BREAKING NEWS: My Cat Makes an Effort to Compost
The fat cat left me a present this morning... thanks dude! Would you mind burying it in the compost pile next time instead? I think the tally for my current bin is four mice and three birds.
The fat cat left me a present this morning... thanks dude! Would you mind burying it in the compost pile next time instead? I think the tally for my current bin is four mice and three birds.
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2015/02/19/city-council-oks-measure-to-allow-restaurants-to-recycle-scraps-for-composting/ Although it's been known for a few weeks, I wanted to bring up what's going on here in Philadelphia. Up to now, the City had no real incentives set up for businesses to compost, nor do they provide curbside compost collection. In Philadelphia, all commercial establishments must pay a fee every year for their trash dumpster and recycling dumpster. The recycling is cheaper than the trash dumpster. The idea is to have a composting option available, which will hopefully cut back on the amount of organics being thrown in the trash. This bill focuses on just restaurants...ideally it will expand to include coffee shops, pizza shops, and really anywhere serving food. Done right, numerous businesses should practically be able to either recycle or compost almost all of their waste.…
[ copied from http://news.discovery.com/earth/people-erode-soil-100-times-faster-than-nature-150114.htm ] Jan 14, 2015 12:51 PM ET // by Patrick J. Kiger Play Video Soil is washed away by the Chattahoochee River in the early 1970s. Cutting down or burning native forests and starting intensive agriculture -- that is, industrial-scale farming, designed to produce high yields of crops and/or animals -- can accelerate erosion dramatically, reports a newly-published study from researchers at the University of Vermont. It causes so much damage, in fact, that in a few decades as much soil is lost as would naturally occur over thousands of years. NEWS: Are We At Risk For Another Dust Bowl? The researchers, who studied 10 large river basins in the southeastern United States, found that the damage started to occur hundreds of years ago, when large numbers of settlers arrived from Europe,…