It's the last leg of the Pembrokeshire Recycle Tour this month. Many items have been recycled and passed on to charities. So far: six bin-bags of Christmas cards have been collected for the Woodland Trust; 20 mobile phones for Oxfam; a lorry load of electronics have been sent for refurbishment to a local company - Recycle IT; many boxes of bizarre and useful goods have changed hands in the Swap Shop; and several trays of fair-trade chocolate brownies were consumed. But there is still a chance to do more! The last leg is tomorrow (Saturday) at Pembroke Dock Youth Centre, Bush Street, from 11 am - 3 pm. It's for free: Make yourself a funky new black- rubber bag, hat or pot from inner tubes at the recycled art workshop. Get free energy efficiency advice and low energy light bulbs, and clear unwanted items from your cupboards as well as the garden. A tasty home cooking café will also be there. Did you know that, according to Electronicsweekly.com, households in the UK produce a total of 29.1 million tonnes of waste annually, of which a mere 18 per cent is recycled and around 70 per cent ends up in landfill; other EU countries do far better recycling up to 33 per cent. Cara Wilson, of West Wales Eco Centre, said: "We are wasting tonnes of useful copper, aluminium, ferrous metals, glass and plastics which are easily recoverable, and in a couple of decades we will probably want to dig it up again due to world shortages!" When it comes to electronics, the UK throws away five-million TVs and two-million home computers each year. This is a small part of the total one million-plus tonnes of electric goods that go to landfill. It begs the question: Did we really need it in the first place? A new website http://www.enoughness.co.uk/">www.enoughness.co.uk/ has just been launched to find Britain's most useless consumer product. They are looking for nominations 'for the most needless, wasteful uses of our planet's precious resources that you've seen, bought or been given in the past year. Whether it's a razor with enough blades to shave the badger population of Britain, an automatic cucumber peeler or a toothbrush with its own satnav capability'. The Recycling Tour 08 has been organised by West Wales Eco Centre, thanks to Objective One funding for the Strategic Recycling Scheme, which includes partners: Fishguard Composting and Recycling Group, Frame, The Pembrokeshire Real Nappy Network, Compost First, Planed, Milford Haven Plus and Pembrokeshire Machinery Ring.