It molds as soon as something hits the bucket and is an impossible size to fit either a biodegradable garbage bag (regular plastic bags should not be put in the yard debris can) or a cut down paper bag. I tried to fit both when I should have been doing something more productive. Apparently, despite everybody having a garbage disposal, pipes are not really made for food debris. Portland is too sustainable. I do not enjoy knowing this much about refuse. Also. Pizza boxes, egg cartons and frozen dinner boxes are not recyclable. As long as we're on the subject. I can cite references. I do not enjoy being able to cite references about this subject, either.
well, we're bound to that, in truth. But while there's time I want to write I'm glad to be alive in the same world as you, here where there's, yes, a wisdom in the inward parts, where something mesenteric loosely binds us, where you, as words are bound to tell, have given understanding to my heart.
at least you get a container...we'd just have to save ours in a bag and put it with our garden debris one...which we don't do cause what a pain.
It molds as soon as something hits the bucket and is an impossible size to fit either a biodegradable garbage bag (regular plastic bags should not be put in the yard debris can) or a cut down paper bag. I tried to fit both when I should have been doing something more productive. Apparently, despite everybody having a garbage disposal, pipes are not really made for food debris. Portland is too sustainable. I do not enjoy knowing this much about refuse. Also. Pizza boxes, egg cartons and frozen dinner boxes are not recyclable. As long as we're on the subject. I can cite references. I do not enjoy being able to cite references about this subject, either.