That's building waste, not reguar household waste and not for the bin. ..... Or you could hire a skip.
Some of that could be called building waste, some not. Stripped wallpaper is decorating waste for example, and being soaked in stripper fluid it cannot go with regular paper waste. My council has several types of recycle collection bags (paper, glass, plastic etc) and their comprehensive list of what
cannot be put in them leaves a lot that needs to go in the "general houshold" or "landfill" bin. For example they don't want metal in with plastic and they dont want plastic in with metal, so what do people do with something that is made with plastic and metal, which is common enough? These days most people are incapable or think it undignified to use a tool to dismantle anything like that (I can, and I would BTW). The "general household" It is also the only option for home collection of electronics (in fact I save mine for the special bin at the depot).
As for a skip, have you ever hired one? I have, and you might be surprised at how expensive they are (regular trade users must get them far cheaper), and do you seriously suggest that someone hires a skip just to take away a small wooden shelf that they have taken down and not allowed to put in other than the "general household" bin. What is the sense of hiring a skip just to save putting something in the "general household" bin?
I actually waste very little, verging on obsession, always have, nothing to do with the recycling movement. I will keep any piece of timber longer than about 6", any piece of wire longer than a foot, any plug off an old appliance, old ice-cream containers and pinapple tins (to store nails and screws, salvaged or new), computer components going back to the 1980's, and when I re-plumb I keep the old pipe and fittings. I still have most of my childhood toys, put back into the boxes they came in - I really need an Ebay selling campagn.
Incidentally I find it sad that there is so little DiY capability among people now, or understanding as shown in dismissing any DiY as "building" work. There seems to be a contempt and fear of rolling sleeves up and picking up a tool. That's why the only thriving UK industry these days seems to be the "white-van handy-man" industry, with white vans filling the roads* and parking spaces in the streets, and customers being ripped off in their ignorance of anything practical (my elderly mother spent a fortune on them, paying any price they said). I have seen the waste that white-van-man creates, like throwing paint brushes away at the end of every day because "
their time is worth more than a paint brush". The white van industry is not environmentally friendly at all.
* I did a count of traffic passing me on a 50 mile motorway stretch recently; I was generally doing 70 in the middle lane. About 50% of those passing me were white vans, some obviously being driven flat out; I overtook only three.