White Ceramic Compost Pail
http://www.cleanairgardening.com/ceramic-compost-crock.html
This white ceramic compost pail holds one gallon of material and features a charcoal filter that helps eliminate any smell. Like most compost pails, it serves the function of dropping off your kitchen scraps and then taking them to your compost pile or compost bin every few days or so. If you’re a little klutzy, you might want to consider a stainless steel or bamboo compost pail instead. Overall though, this is an excellent compost pail for your kitchen, and a wonderful addition to home composting.
For more information on this compost pail, please click the link at the top of this video description. Thank you.
Duration : 0:2:20
Gardening Rhythms: Composting using a Black Soldier Fly
Compost yard and kitchen scraps using the Black Soldier Fly. The fly never appears. It’s first eaten before it flies.
Duration : 0:3:25
Kitchen Compost Stoneware Crock Review
My mother-in-law gave me a Green Stoneware Counter Top Composter as a Christmas gift. I’ve been using it for a couple of weeks at this point and it’s been full of food for about a week. I added a banana peel this morning and noticed that it was ready to be emptied so I shot this quick video for you.
Duration : 0:3:41
Indoor Kitchen Composter Review
Shawna Coronado reviews and discusses the benefits of an Indoor Kitchen Composter from Clean Air Gardening (www.cleanairgardening.com).
Duration : 0:3:57
Home composting with DailyDump
A step-by-step guide to how we compost our kitchen waste at home using a DailyDump ‘kambha’. Video is self-explanatory. For details on DailyDump visit www.dailydump.org
Duration : 0:2:0
Container Gardening: Container Herb Garden
Container gardening is a great way to grow plants, vegetables and herbs without needing a lot of space. Herbs do especially well and can be grown right outside your kitchen door. In this video, you’ll learn how to use an old farmer’s market basket to make a great container garden. Fill it with your favorite herbs and your cooking will be full of flavor all summer long.
Duration : 0:6:7
Kitchen Compost 101
Gavan Murphy, The Healthy Irishman, shows us how to set up your very own kitchen compost kit. He breaks down how to get started and use all those extra food scraps and turn them into fertilizer for your garden.
Duration : 0:4:47
How to Bokashi, Part 2
Heather and Richard conclude their setting up of a Bokashi bin.
Duration : 0:7:54
Kitchen Composting— E A S Y — Q U I C K — CLEAN & CONTAMINATION FREE
Easy to use Auto Opening Kitchen Compost Catcher.
A retro fit kit – that makes a under sink door hung Kitchen Compost Catcher Auto-Opening.
An easy and quick homeowner do-it-yourself installation. The Auto Opening feature makes doing the right thing with kitchen compost quick, easy and clean. Hands free for dish clearing reduces the possibility of cross contamination; no-touch access to the container while tossing compostables.
Greater Adoption of good ideas is readily accepted when the end user is kept in mind. When doing the right thing is easy to fit the idea into our lifestyle. We get on board… we ‘pitch in’ …we make waste diversion and composting part of our lifestyle.
For more information please call toll free: 1-877-283-3535
Copyright©2009 Colin KNAUF/ SynCOGENT Design & Direction Inc.
Duration : 0:0:7
Our Biogas Kitchen
In Germany it was our common practice to compost all of our kitchen waste. Now that we have built an ARTI India style biogas digestor on the porch, however, we only compost the tissue paper, napkins, cardboard, tea-bags and fibrous, cellulosic material that our household generates as garbage. All the food waste (including flower petals and banana peels) go into the blender with warm water and then into the biogas digestor. What we get out is liquid fertilizer for our rooftop herb, berry and vegetable garden, and biogas. We are still experimenting with the yields of gas, but are so far averaging 10 minutes a day for the small size of our digestor and the small quantities of food waste our family of 2 (with a baby) generates. Two days worth of kitchen waste gives us enough gas to usefully cook for 20 or 30 minutes.
Duration : 0:5:18