- compost - We eat a lot of fresh fruits and vegetables which means a lot of trimmings. I compost what I can but with the amount we eat even the compost cannot keep up. In addition to the daily produce consumed, we go through a vast amount of produce for home canning and freezing at least a year's worth at a time. Aesthetically and in terms of space there is only so many compost bins we can have and due to property limitations there is only so much compost we can use and give away.
- non-compostable food scraps - Certain food scraps cannot go into the compost. These include fats, oils, dairy, corn cobs, fish parts and type of thing. Two houses ago we had a food garburator which helped immensely but until we move back into town a garburator is not an option. I save larger bones for a friend of ours who has a dog. I also save bones for stock making which gives me a useful product before having to toss the bones. Cooking oil is a huge concern as the only way to dispose of it is in the garbage.
- food containers - We use little in the way of food containers since I do a lot of home canning. What we can't curb side recycle which is mainly plastic tub containers are used around the house and garden but what we can't use find their way into the garbage. This concerns me and it won't be a problem when we move into town but for now it is a problem. Short of not buying cottage cheese, sour cream, ice cream and ricotta cheese there isn't a way to eliminate these containers so finding a way to recycle them is the only option.
- burnables - We are technically rural so can have a burn pile or barrel but we don't. While this is a ready solution and we have used a relative's burn pile for brush, burning normal household garbage just contributes to air pollution trading the landfill issue with air quality issues. Although some household waste could be burned we don't take advantage of this.
- excess packaging - We are quite diligent about reducing the amount of packaging we bring into the house. Less in means less that has to be tossed out. We use reusable shopping bags as well as shop farm stands, farmers' markets and bulk food stores which eliminates a lot of food packaging. We are at the point where we don't need to buy a lot of household items so that saves on packaging as well. Still there is some packaging that is unavoidable but we keep looking for alternatives.
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