device you donate gets properly recycled or refurbished instead of going to a landfill.
What we accept
Any consumer electronic item — working or not. This includes:
- Smartphones, tablets, laptops, desktops
- Flat-screen and CRT televisions
- Printers, scanners, fax machines
- Gaming consoles and accessories
- Small and large kitchen appliances
- Power tools (electric)
- Cables, chargers, accessories (bundles)
- Batteries (properly taped and bagged)
- If it plugs in or runs on a battery — bring it.
What happens next
After you submit this form, our team will contact you within 48 hours to arrange drop-off or pickup (Orlando, FL area). Every device is assessed:
- Working devices → refurbished and donated or resold
- Repairable devices → fixed and given a new life
- End-of-life devices → sent to certified e-waste recyclers
- Zero landfill. Always.
Data security
Before donating, please back up and factory reset your device. If you cannot reset it, note this in the form — we handle secure data destruction at no charge.
Donation submitted!
Thank you for keeping electronics out of the landfill. Our team will contact you within 48 hours to coordinate drop-off or pickup.
About chorecycle
Zero waste. No exceptions. Ever.
chorecycle is a project by Absolutely Plausible Solutions — an Orlando-based consultancy built on one non-negotiable: zero waste, 100% sustainable, in everything we do.
The Mission
We want to be the most complete recycling resource on the internet — for anything and everything that can be recycled, repurposed, or properly disposed of.
The name says it all: make recycling a chore — a routine, a habit, a non-negotiable part of your day. Not heroic. Not optional. Just something you do.
- Recycle everything that can be recycled
- Repurpose everything that can be repurposed
- Properly dispose of everything that must be disposed
- Send as close to zero as possible to landfill
Built by Absolutely Plausible Solutions
chorecycle is one of AP's own projects — not a client engagement. It's built to the same zero-waste standard that AP applies to every project, event, and system it touches.
Absolutely Plausible Solutions is an Orlando, FL based consultancy operating under a strict zero-waste, 100% sustainable founding policy since 2008.
Roadmap
What's coming next.
Phase 1 — Foundation
Homepage, Academy myths module, Recyclopedia with 60+ items, Electronics donation intake form. Deployed to Cloudflare Pages.
Phase 2 — Database
Expand Recyclopedia to 500+ items. Add regulations database searchable by state and municipality. Supabase backend for real-time search.
Phase 3 — Academy
Full course content for all 6 academy modules. Interactive quizzes, local facility locator by ZIP code, and user-submitted facility reviews.
Questions, partnerships, or drop-off coordination