Cutting Waste Part 1

I want to resume the posts here at Organic Sanity by looking at some of the modern day things that we as a race do that is doing immesurable harm to the planet on which we live. Things that to an individual, or family group seem like not really a big deal. But when you add up all the families or indiviuals who run households in a country the size of Great Britain, then what we do collectively is a very big deal. Take that number and multiply it by 5 to get a country the size of the United States and it becomes quite scarey.

Multiply that number again by four and you get a country like China or India and it then seems almost hopeless. So what are some of the things we can do collectively to give this planet of ours some breathing space?

Notice I don’t say anything about trying to save it, because we’re past that now. Its damage limitation time and maybe, just maybe we might leave some space for mother nature to come back from the brink.

Its not just about the big overall picture of saving a planet when you’re more concerned about where the next monthly mortgage or rent payment is going to come from. Or where your next meal might be coming from, for that matter. Take the big picture down for a while because it is overwhelming. And when something is overwhelming, it looks an almost hopeless task to do anything about, so a a race, we generally tend to ignore it and hope it goes away.

Well, your grandchildren may not thank you for that attitude, but they might just understand it.

So I am, instead going to look at ways to limit the damage we all are already doing bu taking some very down to earth scenarios and making them look very achievable. Why? Because a lot of what we waste can be avoided by using some of that grey matter the gods have deemed to scatter inside your cranuims. Brains! Yep, we all have them so why don’t we all use them? Common sense is a term bandied about an awful lot, but how many of you actually believe you have a good grasp of what common sense actually is?

This series of posts will take that common sense and make it obvious. Obvious about what simple and almost unbelieveably tiny changes in the way we thing and act that can bring about a huge shift in the chances our Earth has of providing as much for our grandchildren as it provides for us. So let’s get started with the first of our articles on Cutting Waste.

Garbage

How can you cut down on the amount of rubbish, trash, garbage or whatever you want to call it? How can you cut down when you have a baby that produces a huge mountain of throwaway nappies for instance?

How can you cut down when you are so broke you hardly buy anything at the stores to eat in the first place?

How can you cut your garbage pile at all?

Well, just by thinking about the question, you are already getting the common sense portion of your brain into gear. When you look around you and take note of everything you put into the trash can, you are suddenly becoming aware of what you are throwing out. Then you work backwards and see what is coming into your house in the first place that is going to get thrown out later.

Then it hits you!

The shops and stores are producing most of what you as an individual or familay are throwing into the land-fill sites by the bag-load every day.

So what can you do about it?

Start shopping in stores that don’t pre-wrap everything. In our grandparent’s day, very little was pre-wrapped. When they bought fruit and vegetables those fruits and vegetables were on display unwrapped and naked in the display shelves and wracks of the greengrocer store. The store assistant weighed their stuff and put it into paper bags. They put the paper bags into a larger basket or bag that was re-used every time our grandparents went to the shops! No plastic carrier bags, in those days. The landfills were almost nonexistant because there was so little trash thrown out in those days.

Why?

Because there was so little pre-wrapping of goods in those days. Stuff came in cardboard boxes or paper bags and guess what paper and cardboard does when you get it wet and pile it up? Yep, it rots down like any other prganic material and does not produce any pollution. It can be mixed into a comppost heap and returned to the earth as good organic matter.

Am I stirring any thoughts or ideas yet?

We bring home with us a lot of plastic and that is tough to get rid of. If you pile up plastics and get it wet, it doesn’t rot down. It just stays there and tangles up with organic matter and retards its rotting down process as well. So the landfill sites fill up quicker and we start running out of places to put it. Its no good dumping it into the ocean, because fish can’t eat plastic - in fact it kills them. We eat fish and the more we kill unnecessarily, the less there will be for us to eat. But that’s a story for another post.

So what do we do with plastic that we have to throw away?

Use that common sense again. Separate it from the other trash, collect it up and store it in a big bag and when its full, take it to your local recycling centre., that’s what. Its not hard, not difficult to figure out. That little bit of extra can-do attitude will mean that little bit less plastic gets dumped into land fill or into the sea. More fish for you and less pollution for your grandchildren.

Ok, that’s it for this post, its long enough already. I’ll write more on this subject in the next instalment, so keep an eye out for it, won’t you?

Terry Didcott
Organic Sanity

Del.icio.us | Digg | Technorati | Blinklist | Furl | Reddit

Comments (2)

Hacked!

Sorry to have to write about this after such a long layoff without writing anything, but this site has recently been hacked by some bastard and a load of malware inserted into a lot of the files.

This cost me a lot of time cleaning it all out, so you’ll have to bear with me while I get this show back on the road at some stage.

At present my writing commitments are too tight to allow me much time at writing any of my blogs at the moment, but whenever I get a break I’ll get back in here and add some more informative organic articles to this place and maybe even spruce it up a little.

Terry Didcott
Organic Sanity

Del.icio.us | Digg | Technorati | Blinklist | Furl | Reddit

Comments

Happy Organic Christmas

I know I’ve not posted in here for a while too many other projects getting started and nothing getting finished so some things had to be put to one side for a while. Unfortunately, this blog was one of them. I’ll get back into the swing of things in the new year as the pressure comes off a little so expect more organic news, information and trivia and some more build in this site as a whole.

But for now, I’d like to wish all of you a very merry Christmas and a prosperous New Year.

MERRY CHRISTMAS!

…and let’s hope for a greener future!

Terry Didcott
Natural and Organic Food

Del.icio.us | Digg | Technorati | Blinklist | Furl | Reddit

Comments

Compost Mini FAQ Part 2

Here’s a continuation of my mini FAQ on the benefits and concerns and all things to do with compost.

7. Can I put leaves on a compost heap?

Of course, as long as you mix them up with other plant matter to form a good mixture of different types of organic debris. Leaves on their own will rot down but takea long time. Alternatively, if you wanted to produce leaf mould, which is a type of compost that can be used in many different situations, the easist way is gather all the leaves you sweep up and place them all together in a large black plastic bag and tie it shut. poke some holes in the sides with a garden fork and then leave the bag in a corner of the garden for a full year. In that time it should have rotted down nicely into a good pile of humous-rich leaf mould.

8. Should I dig compost into the soil or leave it on top?

You can and should do both, especially if your soil is in poor condition and in need of some TLC. Digging compost into the soil a few weeks before planting starts is a great way of enriching and feeding the soil. The amount you dig in really depends on how much compost you have and the general condition of the soil. A rule of thumb is that the poorer the soil the more compost you should dig in. Once you have planted out your crops, mulch them with a layer of compost. This will help the soil retain moisture and protect the plants from the worst infestations of pests and diseases as it naturally strengthens plants boosting their own natural defences against these.

9. Can I use compost for pot plants?

Yes, absolutely! You should mix compost with equal amounts of sterile soil and sharp sand to make a great potting mixture. To sterilise soil, place some on a baking tray about an inch or two thick but no more and place it in a hot oven for twenty minutes or so to kill weed seeds and soil-bound diseases. Make sure the cook of the house doesn’t find out though!

That’s it for this part of the mini FAQ. I’ll post more at a later date, or if anyone has any questions not covered, leave me a comment and I’ll respond and even put your question with my answer in the next part of the mini-FAQ.

Terry Didcott
Natural and Organic Food

Del.icio.us | Digg | Technorati | Blinklist | Furl | Reddit

Comments (1)

« Previous entries