smonster, thanks for the link to Preserve. I'm buying some of their stuff right now.
We have single-stream recycling now. Makes things so much easier, and of course tons more stuff gets recycled than when recycling depended on people actually separating their garbage.
I'd like to start composting, but I don't have room for a huge compost bin - too much of my yard is sloped too steeply to put anything on. Anyone know of a small, one-person's-garbage-worth composter?
See, I would just ask people like that how often they replace their electronics, how often they fly, or what kind of car they drive, etc.
Hah! And I figure much as I am blessed to live in Seattle where I am required by law (and the trash company picks up) to recycle and compost, and I can walk everywhere, and only drive my car to the airport...given my job and how I fly everywhere, I lose. :)
Anyway, those "friends" are the same ones who disdainfully made remarks about the coffeecake (that had to rise the night before! And was baked that morning!) I brought to a brunch, because it was not local and organic. They were joking about how the coconut yogurt was organic, but not local. Oh, how funny. ....I am not friends with them anymore. But mostly because they stopped talking to me when I started dating someone they didn't like. But I have better friends now. They were my starter friends in Seattle, I guess.
Suzi? hello back.
We have a smallish garbage bin (I fill it every 2 months), a huge green bin and a huge ALL recycling bin. Wish everyone had it this easy.
The compost bins in my building's backyard are about the size of large trash cans, but there are also much smaller ones like this.
New Orleans is troubling with its lack of recycling, and I don't want to get into it because then I would have to admit the amount of waste that we've produced since we moved down here.
Oooh, Jess!! I could totally get one of those once Joe finds a job!!
I am glad you have better friends now, meara.
Our biggest composting problem is that, since we don't have a real yard (it's a paved concrete patio), our mix is almost all greens and no browns. We generally wind up bartering for bags of leaves from neighbors with trees. (Free compost, just give us your leaves!) And then hoping the porter doesn't throw them out.
I have no recycling, and I don't have a car to schlep stuff elsewhere so, much as I hate it, everything pretty much goes in the trash. I do better on the reduce and reuse side though.
Chicago needs to STEP up!