tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3692776953406823961.post5047253296000137740..comments2023-06-17T07:53:10.795-07:00Comments on kitchen dancing: An embarrassment of richessineadhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17655363330088316924noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3692776953406823961.post-84237353458897276472008-08-28T12:02:00.000-07:002008-08-28T12:02:00.000-07:00Sadly, I've never gotten composting to work, excep...Sadly, I've never gotten composting to work, except when I was working at plant research institute where I could bring in my veg waste. I've always lived in flats (currently I have no balconies), and so I don't actually have anything to do with the compost once I make it, and here, I don't have anywhere to put it. <BR/><BR/>In theory, I think municipal composting is a great idea, but in practice, it often just ends up in the dump. I'd like to see it work, and especially in cities with allotments/community gardens/lots of green spaces, there is a clear use for it. <BR/><BR/>In general, I think that people tend to focus very hard on how to get rid of garbage, but ignore the far more obvious solution of just not creating so much of it (though creating some is inevitable). Even stuff like washing instead of peeling your veg, and using the *whole* edible part of the veg (eating beet greens, not just the roots etc.) can make a pretty big difference, especially when one is vegan and doesn't buy much processed anything, like me... <BR/><BR/>Honestly, I don't think vegetable waste is as big a problem as plastics, glass and paper. And poo (where vegetables ultimately end up). And with the exception of poo, we really don't *need* to produce most of the disposable stuff we produce in our everyday lives. Poo will be the topic of another post. Possibly one with a recipe involving prunes...sineadhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17655363330088316924noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3692776953406823961.post-24715423051343479012008-08-28T06:19:00.000-07:002008-08-28T06:19:00.000-07:00Remember that food thrown into landfills doesn't "...<I>Remember that food thrown into landfills doesn't "just decompose". Or at least not quickly, since we throw things out in hefty plastic bags, and the conditions in landfills promote preservation, not decomposition.</I><BR/><BR/>I remember when I first learned about that (probably in my early teens) and I was horrified. What was the point of spending extra time and money on all that biodegradable packaging, etc. if it was just going to go to a landfill and *not* decompose. That's when I instituted a new policy: Although I make a point not to litter, but rather to carry my trash with me to the next garbage bin I encounter, any organic waste I produce while I'm out and about (apple cores, banana peels, etc) just gets chucked into the next available bush or green patch. At least it will decompose there.<BR/><BR/>I haven't ever managed to make an in-apartment composter work, but I hear that Toronto will be adding apartments and condos to the green-garbage system in the next year or two, so that's good.<BR/><BR/>What's your take, btw, on municipal composting?Jakehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10080325691281736946noreply@blogger.com