Oh, sorry guys.
It's a beautiful sunny day.
I am going to climb up there today because yesterday we had to pack up early because we had items that needed police attention in a section of donations.
So I had to go and do a statement.
Which is, you know, something you've got to do, isn't it?
So that took a while.
So by the time I finished, my social battery was completely drained.
So I thought, I'm going to go to bed.
So I'm a bit gutted because I was planning all day.
Oh, I'll do this, he'll do that.
So anyway, we've still got our sail on.
£0.50 a pound.
We want it gone today, right?
We want this stuff gone as quickly as possible.
So if you're one of our followers, if it's the £0.50 a pound stuff, we'll do fill a bag for a fiver.
Carry a bag.
Prams, half price.
Moses baskets, a pound.
We haven't got many left.
The pod one is a pound.
I've only got this one left.
It hasn't got a bar, but this bar will sort of go on there.
So I'll do that for a pound to get rid of that.
The walker is £25, guys.
We usually sell them anything between £20 to £30.
The walkers.
These are nice lamps.
You can't see them because they're, like, where the pillar is.
So Dan's on his way over now.
We're going to get it all out.
Pete and Lacey are running Blackwood shops.
Still 50% off in Blackwood.
Pop up and say hello to them.
They're doing a good job up there.
Think we'll get Dan to measure up for the wood for the racking.
But we need to have a think now, volunteers, about the donations because the problem I had yesterday was the donations had been in the area for a very long time and then more donations put on top of them.
And I couldn't put a date on when these donations had come in.
And in particular, these donation crates had been in Big Risca.
They'd been in the back of one of our vans.
They'd been Blackwood shop at the back of the shop where anybody could have had access.
And they'd also been in Blackwood shop where anybody could have had access to it.
And then they were moved down here and chucked in the corner and we didn't do anything with them for about three weeks.
So I think going forward in the donation centre, which is something that we talked about anyway, I haven't got a photographic memory, right?
I've got... I think I've got the condition that Michael Schofield had off Prison Break where I can see everything even if it's inside a box.
Do you know what I mean?
It's a bit like that.
So what we need to do is not squirrel the donations away when they come in.
They need to go into a sort... even if we've got to paint the floor and have a red patch on the floor and say that's the in, this is the out.
They have to be worked straight away so that we know what is in the boxes that's being stored and the bags.
So we're fully aware of where they are.
Now what we might need to do in the shops is when they come in and you weigh them, you might have to start writing the date on the bags for me.
