A handful of compost
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Learning how to compost is one of the most eco-friendly things you can do. Composting is simply a process of transforming your kitchen and yard waste into nutrient-rich soil. Composted soil is an optimal fertilizer for your yard, and helps with all gardening issues, including drainage, disease, and pest problems. It’s a natural way to give health to your soil in a manner that doesn’t pollute your soil with poisons or chemicals.

With composting instead of tossing the waste into the trash, you’re also actively reducing the amount of waste you’re sending to the landfill. Landfills all over the world are overloaded, while the population keeps growing, so this is becoming an issue with huge significance.

Many families can reduce the amount of waste leaving their homes by half or more, by composting everything they can. If you recycling everything you can, there ends up not being much to send to the landfill in the first place. The Earth and every future generation will thank you.

Believe it or not, by composting, you’re also actively reducing greenhouse gas emissions in what can be a significant amount. With composting, you’re not only reducing the amounts of greenhouse gasses created in the landfill, but composted soil actually pulls the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide out of the environment. It’s actually possible for a family who actively tills composted soil into the land around their home, to offset a year or more of the average American’s carbon emissions.

Think about what an impact it would make if every family composted instead of sending their waste to landfills. The land around our homes would be nutrient-rich, the landfills would become manageable, and our carbon emissions would shrink considerably.

Learning how to compost is easy; there are plenty of resources on the net – a simple search can give you all of the information you need. Then, just get started with a compost bin or even make one yourself and begin with just a little investment in time.

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