• @scarabicM
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    12 months ago

    Yes, soil additive, not composting material. That’s all I meant. I think the original question was could you compost a body and I said yes except the skeleton and then someone asked what if you grind it up and the answer is still you can’t really compost bone.

    • @SchmidtGenetics
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      02 months ago

      You can’t yourself, but if you heat the compost it’s possible.

      Our city takes bones as well as dog and cat poo as well as a host of other stuff you can’t compost personally since it’s a heated above 55c and breaks down all that extra stuff.

      • @scarabicM
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        2 months ago

        Municipal compost is put through a tub grinder, which masticates everything to a fine degree. So even there, it’s not really the heat. They are just grinding it to the point where you can’t distinguish it from other bits of rock and silica in the soil.

        Video: https://youtu.be/j_RXRqFB_bM?si=g2_1Pt99qIc9cq6g

        Also, I’ve gotten my home compost over 160 degrees F which is considerably hotter. I mean the same pile that these bones have survived.

        • @SchmidtGenetics
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          2 months ago

          Municipal compost shouldn’t be accepting those items if it’s not heated since it doesn’t break down, nor does it kill pathogens off that can be deadly if used for vegetable gardens.

          Linky

          Heating it in specially designed containers with controlled environments is a little different than the center of the pile getting that hot for a few hours during a hot day.

          It’s a stare of the art facility that’s brand new, they’re a little different than most other municipalities.

          • @scarabicM
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            02 months ago

            I’m not saying the facility doesn’t get hot. It is for sure hot. I’m saying it is not the heat that breaks down bones, but the masticators they use.

            • @SchmidtGenetics
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              2 months ago

              Without the heat it still takes months to years to break down, with the heat it can done in the 21 day cycle.

              It’s a culmination of everything, which is why it’s not really possible to do yourself.

              • @scarabicM
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                02 months ago

                When I say my pile was 160 I do not mean for a few hours on a hot day as you said. It was over 140 for a period of 3 weeks and peaked at 160 for about 5 days. Bones came out of that intact.

                Heat + bacteria will not make bones disappear in 21 days or 210 days.

                • @SchmidtGenetics
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                  2 months ago

                  Maybe read the resource I sent you? Thats factually incorrect, bones do break down, why do you think there’s not trillions of bones all over the earth right now? Because they break down…. The heat exacerbates the break down cycle from months and years to weeks. You lacked the right conditions, that’s why you still had bones, it’s not because they don’t break down, they do. YOU can’t do it, but it absolutely is possible dude.

                  You seriously think your anecdotal experience is proof when there’s lots of actual physical proof they do break down….? Seriously dude …?

                  And no, your pile wasn’t that hot, it’s physically impossible for the entire pile to be a consistent temperature throughout its entirety, that’s only the center of the pile. You need the entirely of the pile to be consistent temp for the right conditions. Which again, almost impossible to do without sealed containers and specialized equipment you can’t really get yourself. But you can.

                  The incredibly ironic thing is, too much heat also kills off the good bacteria… so yeah you really don’t k ow what you’re doing or why if you’re letting it get that hot in it’s core anyways.

                  • @scarabicM
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                    02 months ago

                    Don’t start getting personal with me because you’re failing to prove your point. That is not called for. Your resource says Z E R O about bones. It DOES however back up what I SAID, which is that your commercial composting facility physically grinds up their material:

                    Step 1 - Food and yard waste is dropped off

                    Step 2 - Shredding the material

                    So yeah, before you get on your high horse with me again, maybe read the fucking resource yourself.

                    I’ve been composting for over a decade here. I do not think that my anecdotal experience overrides all, but if you think you posted scientific proof that solid bones break down at 50C within weeks, you absolutely did not.

                    I DO think that my decade of direct experience DOES override your bad guesses about what probably goes on at your city facility. Goodbye now. I’ve wasted enough time in this rabbit hole and the vibe is getting shitty in here.