Naples-area compost operation growing and thriving (article)

Original article found here: http://www.mpnnow.com/news/20161128/naples-area-compost-operation-growing-and-thriving A small backyard compost turned into a rich farming operation in Prattsburgh that is keeping Naples-area food waste out of the landfill By Julie Sherwood (jsherwood@messengerpostmedia.com) Al Zappetella makes weekly rounds through Naples to pick up buckets of kitchen scraps. Barrels of discarded onion skins, banana peels, coffee grounds, egg shells, apple cores and other food waste — along with leaves, yard trimmings and other organic waste — get trucked a few miles down the road to Prattsburgh. Zappetella has been doing the free pickups for a few years now. That is, after he and partner Celeste Arlie realized they were outgrowing their small, backyard compost pile in Naples. Family, friends and neighbors began adding to the pile. It cut everyone’s household waste by more…

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How to Cut Your Trash in Half by Skipping One TV Episode Per Week

Do you want to start composting right away, but you have an endless number of questions and you're not sure where to start? Or maybe you're tired of looking at a stagnant, slimy compost pile, baffled as to why it isn't breaking down after six months...or even longer? There were so many tricks I wish I knew when I first started composting.  My new guide will get you on the fast track to quality compost in less than ten minutes a week- seriously! In this new e-book, you will discover: -The 5 make-or-break factors to having an efficient compost pile -How to cut your trash in half in less than ten minutes a week -How to eliminate pests and odors with one simple trick -Identify how and when your compost…

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In Maine, a Whale of a Compost Pile

[ original source: http://www.seacoastonline.com/news/20161119/in-maine-whale-of-compost-pile ] GORHAM, Maine (AP) — Lobster carcasses, dead sea urchins and other "seafood waste" are common ingredients in the compost pile at Benson Farm Earth Products. A 43-foot right whale, not so much. But the leviathan's bones were the prize as a team of volunteers from Marine Mammals of Maine arrived at the Gorham farm dug into a smelly, steaming pile of compost, sawdust and whale to extract skeleton pieces including ribs bigger than a person. The rare and protected whale met its demise after becoming entangled in fishing gear off Boothbay Harbor in September. It was trucked to the farm for composting. Lynda Doughty, executive director of the nonprofit Marine Mammals of Maine, says she hopes the skeleton can be reassembled as an educational exhibit.…

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