Originally published Friday, March 13, 2009 at 3:46 PM
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Swap instead of shop
To help stretch their money further, some consumers are turning to swapping or bartering goods and services
McClatchy Newspapers
Resources
HERE ARE A FEW WEB SITES that help consumers reuse products at little or no cost rather than throw the goods in the landfill.Exchanges: Trade video-games, books, DVDs and music on swaptree.com and switchplanet.com.
Freecycle: The Seattle Freecycle group has more than 17,000 active members dedicated to reusing goods. The group's site is http://www.freecycle.org/group/US/Washington/Seattle. The Seattle site also links to other groups in the region.
What do I do with ... ? King County Solid Waste Division's database of hundreds of businesses and organizations that accept unwanted items, www.metrokc.gov/dnrp/swd/wdidw/index.asp.
2 Good 2 Toss: Washington State Department of Ecology's exchange for reusable building materials and large household items, www.2good2toss.com.
Seattle Times staff
LEXINGTON, Ky. — It really is the oldest profession in the world — swapping stuff you have for stuff you want.
But with credit crunch and tight economic times, bartering is gaining a new, higher profile.
From individuals trading with one another to networks designed to bring people together, swapping is increasingly becoming the way to stretch scarce dollars.
People "don't have money to spend, but they've got a lot of stuff," said Kent Berryman, who started Swap-It-Now.com from his Mount Sterling, Ky., home in 2006.
Inspired on the treadmill one day, he decided to set up a site where people could swap DVDs. Now the site has grown to include everything from spark plugs to musical instruments to plots of land. The site is free, he said, "we just put people together." Traffic is growing by 20 percent to 25 percent a month, he said, a trend that started when gas prices started to top $3, but it has held as those prices went down.
Lisa Brawner started bartering years ago, trading jewelry she made for things both obscure and concrete. Maybe she'd swap a pair of earrings for help erecting a tent at a Renaissance fair, or barter a necklace for some bauble she craved for herself. Basically, she's swapped stuff she made for stuff she liked.
But, especially as her work as a home-health aide has become scarcer while prices on everything continue to rise, the Lexington, Ky., woman has found herself deep into bartering.
She's found a way to make her fewer dollars stretch. For example, she recently traded some jewelry for hay, which she will use to transform her Lexington yard into an herb and vegetable garden. She eats what she needs from the garden and trades the rest.
"A lot of people barter, they just don't think about it," she said. "If they knew what was out there, they'd do more of it."
For people new to bartering, Brawner suggests sticking with people you know or "people who seem trustworthy," she said.
Brawner said she feels there is a "social stigma" to bartering. Some people trade but don't want others to know they are doing it.
"The American public, we are just not used to negotiating or even swapping things," said Berryman, who is hoping to eventually sell advertising on his Web site and make a profit. "It's just not our culture."
But the growth of the Web site shows there could be a cultural shift.
"People are looking for something different because they have to," said Berryman.
Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company
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