While I am sceptical about recycling, it is just part of everyday life here in Germany. Increasingly more types of bottles are included in the deposit system and hardly anyone goes shopping without a big bag full of empty bottles., starting the trip round the supermarket with a visit to the machine which prints out a receipt for the returned bottles, which is redeemed when you pay at the till.
Bottle banks have gone and glass is collected at the kerbside. My DiL says there is still too much glass thrown away - why not return jam jars, gherkin jars etc as well for re-use?
All plastics and tins are collected in plastic sacks. Yoghurt pots etc should not be rinsed out as the extra water used rather defeats the object of helping the environment. You can put polystyrene in the plastic sacks but they should not be mixed with other materials.
Paper and cardboard are collected in a separate wheelie bin. We use newspapers in the winter for starting the fire, so reduce waste that way.
Sometimes you hear of cases where all the carefully separated rubbish is chucked into one container. Hence my scepticism.
When I think back to when I'm was a child, though, my parents practised conservation and waste reduction by having a huge compost heap, and far fewer items were sold in plastic wrappings. Of course we also had a huge bonfire every bonfire night.
When we cleared the house after our mother died, we found the dustbin that they used to use for waste that couldn't be disposed of in the home or garden. It was tiny!
However the recycling that households can do is a drop in the ocean compared to what waste industries all over the world are churning out. I despair when I see pictures of the plastic in the oceans and the mountains of discarded clothes and rubbish in Ghana.