HOMEMADE WATER FILTER WITH NANO EFFECT
Homemade water filter. Video Tutorial - How to make Homemade water filter with a NANO purifying effect. It's hand-made portable filter with ...
Nano filter | Nanostructured Carbon Filter
Nanostructured Carbon Water Filter. It's 350 times higher adsorption effect than GAC \ Granular Activated Carbon.
Nano Water Filter | Coca-Cola Filtration
Water filter with Nanostructured Carbon has filtered Coca-Cola completely
Compost this!
Last Saturday I went to a compost demonstration. When I told Mark that I wanted to go to a compost demonstration, he joked that I didn’t have any signage, as ifВ “demonstration” meant “rally,” like I was going to a trash protest march. Alas, the compost demonstration was not a rally but rather a meeting at a local park where the education director from our county’s solid waste management office offered tips on successful composting. Still though, how fun it would be to have a rally with recyclable (compostable, even!) signs like:
“Oppose the trash establishment!”
“Composters unite! Overthrow trashers!”
“No veggies left behind!”
OK. You get the idea.
Anyhow, off I went to the park on a chilly Saturday morning to get some tips. I wrote this beginner’s composting post a few weeks ago that gives basic information on starting a compost bin. But, I am not an expert composter, so I knew I could learn more.
As I mentioned, our composting teacher works for the county’s solid waste department as their education director, and she began her lecture with such little nuggets as, “I talk trash for a living,” and “My business is trash. Once you get in, it’s hard to get out.” She also had a 12 gallon indoor worm compost bin with a sign taped to the lid that said, “Worms eat my garbage.” I won’t cover worm composting in this post, but if you’d like to know more, here’s a great tutorial on how to start your own indoor worm bin.
The following are some highlights of what I learned at the demonstration (some of this information is also in my previous post on composting, but it’s worth repeating):
There are four main ingredients to successful composting:
Nitrogen (the “greens”): these are fresh vegetable waste...

