larry@stinescorner

Well-known Member
When I was doing masonry repairs,side jobs,these buckets came in handy.Sand for mixing cement and
all kinds of uses.i still have a big collection of them in the shed.I used to get them behind a
deli,they were pickle buckets originally.And looking around the shed,,another one of the free magnetic strips in use,,,lol
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The surf cast fisherman love those buckets. Guys at work collect them all up and charge a couple of bucks each along the beach.
 
we have pickle pails around here too...some still smell like pickles after several years.we know a guy that use to own a restaurant in the area. He'd get that many then drop em off. We had a lot of mushroom pails (smaller 2-2 1/2 gal size) to at one time, most of them got hard and shattered though. I think we used some of each for sap buckets(after a good scrubbing) for a time.
 
I used to get stacks of those when I worked in a donut shop. The jelly for jelly-filled donuts came in them. I'm thinking they smelled a lot better than pickle buckets.

The machine we used to inject the jelly into the donuts was pretty neat, did two at time unless the nozzle came out the other side and squirted jelly all over your arm.
 
I probably have 50 spackle buckets used for storage, tool totes, demolition containers, fluid storage or drain pans. I keep covers also as some fluids can be reused or to keep things clean.
 
It amazes me sometimes when I hear about folks who can get a nearly unlimited supply (for FREE, usually) of buckets, steel drums, or plastic drums. Has gotten to where the only place around here to get plastic drums now charges $25, and steel drums are VERY hard to come by anymore.
 

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