Something happens when Paul announces, "We're ready to start composting again."
The world shifts. Soon I will be gardening and shopping at farmers’ markets and farm stands. I’ll be cooking with local and seasonal foods. I’ll be picking flowers from my beds.
And when I find a moment, I’ll be sitting on the porch, reading.
I will be in my happy season.
We take our fruit and vegetable scraps and store them in a metal bucket designed for that purpose. When it’s full, we bring it out to the wooden bins Paul built years ago. They don’t get full sun, so they don’t make for an optimal compost-producing operation, but they do provide enough product to keep most of our beds nourished.
Composting isn’t just about the end result, though that is important. If you want to grow organically, which we have always done, there’s nothing better to enrich your soil than your own rotted lemon peels and potato parings.
Meanwhile, food waste is a real problem. It’s the single largest type of material in U.S. landfills. When it rots there, it produces methane, which is a greenhouse gas.
When I compost, I do feel I’m doing the right thing, environmentally speaking. But I also enjoy the process. Turning food waste into fertilizer makes me feel a bit like a magician. And I prefer, for hygienic reasons, to bring food scraps outside rather than throwing them in the kitchen trash container.
When I was growing up, my parents had a metal container with a lid buried in the yard. My mother would put the “swill,” as she called it, into it. Somebody—I’m not sure I ever saw him—would come by and take it away, to feed it to pigs.
It pleases me to think that my parents, in this way, were more ecologically correct than me.
Composting is easy. Save your scraps. Add garden debris and fallen leaves to your bins. Mix it up and let it sit. Soon you will have a rich, crumbly mixture that will make your plants grow tall and strong without chemical additives.
In fact, the scraps already start percolating while they’re still in the house. When I pick up the container to add more swill, I can feel the heat.
It’s exciting, but I don’t take a deep breath, for obvious reasons. I do smile. I know that from a brown banana peel, a scooped-out grapefruit, a few moldy peas, my happiness will grow.
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