If you want to reduce waste and grow healthier plants but don’t have a backyard, composting is still possible.
I grew up composting. Wherever we lived, there was always a spot in the yard for food scraps, leaves and branches.
By composting your food scraps, individuals can keep these items from going into landfills. Among other things, landfills ...
Minnesota has a long history in composting, beginning with the 1987 launch of its first mixed-waste municipal compost ...
This is by far the best compost bucket or composter bin I have found for the kitchen to recycle waste and scraps. We got rid ...
Thanks to the work of Girl Scout Troop 64834, when Lenox middle and high school students are done with their lunch, they ...
The city is $3 million closer to rolling out a curbside composting system, now that the Board of Alders has approved a state ...
With plenty of leaves, grass clippings and garden debris available, residents can create compost piles that benefit their gardens.
If you’re looking to reduce waste and create nutrient-rich soil for your garden, composting at home is a simple and effective way to do it.
Focused on education instead of punishment, the inspectors place either “oops” tags on bins that contain improper materials ...
With pumpkins collapsing and leaves piling high, Seamus Allman of Louisville Grows offers smart, sustainable ways to compost ...
A 17-year-old York Suburban student wants to build community, reduce waste in landfills, and enrich the soil through a new community compost bin project. For Alexia Purkanto, it began with a compost ...