On Wednesday, April 18th, the Institute for Local Self-Reliance hosted a webinar on, “Using Bokashi in Community Composting: What, Why, How, Who.” This was one in a series of webinars oriented toward community composters, and offered on behalf of the community composter network. View the recording here.
Bokashi is a Japanese term meaning “fermented organic matter.” Bokashi fermentation utilizes a variety of by-products – such as leaves, sawdust, husks, bran, other grains – inoculated with beneficial microbes to ferment kitchen waste. It is an anaerobic (without oxygen) process, akin to pickling. Often mistakenly considered a form of composting, it results in a very different product. However, as a pre-processing step to composting, it has several benefits including ability to handle meat and dairy, repelling rats, speeding up the composting process, and cutting frequency of food scrap collection. The webinar covered what bokashi is, how it’s made, benefits of bokashi to micro food scrap haulers and composters, and lessons from three micro composters.
Intrigued? Watch the recording of the webinar to learn more.
Presenters
E. Shig Matsukawa
Bokashi Expert at Recycle Food Waste
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Meredith Danberg-Ficarelli
Operations Director at Common Ground Compost
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Facilitator
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View and download slides:
Bokashi Composting: The Bokashi Method of Recycling Food Waste — E. Shig Matsukawa, Recycle Food Waste
Making Bokashi at ECO City Farms — Benny Erez, ECO City Farms
Bokashi Composting at East Side Outside Garden — Meredith Danberg-Ficarelli, Common Ground Compost
Using Bokashi in Community Composting: What, Why, How, Who — Vandra Thorburn, Vokashi
Check out our other Composting for Community webinars:
Successful Rat Prevention for Community-Scale Composting
Two Business Models for Community Composting
Crowd Funding for Community Composting
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