May 5 to 11 is International Compost Week, building awareness
of composting, and the importance of "feeding the soil."
What better time for Cathy Nesbitt, founder of Cathy's Crawly
Composters, to look back on her 11 years of promoting vermicomposting.
Vermicomposting uses red wiggler worms to transform organic waste
- from coffee grounds to eggshells and orange peels - into gardener's
"black gold," rich compost and worm castings.
It's a simple, environmentally-friendly process, and her worm
bins and "worm chalet" composters are ideal for classrooms,
businesses and multi-family residences, where outdoor composting
just isn't feasible.
Her biggest challenge has been overcoming the "ick"
factor that most people have when they consider worms - and making
people appreciate that earthworms are the "angels of the
earth" has been perhaps her greatest accomplishment.
But after 11 years, Nesbitt admits it's time to take Cathy's
Crawly Composters to the next level. She has been bringing her
displays and information booths to individual classrooms, to Green
shows, horticultural societies and other groups, yet interest
"hasn't exploded", and vermicomposting hasn't reached
the scale needed to make a dent in the amount of organic material
still ending up at landfill.
"I'd love to have a space. It would be be an education centre,
where people come," she says, and which could undertake projects
on a larger scale, similar to the pilot projects being pioneered
by the University of Michigan. "I do a lot of outreach, but
I'd like to have a place where people could come to see vermicomposting"
in action.
Part of the problem has been the introduction of the municipal
Green Bin Program - a program that, Nesbitt says, "doesn't
make sense." Residents are asked to put their organic waste
into compostable garbage bags, where it rots until collected by
diesel-powered trucks and, hopefully, is taken away to a composting
facility.
"Hopefully, it will be processed properly, but while it's
sitting, rotting in the Green bin, it's not composting,"
she says.
Nesbitt would love to see a Vermicomposting Centre here in Bradford
- a centre that would not only be a showcase, but provide employment
for Special Needs residents or Youth at risk, collecting the compostable
materials, and selling the end product. "Why doesn't Bradford
jump on what we're doing? Why isn't Bradford the place?"
she muses.
In the meantime, she is busy with new projects. Cathy's Crawly
Composters will be involved in a Girls Inc. Discovery program,
that links Seniors and girls between the ages of 12 and 15 - holding
a workshop on soil management and vermicomposting in June - and
the opening of the East Gwillimbury Farmers' Market this weekend.
She will be highlighting another aspect of her business at the
market: simple sprouters. "You may think my booth is confused
(but) I have world hunger solved here," she told a group
of students recently - creating soil, and creating nutritious
food.
"It's not rocket science," says Bradford's Worm Lady.
"They fit everywhere. The worms are the solution."
For more information see www.cathyscomposters.com or call 905-775-9495.
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