Results for compost

I Didn’t Know You Could Recycle THAT: Food Utensils, Straws, Chopsticks and More

Rethink Reread Recycle
JENNIFER MORKUNAS, CELILO GROUP MEDIA / Monday, June 8, 2009 07:09 PM

It’s the little things in life…that add up. When ordering food to go, how many times were you given a pile of extra plasticware and napkins? This is not to mention those pesky clamshell food containers themselves. In the ongoing shift away from petroleum-based plastic products, you may have noticed some plastic items now have “Compostable” printed on them. Learn about how to differentiate between biodegradable and compostable, and consider choosing bioplastics and other earth-friendly tableware and food packaging.  More...

TAGS: FOOD, LIVE, compost, recycling

Corn-based and Compostable Cutlery, Pens, Rulers, and Mugs

multi-colored aliens
JEFF MARKWARDT / Sunday, January 6, 2008 10:16 PM

Your standard plastic fork is manufactured from a petroleum-based material and is not compostable. Housing and Food Services at University of Washington (UW) here in Seattle switched to corn-based cutlery in their cafeterias at the beginning of the 2007 school year. When I first heard this, I had to get my hands on a piece of this new eating utensil. After testing a corn-based fork, I was surprised and excited to learn firsthand that it truly does look, feel, and work just like a plastic fork. More...

TAGS: LIVE, compost, recycle anything

Rain Gardens and Earthworms

Garden of Weedin'
MONYA NOELKE / Wednesday, December 26, 2007 05:37 PM

Last week’s rain created waterfalls in my rock walls and lake sized puddles at the corner of my house which resulted in a stream of water across my laundry room floor. Hunched under a torrential downpour I dug drainage ditches from my new lakes to the front slope – it worked!

Within a couple of hours the lakes were empty, even as the rain continued. This has caused me to reconsider “Rain Gardens”. The smattering I know of rain gardens makes me think I have inadequate distance between my foundation and my neighbors’ for creating one. More...

TAGS: HOME, compost, gardening, green remodeling, water conservation

Going Worm-Bin Bananas

New to Green?
KRISTEN PROCTOR / Monday, December 17, 2007 04:04 PM

When you think about the newest gadgets and activities, like the Wii, iPhone or Halo3, you probably wouldn't add composting and worm bins to the list of hip trends. But somehow, with the rise of the all-encompassing yard waste bin, there's suddenly a larger movement pushing for more families and businesses to compost. It's not like it's an entirely new concept either! Composting has been around and will continue to be around until the end of time. I can remember my grandparents turning their piles of grass and food scraps in the backyard when I was a kid. Sure didn't seem like anything phenomenal then. But now it's the latest activity in creating a 'greener society'--and one that everyone can participate in.      

Even me. More...

TAGS: HOME, compost, gardening

“Better Living Through Denial”

Bumper Sticker Life
DIANA CRANE / Friday, October 26, 2007 03:49 PM

“Time for a family meeting.” These are the five most dreaded words uttered at my house, occupied by a husband, two teenagers, two cats, and a dog … all highly skilled at avoidance tactics. But the word certain to elicit groans and sudden recall of urgent needs to be elsewhere … is “sustainability,” dubbed the “S” word.

Recently I went for broke and declared the S word the topic of a family chat. A bumper sticker that could describe the response is: “Better living through denial.” Yeah, better for them. Denial is no longer an option for me.

I should disclose upfront that I work for PCC Natural Markets, a Seattle-based natural foods cooperative. Five years ago — pre-PCC — sustainability was not in my vocabulary. A junk food mom who could barely define organic, I joined PCC and, since I do the household buying, so did my family. After a few weeks at PCC I started introducing lots of new terms at the dinner table … genetically modified, irradiation, trans fat … the result of working with people who are genuinely passionate about all things natural.

I’ve transitioned gradually from the dark side — one organic- shade-grown-and-fairly-traded cup of coffee at a time — and I’ve discovered that incorporating sustainable choices in my life isn’t as hard as I’d feared. I’ve not yet tried hemp milk in my coffee, I don’t drive a hybrid, and I don’t pee in the dark to save electricity, but I do recycle all my Diet Coke cans, bring my own bags for groceries, and try to get my family to embrace the S word.

Back to the meeting. I quoted a bumper sticker I saw on a truck during a farm tour I took last year: “Compost. A rind is a terrible thing to waste.” It’s no surprise that composting is not a natural impulse for teenagers just beginning to venture out into the world, far from the warm, familiar source of comfort and possibilities (the TV, not their “parental units,” as we’re described to their friends). After all, composting may be a fine idea for people who actually like to do stuff like that, but the garbage disposal is a lot handier and if it clogs from too much sticky rice forced down the drain, dad knows how to fix it.

I was tenacious and declared a composting campaign, promising we’d have even more fun than our last family fire drill. (Well, fun for them; I had to be sedated after finding two smoke alarms had been disabled by my son because low batteries made them beep and woke him up.) We downloaded some composting information (great stuff at seattletilth.org and cedar-grove.com and seattle.gov/util) and will begin our adventure in composting this weekend.

Next up is a “green” household audit covering all the ways we can conserve energy, reduce waste, and still keep peace in the house. I already have a bumper sticker in mind for that. Stay tuned. More...

TAGS: LIVE, compost, green remodeling
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