After each poo, you add a bit
more peat moss to the bucket.
Watch the compost and if it becomes too moist, add
more peat moss or coconut coir.
Not exact matches
«No plant genus is
more important as a carbon balance on Earth than
peat mosses.
In addition, increasing atmospheric nitrogen pollution can allow rapidly decomposing vascular plants to outcompete the
more recalcitrant Sphagnum (
peat moss).
My research indicates that the Siberian
peat moss, Arctic tundra, and methal hydrates (frozen methane at the bottom of the ocean) all have an excellent chance of melting and releasing their stored co2.Recent methane concentration figures also hit the news last week, and methane has increased after a long time being steady.The forests of north america are drying out and are very susceptible to massive insect infestations and wildfires, and the massive die offs - 25 % of total forests, have begun.And, the most recent stories on the Amazon forecast that with the change in rainfall patterns one third of the Amazon will dry and turn to grassland, thereby creating a domino cascade effect for the rest of the Amazon.With co2 levels risng faster now that the oceans have reached carrying capacity, the oceans having become also
more acidic, and the looming threat of a North Atlanic current shutdown (note the recent terrible news on salinity upwelling levels off Greenland,) and the change in cold water upwellings, leading to far less biomass for the fish to feed upon, all lead to the conclusion we may not have to worry about NASA completing its inventory of near earth objects greater than 140 meters across by 2026 (Recent Benjamin Dean astronomy lecture here in San Francisco).
Throw in a little bit of
peat moss or be even
more sustainable and use coconut coir.
Warming results in
more carbon dioxide release from soil and
peat moss — it is some 20 % of the fossil fuel emissions.
You start by adding some
peat moss to the bucket — this provides Carbon for composting and provides
more air in the mix.
As the BP oil spill moves from being a short and bloody battle to a long and drawn out war, I've personally have moved to from anger to trying to think
more constructively, but here are two pieces of news which drag me right back to frustration: 1) In an Alabama wildlife refuge affected by the spill, even possessing a camera is prohibited; 2) BP apparently won't use
peat moss to help clean up the oil because it won't be able to sell the oil afterwards.
But what did the decorating diva, who's
more accustomed to paint chips than
peat moss, do when her boggy backyard needed a lift?