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Kitchen Waste Composting Article
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Home Composting For Your Own Use
from:Composting has become a national pastime of many today. We're in a country that stresses the importance of recycling and helping to keep our environment clean and safe for our children and each generation after them. Composting is nature's way of recycling materials and waste we use every day in our home. Composting creates a dark rich soil formed from the decomposition of materials such as grass clippings, leaves or food waste (fruits, vegetables). Home composting is done in many homes with the many waste products we have on a daily basis.
Although composting is done on a large-scale with large facilities, it's also done in on a small scale right where it begins: in the home. Composting is the best way to make use of all those leftovers you can't seem to get rid of any other way. Home composting not only reduces the cost of having the materials removed but also gives you an excellent type of soil to use in your garden or flower bed. Some of the items you can use for home composting include vegetables, fruits, and leftover foods.
Home composting includes having a composting bin and storing the food waste until the bin is full. Many people have a small composting bin inside their kitchen for their convenience. Leftover food items and scraps are stored in the bin. It's important that you have a bin with a cover to prevent it from developing odors in your home. You'll also have a large composting bin outside, which is where the actual decomposition will take place. If you have a composting bin outside, you'll probably see all sorts of wild animals around it that you haven't been seeing before, but this is perfectly nature. They're all looking for a bite to eat.
If you're doing home composting yourself, you can make your own bin out of materials like wood, snow fencing, old garbage cans or plastic bins. If you use bins or can, make sure you have holes drilled on the sides for ventilation. You can also purchase manufactured bins if you're uncomfortable about making your own. You'll find a huge selection online or in many retail stores.
Four ingredients are involved in composting: carbon, nitrogen air and water. These ingredients mixed together form the compost. You need to have an even mixture of these ingredients. The carbon comes from the dry or brown material, while the nitrogen comes from the green or wet material such as grass clippings. Mix these ingredients together with some water and allow it to get some air and you're on your way to home composting. Since composting is a lot like cooking, be sure to mix it up from time to time.
Kitchen Waste Composting Specific links
Kitchen Waste Composting News
UC boosts emphasis on composting organic waste
Recycling has allowed UC to divert more than 50 percent of its waste from landfills. But to reach its goal of "zero waste" by 2020, it needs to start composting. Hence the green bins, for organic waste, becoming commonplace at Berkeley and other UC campuses. Dining facilities, residence halls and sports stadiums are some of the first composting sites.
Read more...City pilots program to compost food waste
The city of Highland Park has agreed to launch the region’s first food waste composting program — and the first 125 households to sign up will get the city to cover half the $40 participation cost. The pilot program is open to all residents who are on the city’s Thursday collection pick-up cycle, or about 2,500 households. Veolia, the city’s residential waste hauler, will begin picking up the ...
Read more...To reduce food waste, city to try disposals
In the quest to green Philadelphia, officials are turning to the city’s kitchen sinks. At an event Thursday, the city will unveil a pilot program to install garbage disposals in 200 Point Breeze and West Oak Lane homes.
Read more...Reduce waste from kitchen
Home cooks and grocery shoppers wield enormous influence when it comes to controlling the No. 1 source of ozone depleting garbage in our waste stream: food.
Read more...How to Stop Wasting So Much Food in the Kitchen [Food]
# food Unless you're a kitchen ninja that can plan and measure out the exact portions for every meal you make it's likely you find yourself wasting good food because you didn't plan right, you forgot about it, or you just had no idea what to do with it. Thankfully, it's not too difficult to cut down on your kitchen waste. Here's how to do it. More »
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