
Okay, consider me reprimanded for my erroneous presumption: Violet was not tossing scraps into the trash, as I misunderstood. All those ginormous bins are for composting. Okay, then. They are still too large and do not appear to be properly vented. So there!
Cherry makes a very good point about why meat scraps do not normally go into a compost bin. Aside from bears, you must watch out for cats, mice, rats, racoons, foxes. However, compost piles of grass clippings, fruit, vegetables, and even grains can attract herbivores and omnivores, such as possums, squirrels, rabbits, chipmunks, and birds. And possibly bears, anyway.
Finally, Rivera could stop with the grade-school puns right now and see a 25% increase in the quality of Mark Trail. They are neither cute nor clever.
We have at least one bear in the neighborhood. It’s knocked down a fence, stolen suet from a porch feeder, been barked at by our dog, and ambled through our backyard while we were eating breakfast by the window. It left our compost bin alone.
As to the puns, you know my opinion : No soap. Radio.
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Woohoo! Interesting, to say the least. You must have to shelter or lock your trash and other waste!
The most dangerous animals we have seen in our yard are racoons and hawks. But we live in town.
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