Waste
Coprovore Terrarium Sewage Unit (To Replace Sepic Tanks or Entire Sewage system)
Tue, 08/10/2010 - 23:49 — AgreeToDisagreeIntroducing a terrarium form habitat with featuring solid waste eating slugs. Biologically natural and 100% green. Apart from the earlier mentioned open air method earlier suggested, we could also use :
(1) Slugs For Processing of Meat Waste & Solid Sewage
- solid waste be fed to coprovores like slugs
- when slug populations grow too large, they can be given (after a period of cleansing via 'clean' diet) to ducks or geese or any animals that eat slugs, these animals can be in turn eaten by humans
Make your own cooking gas.
Wed, 11/04/2009 - 07:09 — samdeedHi Green People! I will post a more thorough explanation later, but I am currently attempting to create a "Gobar Gas" unit at my house. The basic concept is that we have left over rice banana peels and other kitchen waste. The idea is that I don't want to just sent that trash to some dump and it is actually the basis for fuel(methane). Of course if your food has any oil in it like french fries then you can't use that. Basically anything that will break down. Cow Dung is the best, but since I don't have a cow(no pun intended) I can use basic kitchen waste.
Waste Management - Plastic Bottles
Thu, 01/22/2009 - 11:36 — samdeedI was reading a blog on why plastic bottles should be done away with in the third world. It gave me a thought. What if bottled water companies had refilling stations everywhere rather than selling bottles. An example - a refilling station could be at a supermarket or gas station. This way a consumer would be able to use just one bottle, clean it and reuse. That could solve the plastic problem. The distribution of the water would still add to the carbon footprint of the bottled water companies, but at least the footprint contributed by using pla

