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Cities are Eliminating Your Excuses to Skip on Composting

Even if you don’t have a personal garden to sprinkle compost in, there are other ways the soil additive can be helpful.

By Leslie Nemo
Jun 20, 2020 6:40 PMJul 1, 2020 9:30 PM
Compost Vegetable Garden - Shutterstock
(Credit: Pixelbliss/Shutterstock)

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Banana peels and coffee-ground mountains begin to pile up when you’re eating all meals at home for weeks on end. Maybe it’s finally time to get serious about composting.

Potential composters might shy away from separating out their food scraps because it’s time-consuming or messy, says Keima Kamara, a solid waste specialist with the Oklahoma State University Extension. “Some people want to just put everything in the trash bin and put it in the dumpster,” she says. But your discarded veggies can build up healthy soils and reduce greenhouse gas emissions with minimal personal oversight, depending on the method you choose.

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