In Maine, a Whale of a Compost Pile

  • Post author:
  • Post category:General
  • Post comments:0 Comments

[ 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.

==============================================

I was relieved about a few things here: first of all, they’re composting a gigantic animal instead of doing something stupid like incinerating it.

That’s cool that they want the skeleton, too- I can only imagine how quickly that carcass will break down!

I composted a friend’s dead turtle not too long ago, and of course he wanted the shell.  I couldn’t believe how quickly the shell was degrading.

If you’ve never composted a carcass, I highly recommend it.  Your pile craves it.  It adds some good variety to the mix, causing a nice thermophilic spike in temperature.  As always, add double the carcass’ amount in shredded browns and it’s a breeze.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.