View allAll Photos Tagged Compostable

master composters class, san diego

Coffee pulp composting using red worms (prevents pollution of watersheds). My father is at left, front

Score! A surprise stock of compost!!

Composting is a great way to keep green waste out of the landfill. By composting our vegetable peels, rinds, and other garden waste, we can create a nutrient rich soil amendment at that's free. And free is in our budget!

This would be one of those cop-out photo's I was talking about.

Compost Connector teachers & students at Discovery High & Lovin Elementary participate in building new 3-bin compost systems with FWA staff. (credit: Brandon Crumsey)

The Quayle and Epworth Jets Kids Cafe students are learning to compost this semester. They've been working hard each week and have already filled one of their bins with 800 pounds of food waste.

Pat Murphy demonstrates his new shredder for composting leaves, branches, twigs, and anything else that stands in his way.

I was amazed by how much compostable stuff can be generated after making just one supper. Here you'll see I filled nearly half a grocery bag after preparing and consuming one meal. So, save those scraps and put them to work. Put them in the Green Bin and divert them from wasting away in landfill. Waste nothing.

Compost bin inside of Fruitopia

The compost heap is just next to a little door leading into the house. Weeds and organic waste go there. Can you see the enormous amount of weeds? And the garden is far from weedfree...

cabbage, tomatoes, greens, limes, red bell pepper..

Eco Friendly

Cutlery

Compostable PLA Knives

An example of a tumbling composter. Nice, but expensive.

GGW works with the school district to encourage composting in the cafeterias

You cut it open and plant in it.

A coffee cup, conspicuously marked "Compostable," busily composting in the form of litter near the Heart of the Beast Theatre in Phillips, Minneapolis.

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