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Council Food Recycling Caddies

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barry1010 | 22:01 Fri 15th Mar 2024 | Home & Garden
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My council is starting this very soon and I have no idea how it works.  They will collect weekly.

How big is the bin? Is it lined? What can I put in it and what mustn't go in it?

The only food waste I throw in the bin is chicken bones.

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How do they 'recycle' the mouldy, possibly maggoty, food?

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Put it a huge incinerator thingwee that makes biofuel.

Lord knows how much energy that takes

Here's the follow-up to the video that I posted above.  This one will, I hope, help to answer Clover's question:

Thanks, Barrie. I do often wonder if it's all just chucked in a massive landfill somewhere. 

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Some councils have huge silo type devices that turn it into compost or fertiliser without using energy 

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Cloverjo, if it went into landfill it would create methane gas and see the strange phenomenon of flames rising from the earth and suffer the dreadful smell.  Could be explosions.

Thanks, Buenchico.

Interesting. I'm glad it does actually get used. I'm still a bit wary of keeping old food in a little container in my kitchen for a week, though. It must stink in the summer. 

Garden waste. Twice a monthly. £109 a year.

Cloverjo - no, you don't keep it in your kitchen bin for a week. You can empty the kitchen one into the outside food caddy as often as you want, or just when it's full. I empty mine every other day at least,

Our council have an innovative way with garden and food waste since unveiling their 'new method of composting' so it all goes in together meaning I only have four full-size bins to contend with now.

Saving the planet one new wheeze at a time.

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So many different schemes.

£36 a year for garden waste, fortnightly, all year

We don't have food waste apart from teabags and egg shells, everything we we buy gets eaten. 

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Fruit and veg peelings and cores, bones, fish guts and chicken giblets?

Are they really ok with tea bags ? A lot of them have plastic in and don't break down in any reasonable time.

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