Bio-Lancasttf Ftnrtng, Saturday, Saplambar 23,1995 \*i* Children CREAMERY (Montgomery Co.) Young visitors to the Recycling Education Program’s booth at the recent Montgomery County 4-H Fair were asked for a definition of compost, what it smells like, and how it is made. Their answers were descriptive, accurate, and to the point. When asked what compost smells like, the answers ranged from “it smells like my grand mother’s woods,” “like insects,” “flowers and oranges,” “nature of the world,” to “soil, but sweet.” Emily, age 6, disagreed. She thought it smel'ed yucky. Look at the picture below. It's a landfill where trash is buried. Most of your trash will end up in this pile. There ate about 6000 landfills in the United States to hold all the trash. Why is there so much trash? One reason is because we buy things that use too much packaging made from paper, cardboard, plastic and polystyrene foam - styrofoam. Things look so good on the shelf; we have trouble resisting them. Color the things that you think can be saved from the trash pile. Reduce Here's a game you can play in your home. There are four squares below with the numbers 1,2,3 or 4in them. Each number stands for the number of layers of packaging used foranitem. For example, cereal uses cardboard and a bag so it goes in the #2 box. Look at the list of items (under the boxes) and try to put them in the right box. milk juice packs bread fruit crayons pack of gum cereal music tapes video cassette games lb check your answers, find these items around your house or check the answer key in the back. Most of these items used ttfo or mote layers. Some layers are there to protect the item. Some layers are there to make the product look good. If fewer layers were used, people would have less to throw away. You should try to decide what is needed to protect an item and what is there for looks. Look at the list of products in the activity above. Some things are packaged different ways by different makers. For example, fruit is sometimes available in bulk in large bins and other times it is found prepackaged in plastic or paper trays. Certain cereals sometimes also have an outer plastic wrapping. Cereal variety packs also have an outer wrap and lots of cardboard and paper for a small amount of cereal. Look around the next time you go to the store and you'll see many examples of the same type of product packaged in different ways. An E.S. looks to buy only those items that have the least packaging. Buy, and encourage others to buy, the things that have the least packaging. REJECT unnecessary packaging. id® * Take Compost Quiz Thomas at age 10 must be a vet eran compos ter. Asked what is compost, he replied, “Compost is leaves, grass and other natural items mixed together to form soil for plants to gro\v in.” Catherine describes compost as “old things that people don’t want anymore so they recycle,” while Ford, age 6, was right to the point. He said it means “something is rotten,” and Christine said it was “leftover food.” The children certainly know how to compost. Katie, 11, instructs us to “put dirt in a pile with potato peels, grass, leaves, other things that can be decom- Reject posed. Wait for 8-9 months, may be more, and you will have com post for your garden.” Christina, 6, is more direct: ‘Throw it in a pile, then it breaks down.” Aaron. 9, wants us to “grind up dirt, trees, I think.” Promotion of backyard com posting for all age groups is one of the goals of the Recycling Educa tion Program. If the many children who took a few minutes to answer the compost questions are any indication, their generation is on the right rack towards environ mental awareness and good recy cling practices. a * or*ie Have you thought about your trash lately? Most people don't think about where trash comes from or where it goes. Did you know that every person creates about four pounds of trash each day? In one week that is nearly thirty five pounds - the weight of a very fat turkey. If you imagine all die people you know, that is a lot of turkeys! More than half of the things that get thrown away can be saved, reused or made into new things. The Environmental Shopper does not create four pounds of trash a day, because he or she knows what to buy and what not to buy. The best way to get rid of all those turkeys is to start with yourself. & \s *am«r.g