You can’t, for example, just put a tote in a compost bin, and only 15 percent of the 30 million tons of cotton produced every year actually makes its way to textile depositories (仓库). Even when a tote does make it to a treatment plant, most dyes used to print logos onto them ...
Ready to harvest in 20-45 days, depending on whether you’re picking baby leaves or full rosettes. Harvest outer leaves as needed, or cut the whole plant at the base. Cold Tolerance Light frost won’t harm them, and may even sweeten the flavour. Very cold-hardy—can survive light ...
Best way to save on food miles, packaging and £ is to grown as much of your own food as possible - there are heaps of websites for container gardening ( so if you don't have much of a back yard, you can still grow food) plus you can recycle all sorts of containers to do it...
We all curled up together to watch, “Singin’ in the Rain.” The kids love to watch the video clips on youtube of, “Make ‘Em Laugh” and “Moses”, so I finally just bought the whole movie. They loved it, and I loved curling up with them almost as much as I loved listening ...
Food Waste In America – Would You Throw This Away? Food Waste In America – Chickens Scraps? No Way! Food Waste In America – The Monkeys Stole My Bananas! SHARE: FacebookTwitterPinterestPrintOTHERThis post may contain affiliate links. These affiliate links help support this site. For more ...
Twist them into fire starters for fireplaces or camping trips, use them as a natural way to ripen fruit (just place unripe bananas or avocados inside), or cut them intoDIY book coversto protect school textbooks. They also make fantastic eco-friendly gift wrap—just add some string or a han...
Freeze mangos whole if they’re too soft to cut open and slice. If you have a mango that is getting a little over-ripe but you’re not ready to use it yet, try freezing it before it starts to go bad. Simply place the entire mango into a freezer-safe bag, label it with the date...
Bananas Bananas are soft fruit that chickens will also enjoy. In some instances, if you place bananas anywhere your flocks can reach, don’t expect they won’t peck on it. Melons Chickens love to feast on melons, especially watermelons, but you can also give them Cantaloupe & Honeydew me...