conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2008-07-17 12:07 am
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You really gotta hand it to the Japanese.

Whatever it is, they'll find a way to make it better.

I present... really, really intense Japanese compost, everybody.

I thought "turning it every once in a while" was just the greatest innovation in the compost since bins, and now the Japanese are there, as always, turning my worldview on its head.

Bokashi. It's the garbage reclaiming wave of the future!

On that note, once you're done making stock, is there anything, anything at *all*, that you can do with bones other than make scrimshaw?
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[identity profile] velvetchamber.livejournal.com 2008-07-17 11:02 am (UTC)(link)
I am not that good at chemistry, but a calcium ion (Ca2+) is positively charged, or alkaline. I would bring that question to someone that is well versed in chemistry.

Although if you rinse off your decalcified bones before adding them to your compost, you should be rinsing off most of the vinegar, and you would already have removed a great deal of the alkaline calcium.