Wednesday 5 June 2013

Community Fund – Guba – May Update



This weekend, the Guba team metamorphosed from permaculture facilitators, builders & farmers into Cafe pundits for Bushfire, a local Arts & Music Festival based in Swaziland. We undergo this huge transition in order to bring locally produced, fresh, healthy food to the festival goers & raise awareness of the work we do in the surrounding communities. Everything we use – from our seating to our food – is guided by the permaculture ethics: Care of the Earth, Care of People & Surplus Share. 

Our focus this year was to promote two key messages: slow & local. The slow movement works to promote everything that is local. It’s an important message for our consumer-driven time. We have the buying power to influence how our communities thrive or decline.

The festival was a feast for the ears, eyes & soul! Well worth looking up if you’re ever in the region (www.bush-fire.com). Our once a year vegetarian Cafe sparked huge demand from our Swazi-based customers for a permanent Cafe, but these permaculture facilitators, builders & farmers are happy to be back to delivering skills training in our communities…at least for now!

Monday 6 May 2013

NEW from Vegware : Gourmet hot box

  • completely compostable
  • ground-breaking innovation
  • microwavable, freezable
  • sealable, brandable
http://www.vegware.com/images/uploads/Vegware_gourmethotbox_finalwithfood_800x450.jpeg
 This is a VERY exciting new innovation for 2013 by Vegware. This is the market's first ever eco-friendly, plastic-free, sealable, ovenable, freezable, brandable hot food box with a clear presentation window.

This unique patented product is exclusive to Vegware and made of two parts: a bagasse base and a sealable card lid with a high-heat cellulose window. Ingeniously, the lid adheres to itself rather than the base which means that it can work with pretty much any base material.

Due to huge demand after our initial launch, we are currently out of stock - please contact us info@vegware.co.za for more details, to discuss branding options and to get on the waiting list!

Here's the how-to guide!


How to assemble the Gourmet HotBox by Vegware

Vegware wins FSB's best small business in UK, Queen's Awards for Enterprise in Sustainable Development, and announces Australian expansion

Eco packaging pioneers Vegware win two major prizes in one week, winning the Queen’s Awards for Enterprise in Sustainable Development and scooping the £10,000 top prize in The FSB Streamline UK Business Awards. These extremely competitive awards commend the high-growth Edinburgh firm for developing innovative zero-waste foodservice packaging, promoting sustainability and reducing landfill waste in the catering and hospitality sector. To celebrate, the SME has designed its own original Vegware tartan, and announced its expansion into Australia, and the tripling of its Edinburgh office space to support UK and international growth.

Joe Frankel, founder and MD of the global packaging firm said, “We saw that foodservice needed packaging which can actually be recycled after use and responded to that challenge. Our unique solution of certified compostable catering disposals and full recycling support is helping the UK’s biggest operators meet sustainability targets and save money. As a result, we have enjoyed tenfold growth in three years, and now employ a team of 26, up from 2 in late 2009. The Queen’s Award is royal recognition that Vegware is making a positive contribution to the UK economy and global sustainability, and the competitive FSB Streamline Awards celebrates Vegware as the UK’s best small business. Winning either of these is fantastic but this double win is a major coup and we are all absolutely delighted with the recognition. The FSB prize money will be great contribution to our product development programme - as it happens we already have a project earmarked for this, secret of course, for now. We've got a great product, a fantastic team, and the time is right so watch this space!”

These prestigious titles bring Vegware’s accolades up to 24 awards and 2 Scottish Parliamentary Motions. Founded and run from its expanded Edinburgh HQ, Vegware is now a global brand with operations in the UK, US, South Africa, Central Europe and distribution from Iceland to Portugal. Newly-founded Vegware Australia operates out of Sydney. Vegware’s new larger Edinburgh office will be officially opened on 29th May 2013 by Richard Lochhead MSP, Scottish Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs and Environment.

Vegware develops, manufactures and distributes a full range of certified compostable catering disposables, made from recycled and sustainably-sourced eco materials. The firm’s packaging is suitable for food waste recycling after use, allowing caterers to recycle food-contaminated coffee cups and takeaway boxes which often otherwise go to landfill. Their non-profit initiative
 


The Food Waste Network is a free service matchmaking any UK business with local food waste collections and promoting zero waste, supporting WRAP’s Hospitality and Foodservice Agreement and helping Scottish businesses comply with the new waste Regs.

The Queen’s Award office congratulated Vegware, saying: “From its leadership position, the company has educated other firms in the sector about benefits of pursuing sustainable choices. It founded the Vegware Community Fund to support non-profit sustainability groups. It is the only packaging firm to offer, with every order, tailored Eco Audits quantifying carbon savings, virgin material savings and potential landfill diversion.” Her Majesty’s Lord Lieutenants will present the award at a ceremony at the firm’s Edinburgh global HQ later on this year, and Vegware will be invited to a summer reception at Buckingham Palace.

The celebratory Vegware Tartan is predominantly green with highlights of burgundy, pink, blue and white. The firm enjoys creativity: its www.FoodWasteNetwork.org.uk imagery includes a life-size map of the British Isles made out of regionally relevant food. On winning the BCE Award for Environmental Leadership in 2012, the firm celebrated by recording The Vegware Song - a jaunty bluegrass song about eco packaging, now viewed over 1,300 times on youtube.com/vegware

CONGRATULATORY QUOTES
1.  Colin Willman, Chairman, FSB (Member Services) commented: “We were impressed by the staggering growth of this company, which now has an established footprint in countries from the US to Australia. Vegware fulfills a real need in the world of catering and proves that eco credentials are right at the heart of our economy’s future.”

2.  Darren Wilson, Managing Director, Streamline said: “Small businesses play a crucial role in supporting the UK economy and as Vegware has shown, the trajectory for growth can be staggering. Vegware identified a clear need in the marketplace, recognised the incentives for businesses to get on board, and made a compelling financial and environmental case for potential customers.”

3.  Quote from Vegware’s Local Green Councillor Gavin Corbett: "As a member of the city's Economy Committee, I still see too many examples of where economic policy and a greener future seem at odds. So it is fantastic to have on my own doorstep a company that is reconciling the two and prospering in the process." Gavin Corbett is Green Councillor for Fountainbridge / Craiglockhart, Edinburgh.

4.  Quote from The Foodservice Packaging Association’s Chief Operating Officer Martin Kersh:  “This is a fantastic and well earned achievement for Vegware and their talented team, and we are delighted the foodservice packaging industry has been recognised by the award of such a highly prestigious accolade to one of our members. Vegware embody the passion, environmental commitment and creativity of the foodservice packaging industry serving a dynamic and growing market. There are many challenges facing our market and this award is a testament to Vegware's dedication and enthusiasm in addressing these issues and to their betterment of the wider community”.

ENDS
1.  Vegware has won a total of 24 awards and accolades, plus two Scottish Parliamentary Motions – full list here. 2.  April was a big month for wins!
a.  10th April: Vegware’s gourmet hot box wins ‘Highly Commended’ in the Essential CafĂ© trade awards.
b.  18th April: FSB Streamline award announced. Vegware is the Scottish Area Finalist, winner of the Business Innovation category, and wins the top prize, being named FSB Streamline UK Business of the Year.
c.  19th April: Vegware is shortlisted in 2 categories in the Foodservice Footprint Awards 2013.
d.  21st April: Queen’s Award win announced – Vegware wins the Queen’s Award for Enterprise in Sustainable Development.
3.  Vegware’s zero waste initiative The Food Waste Network is mapping all UK trade food waste collections by postcode, and offers a free matchmaking service for any UK business seeking food waste recycling. www.foodwastenetwork.org.uk
4.  Vegware is a Founding Supporter of WRAP’s Hospitality and Foodservice Agreement which is uniting the foodservice sector around two targets: reducing food and associated packaging waste by 5% and recycling over 70%. Vegware’s pledge to support this is the Food Waste Network – see our HafSA blog Food Waste Stories.
5.  From 1st January 2014, all Scottish businesses will be required to recycle, including many having to introduce food waste recycling – full info here.
6.  The Vegware Community Fund gives small monthly grants to 13 non-profit sustainability projects, with a new recipient being added every quarter as Vegware grows – info here.

About Vegware:
Vegware Ltd is the UK’s first and only completely compostable food packaging company. The multiple award-winning firm specialises in the development, manufacture and distribution of compostable packaging for food service. Vegware’s Food Waste Network matchmakes any UK business with food and used Vegware packaging from caterers, recycling it into topsoil, biogas or compost. Vegware invests in product development and has brought many compostable innovations to market, including hot cup lids, double wall cups, high-heat cutlery and soup containers.

Clients range from the UK’s biggest contract caterers and food distributors through to UK government offices, NHS units and independent artisan delis and cafes. Vegware is owned and managed by its founders. It is based in Edinburgh and distributes out of London, shipping to all over the UK, EU and beyond. The company's products are distributed worldwide form North America (Vegware US), to South Africa, including Europe from Iceland to Hungary. Visit www.vegware.com for the full catalogue and further information.

Further information, interviews and images:
Lucy Frankel
Communications Manager, Vegware
0845 643 0406 / 07906 635 139
lucy@vegware.co.uk
www.vegware.com

Tuesday 12 February 2013

A young Briton with a lot on his plate - to stop the world wasting food

By Geoffrey Lean
08 Feb 2013



A gala dinner in Kenya will highlight the millons of tons of food wasted all over the world. All the food on the menu will have been thrown away

 In 10 days’ time, 500 ministers, top bureaucrats, UN officials, pressure group leaders and associated hangers-on will sit down to a banquet in Nairobi. Nothing unusual about that, you may say. It’s par for the course at international conferences, the sort of thing that gets some on the Right grumbling about waste, and some on the Left mumbling about taking food from the mouths of the poor.

But this one will be different. Every scrap served at the gala dinner at the Global Ministerial Environment Forum in the Kenyan capital will have been thrown away, part of the mountain range of edible food that goes to waste worldwide. And it will mark the moment that a campaign to reduce it, started by a young Briton, goes global.

The extent of the waste, which will be starkly set out in statistics on the diners’ napkins, is shaming. The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), which is hosting the meeting, and the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) conservatively estimate that a third of all the food produced worldwide each year – worth more than $1 trillion – is never eaten. And this when hundreds of millions already cannot get enough and the world’s population is expected to swell by another two billion in less than three decades.

The waste also uses up other scarce resources. Some 500 million hectares of arable land – an area larger than the Indian subcontinent – grows unconsumed food. So forests are cut down and vital wetlands drained to provide land that should not be used. And there is also a massive waste of water, energy and fertiliser.

Yet buried in the scandal lies an opportunity. Cutting food waste by just a quarter, as the delegates’ napkins will remind them, would release enough – in theory – to feed all the world’s 870 million desperately hungry people. Destruction of wild places could be greatly reduced, the release of greenhouse gases curbed and water conserved.



That would demand changes in rich and poor countries alike. In developed nations, most waste occurs because producers, retailers and consumers throw out food that is still fit for consumption. A third of what is grown never reaches the market – largely because it fails to meet cosmetic standards demanded by supermarkets – while consumers throw out 222 million tons of food a year, almost as much as sub-Saharan Africa produces.

Britain is one of the most wasteful countries: the average family discards food worth £480 a year. One way or another, by some calculations, up to two thirds of the vegetables grown in Britain go uneaten.

Of course, cutting back on waste in rich countries does not mean that the liberated food ends up in the stomachs of the poor in developing ones. But by reducing demand, it can bring down prices, enabling needy people to buy more.

In developing countries, 95 per cent of the waste occurs before the food is sold, eaten by pets on the farm or rotting in markets, through poor storage and distribution. In India, 21 million tons of wheat – equivalent to Australia’s entire production – perishes in this way annually, while enough food is lost in Africa to feed 300 million people.

Now, at last, the world is beginning to address the issue. Much of this is down to Tristram Stuart, who, when feeding pigs at 15, realised how much good food went into their troughs. Over the last two decades he has studied the issues, examined bins behind supermarkets, written a book and organised a feeding of 5,000 people on waste food in Trafalgar Square in 2009.

He is also behind the Nairobi dinner, which will help launch a global campaign by UNEP and the FAO. And already things are happening. Partly inspired by Stuart, Britain has been a pioneer, with successive governments launching anti-waste pushes. Waste in homes fell by 17 per cent between 2007 and 2010, he says, while sales of odd-shaped fruit and veg rose by 300,000 tons last year.

France has also initiated a campaign. South Korea has introduced swipe-card bins, charging households for food they throw out. And in China, the presumptive new president, Xi Jinping, has cracked down on banquets and launched a “Clear the Plate” drive, decreeing: “These habits of waste must be stopped immediately!”

“I don’t know exactly how it works,” says Stuart, “but it does. People are amazed – and shocked – by the problem, and want to help. It is a relief in many ways that we can enhance the lives of the world’s hungry and reduce pressure on land by doing things as easy as buying only the food we eat, and eating whatever we buy.”

Why is the Prime Minister’s green speech under wraps?

David Cameron this week made his greenest speech as Prime Minister – going further even than his pledge to run the “greenest government ever”, shortly after taking power. But his officials don’t want you to read it, refusing to post it alongside his other speeches on the Downing Street website.

Which is a shame, since what he said – opening a conference at the Royal Society on Monday – deserves study. He directly took on George Osborne and other renewable energy sceptics in his government, insisting “to those who say we just can’t afford to prioritise green energy right now, my view is that we can’t afford not to”, and adding “the economies in Europe that will prosper are those that are the greenest and the most energy efficient”.

Downing Street struggles to explain why it is keeping it under wraps. It protests the PM was just making “talking points, not a speech” (even though he was reading a text) and that it does not put such “opening remarks” online (although it did precisely that for a similar introduction to an energy conference last April).

Makes you wonder who is running the show.

SOS: This 'living fossil’ is in danger of dying out

Here’s a new cause. “Save the hellbender” may not have quite the appeal of similar campaigns for the whale or tiger, but US conservationists are fired up about an endangered salamander described as “so ugly, it’s beautiful”.

A 2ft-long “living fossil” – whose flattened body has changed little in 160 million years – the Ozark hellbender is being championed by the Tucson-based Centre for Biological Diversity, which is taking two government agencies to court for failing to protect it properly in Missouri’s Mark Twain National Forest.

While 70 years ago – as one collector noted – you could “find a specimen under almost every suitable rock” around the fast‑flowing waters it frequents, now fewer than 600 remain, as pollution, logging and tourism have taken their toll.

Known locally as a “devil dog”, “mud devil” or “snot otter”, it is thought to have got its name because settlers believed it was a creature of the infernal regions, to which it was bent on returning. That’s something that would no doubt have appealed to Twain who, after all, famously advised going “to heaven for the climate, hell for the company”.



Monday 11 February 2013

Watch a City-Sized Glacier Collapse (Video)




Michael Graham Richard
Science / Climate Change
February 4, 2013
Awe-Inspiring Excerpt from the Movie Chasing Ice
The makers of the movie Chasing Ice were able to capture on film the largest ice calving ever witnessed by humans (so far, but that might not last the way things are going with our planet's climate). It was the Jakobshavn Glacier (aka Ilulissat Glacier) in Western Greenland. The apocalyptic event lasted for more than an hour and when things stabilized, the glacier had retreated a full mile across a calving face three miles wide!

Plastic Pollution in the Oceans is Causing Problems for Whales, too.

David DeFranza
Science / Ocean Conservation
February 6, 2012 




Every year, humans consume 70 million tons of seafood. Though this is an astonishing volume—one that has a serious impact on ocean populations—it cannot compare to sperm whales which consume more than 100 million tons of seafood annually. Most of this consists of squid and small fish but—increasingly—plastic trash is making its way into the whales' diet as well.

Sperm whales, specifically, have been identified as one of the most intelligent species in the ocean—if not on the planet. They posses the largest brains of any known animal—living or extinct—and use sounds and sonar to communicate with one another, organize into social groups, and even identify individuals by name.

The cosmopolitan species has found great success and managed to establish itself in all of the world's oceans and many of the major seas. One of the keys to this success is their ability to dive deep below the surface—with some dropping nearly two miles—to find food. Even so, they have not been able to escape the scourge of ocean plastic pollution that
has also impacted fish, turtles, and birds.



Though hunting of sperm whales has been regulated since just after WWII, threats like pollution continue to threaten the species. The problem with ocean plastic is twofold: 

First, the mass of trash takes up space in the animal's stomach, reducing their ability to consume enough nutrients. In addition, the releases heavy metals and other toxins as it breaks down, creating a potentially deadly concentration of poison in the animal's fat.

Researchers have identified sperm whales as one of the longest-living animal species on the planet, with individuals regularly surpassing 100 years. Still, the improper disposal of something that—to humans—is as trivial as a shopping bag or bottle cap threatens to not only shorten this long lifespan but erode the viability of the species as a whole.

What are your thoughts, leave us comment!

Monday 14 January 2013

Ways to Eat Environmentally Friendly

If you think "eating healthy" means only what you eat, then it may be time to reconsider your definition of "healthy living."

 Eating at Home

    1. Reduce Waste

        If you use plastic utensils or paper plates, swap them for real dishes and cloth napkins. It's also important to cut down on food waste, which another unnecessary drain on an environmental and financial resources.

        I've long stated that planning your meals is important for a number of reasons, one of which is reducing the amount of food that will go to waste, since you'll only buy what you need each time you visit the store.

    2. Try Composting

        Leftover fruit and veggies scraps, leaves and grass clippings (only if not chemically treated) can turn into a valuable natural fertilizer if you compost them instead of throwing them in the trash.

    3. Eat Your Leftovers

        Rather than simply throwing leftover food in the trash, reduce the waste and save the energy of cooking another meal by revamping them into a new dish. You can, for instance, use the bones from a roast chicken to make stock for a pot of soup, extending a Sunday roast to use for weekday dinners, or throw some extra veggies in the fridge into your juicer to make a fresh green drink.

    4. Double Your Recipes

        This is a great way to save some cooking energy (yours and the oven's), as you can use one batch to eat right away and put the other in the freezer for another day.

    5. Cook One or More "Local" Meals Per Week

        If you're new to buying locally-grown foods, challenge yourself to create one meal a week solely from these foods. You can even invite some friends or neighbors in on the challenge, and have a locally-grown potluck dinner for sustainable, tasty eating and a night of socializing!



 At a Restaurant

    1. Skip the Bottles

        Just as you avoid bottled water at home, skip it in restaurants too (if you're worried about quality, bring your own from home). You can also save waste by ordering beer on tap instead of in a bottle.

    2. Eat at Restaurants That Purchase Local Food

        Increasing numbers of restaurants are supporting local farmers to find the freshest, most sustainable sources of produce and other food. Support these restaurants and their efforts to make the world a better place.

    3. Ask About the Food When You're Eating Out

        It's ok, and encouraged, to ask your server or restaurant manager about where they get their food or how it's processed, and state your preferences as well. While they may be surprised by your interest, if enough people begin to inquire it could prompt them to start sourcing their foods from more natural, sustainable sources.

 At the Store

    1. Use Reusable Bags

        Each year about 500 billion to 1 trillion plastic bags are used worldwide. At over 1 million bags per minute, that's a lot of plastic bags, of which billions end up as litter each year, contaminating oceans and other waterways.

        Plastic bags, like the petroleum they are made from, don't biodegrade very well at all, rather, they photodegrade. Meaning, they break down into smaller and smaller toxic bits, which contaminate soil and waterways, and enters the food chain – animals accidentally eat these bits and pieces, mistaking them for food. It's estimated that 1 million birds and 100,000 turtles and other sea animals starve to death each year after consuming plastic debris, which blocks their digestive tracts.

        Paper bags are not an environmentally friendly alternative, as millions of trees must be cut down to make them each year… and the process is very energy intensive.

        Carry reusable shopping bags instead; keep them in the trunk of your car, or stash a couple of the small fold-up varieties in your purse so you're always prepared. You can also use avoid plastic produce bags (put the produce right into your reusable cloth bag instead) and use reusable cloth bags for packaging your child's school lunch and snacks.

    2. Choose Foods with Minimal Packaging
If you can choose foods in bulk, unwrapped form, do so. Excess packaging only adds to the waste filling up landfills, and often it's made out of toxic materials (like Styrofoam, which may cause cancer and produces hazardous waste and gasses when manufactured).

One study conducted by Portland State University Food Industry Leadership Center, for the Bulk is Green Council (BIG), revealed that Americans could save an average of 89 percent on costs by buying their organic foods in bulk, compared to organic packaged counterparts.2 According to the report, if we purchased the following products in bulk for one year, it would save hundreds of millions of pounds of waste from going into landfills:
  • Coffee: 240 million pounds of foil packaging saved from landfills
  • Almonds: 72 million pounds of waste saved from landfills
  • Peanut butter: 7 pounds of waste saved from landfills per family
  • Oatmeal: Saves five times the waste of its packaged equivalent

    3. Ditch Bottled Water
Bottled water is perhaps one of the most environmentally unfriendly industries there is. Americans consume about half a billion bottles of water every week! The environmental ramifications of this practice are enormous. The video below, The Story of Bottled Water, brought to you by the folks who created the wildly successful video The Story of Stuff, does an excellent job of illustrating the truth about bottled water. Instead of bottled water, drinking filtered tap water is a healthier, more sustainable option. (Take it with you on the go using a glass water bottled.)

www.vegware.co.za


Composting at Home, its easy!


by Natashia Fox, from Vegware South Africa, www.vegware.co.za,13 Jan 2013

Composting food waste at home is one of the most important aspects of home recycling.
Why? Because food scrap items such as vegetable and fruit waste, meal leftovers, coffee grounds, tea bags, stale bread, grains, and general refrigerator spoilage are an everyday occurrence in most households.

It’s earth-friendly: Food scraps make up 20-30% of the waste stream.
Making compost keeps these materials out of landfills, where they take up precious space and release methane, a greenhouse gas 21 times more potent than carbon dioxide emissions in the atmosphere.

It benefits your garden: Compost improves soil structure and texture, increases the soil’s ability to hold both water and air, improves soil fertility, and stimulates healthy root development in plants.

It’s easy: It really is!! You can start with just leaves and grass, then work your way towards composting your food scraps.

It saves money: Adding compost to your garden can reduce or eliminate the need to buy chemical fertilizers or compost. If you pay for the amount of trash hauled, composting can also cut down on your trash costs.

One of the "great waves" in municipal and home recycling is the concentration on what to do with the enormous amount of food waste generated in and out of the home, by businesses, or as a result of surplus farming. On the grand scale, it is estimated that about one-half of all food that is produced or consumed is discarded. The main culprits are spoilage and overproduction.

Up to 90 percent of waste thrown out by businesses like supermarkets and restaurants is food scraps in South Africa. In fact, food scraps are the third largest segment of the waste stream with million tons generated each year. Of the overall waste stream, about 12% is food-related, behind paper and plastic.


WHAT HOME FOOD WASTE CAN YOU COMPOST?
Not all food waste is created equal.  You should know this or else you may have problems popping up in your compost bin or pile. BIG PROBLEMS! Actually, once you look at the chart below, commonsense will be your guide.

Food waste you can Compost

  •     Any Vegware Food Packaging Products       
  •     All your vegetable and fruit wastes
  •     Old bread, pizza anything made out of flour!
  •     Grains (cooked or uncooked) rice, barley
  •     Coffee grounds, tea bags, filters
  •     Fruit or vegetable pulp from juicing
  •     Old spices
  •     Outdated boxed foods from the pantry
  •     Egg shells (crush well)
   
Food waste that you can't Compost
  •     Meat or meat waste, like bones, fat, skin, etc.
  •     Fish or fish waste
  •     Dairy products, such as cheese, butter, cottage cheese, yogurt, cream cheese, sour cream, etc.
  •     Grease and oils of any kind

Why can't you compost these food wastes 
They inbalance the otherwise nutrient-rich structure of other food and vegetation waste and breakdown slowly . They attract rodents and other scavenging animals. Meat attracts maggots   

How to start Composting at home

Compost is organic material that can be added to soil to help plants grow. Food scraps and yard waste currently make up 20 to 30 percent of what we throw away, and should be composted instead.  Making compost keeps these materials out of landfills where they take up space and release methane, a potent greenhouse gas.

All composting requires three basic ingredients:

Browns - This includes materials such as dead leaves, branches, and twigs. 
Greens - This includes materials such as grass clippings, vegetable waste, fruit scraps, and coffee grounds. 
Water - Having the right amount of water, greens, and browns is important for compost development.


To Start
Visit your local hardware store and buy a 25 litre bin and lid bucket or container. Keep the bucket near your backdoor or compost bin.

TIP : A good way to keep fruit flies or gnats from sneaking into the bucket is to line the lid with newspaper. This also cuts down on odors seeping out. Replace the paper when it gets moist and deteriorates.

Pour the contents of your Kitchen Food Scraps in the bucket. Every time you add to the pile, turnover and fluff it with a pitchfork to provide aeration, unless your bin has a turner.
Simple as can be!

TIP : Here's a good trick to cut down on odors or potential fruit flies or gnats:
Have nearby a a bag of finished compost, sawdust, or humus (good soil).
Then, scoop a cup full of the material and sprinkle it on the top of the newly-added food scraps. This is a great way to help the food scraps to breakdown, because of the addition of browns added to the greens of the food scraps.

When material at the bottom is dark and rich in color, with no remnants of your food or yard waste, your compost is ready to use. There may be a few chunks of woody material left; these can be screened out and put back into a new pile. The resulting compost can be applied to lawns and gardens to help condition the soil and replenish nutrients.

 A properly managed compost bin will not attract pests or rodents and will not smell bad. Your compost should be ready in two to five weeks.


Good Luck and have fun composting!