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MJ's little flock

There was only one egg left for today's breakfast because in a fit of culinary exuberance, I'd eaten three yesterday :wee

So I had it pan fried on Vegemite toast.

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I have always composted animal by-products whether that is left overs from human or cat food, or dead critters that one finds around and about.
Bones take for forever to break down so my compost always has bones in it.
We have 3 of this type of bin too, with slightly different classification: landfill (blue), recycling (yellow), composting (green). All food waste goes into the composting bin, meat scraps, veg scraps, bread scraps, etc, and it's taken away fortnightly by the big compost collection truck. Recycling means glass, paper, cardboard, tins, plastics, etc and is also collected fortnightly, alternating with the compost collection. The landfill bin gets anything else (not much at all) but it's emptied every week.
It maybe a language issue ? We make a difference between organic waste (which the local authorities are required to collect) and a compost.
A compost is meant to be used in the garden and it needs some oxygen to activate. It can't be done in a secure plastic bin like other waste, which is why most people, and local authorities when they provide a public compost, don't throw animal by products to detract rodents.
Our collective public composts usually look more or less like this.
1723399489633.png
 
It maybe a language issue ? We make a difference between organic waste (which the local authorities are required to collect) and a compost.
A compost is meant to be used in the garden and it needs some oxygen to activate. It can't be done in a secure plastic bin like other waste, which is why most people, and local authorities when they provide a public compost, don't throw animal by products to detract rodents.
Our collective public composts usually look more or less like this.
View attachment 3916010
I have never seen anything like that, but it's a great idea.

I have a vague idea that once the green waste is taken away in the truck, it is added to an enormous compost pile. Pick up is managed by the council and outsourced to a truck company and I guess likewise compost making would be outsourced to a soil and compost company.
 

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