Ontario Community Newspapers

Oakville Beaver, 3 Mar 1993, p. 12

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12 psychie Registration Fee $15.00 payable to Parkinson Foundation Contact: Program Coordinator in Physiotherapy 338â€"4613 or Parkinson Foundation Mary McCarter 844â€"8992 Psychics Mystics Clairvoyants Palmists Astrolo?ers Spiritualists 6 week program of * @ Activity and Education for @ & Parkinsons Patients Date Time Days March 17â€"April 23 _ 1:30â€"3:00 p.m. _ Wednesdays & Fridays PLACE: PHYSIOTHERAPY GYM, OAKVILLE TRAFALGAR MEMORIAL HOSPITAL EXERCISE @ Stretching * Group e Strengthening Activifies e Balance 5" Burlington International Maple Syrup Breathing © 1993 First Star Enterprises Parkinsons in Motion If your natural gas furnace has seen better days, or you‘re heating your home with oil or elecâ€" tricity, Union Gas has an ErerSmart offer that‘ll help you conserve energy and save money. And, because natural gas is cleaner burning, you‘ll also help preserve our environment! Now that‘s EnerSmart! *Residential consumers with approved credit Offer valid between February 15 and May 22, 1993. Call for details Union Gas deferred payment is also available from Members of the Union Gas Heating Dealer Organization. All other offers not applicable M *« Coordination * Endurance Demos And More Readings Books Crystals Lectures Mountsberg Wildlife Centre in Campbellville and Crawford Lake hold their annual Maple Syrup festivals weekends and holidays to April 12th, and daily during March Break, March 15th to 19th Mountsberg has wagon rides to the sugar bush and pancakes with sausages and syrup; and learn about ‘Sweet Water‘ at Crawford Lake, Classes consist of Presenting Admission fee includes entrance to the Museum of the Paranormal & Strange Psychic Curiosities" Â¥Learn what your nose reveals about you. »Gaze into a genuine crystal ball. whRing a Tibetan wish bell. Â¥Test your own E.S.P. Â¥Learn how to read tea leaves. wOperate the mysterious Ouija Board Don‘t Miss This Special Psychic Event! Friday: Saturday Sunday: Holiday Inn Burlington Amission Orrn‘!xi (Childran 12 & Under Free, when accompanied by an adult Hourly Door Prizes 3063 S. Service Rd. (From QEW, Exit 102, Left on Guelph Line, Left on Harvester Rd.) â€". it you dare. writ‘s all here and so much more discussion on Back Care * Dietary Stress * Posture Management ; ppjrimg cy Relaxation EDUCATION March 5 March 6 March 7 Plenty of Free Parking 1pm â€" 10pm 1lam â€" 10pm 11am â€" 7pm Whether you‘re replacing or converting to natural gas â€" don‘t wait another minute. Call Union Gas today, and ask about these and other EnerSmart offers available on selected home comfort heating and cooling equipment. See a Member Dealer for other purchase incentives. Union Gas P Make the EnerSmart Choice! Composting experiments emphasize separation of garbage for collection (Continued from page 11) "About three to four years ago there was a real flurry of activity, but the biodegradable plastic bags of the day did not live up to their promise," said Taylor. As for the diapers, "we have to come up with something that keeps baby dry and can be triggered by something in the (compost) pile to break down." However, despite the fact they won‘t break down, plastic bags are ideal for collecting materials for composting, especially wet food wastes from households. For the food wastes composting experiment currently underway in Mississauga, two types of plastic bags are being used, along with a rigid container and paper bags. Emptying out the plastic bags, whether used to collect food or grass clippings, costs about $1 each, Taylor said. "We have to keep doing this manually until we can find a biodegradable bag." TWOâ€"PART EXPERIMENT The food wastes composting is a twoâ€"part experiment involving 3,000 Mississauga households and the Mississauga Hospital. "It‘s a project to study the feasibility of food organics," commented Rivers. "We‘re collecting everything from table scraps to vegetables, fruits, meat and potatoes (raw and cooked), plus dairy products, from residential homes â€" most of our food comes from the residential colâ€" lections." Rivers explained the city has four residential routes "for which the emphasis on on collecâ€" tion." Hence the experimentation with four different collection conâ€" Added to this are the 42 20â€"gal. THE OAKVILLE BEAVER containers of cafeteria food wastes, about 2â€"1/2 tons, from the Mississauga hospital arriving weekâ€" ly, representing a sampling of what English describes as ICI â€" Industrialâ€"Commercialâ€"Institutional food wastes. The major difference between the food wastes from the hospital and that from the houseâ€" holds is "one cafeteria compared to several cafeterias," said English. COMPOST MIXTURE He explained the food wastes are mixed with yard wastes, leaves, brush and grass clippings, adding piles of yard wastes have been kept aside for this mixture to continue the food composting year round. The mixture breaks down in about 10 weeks using the ‘microbe farmâ€" ing‘ technique of allowing tiny organisms to eat their way through the yard and food wastes mixture, turning the ‘wind rows‘ regularly to acrate them. ‘"We attain a stable compost in three to four months," English said, adding the experimental site has already held public giveâ€"ways for households participating in the food wastes program, and a third is planned for this spring. English estimates the site comâ€" posts about one to 20 metric tons of food wastes collected from each route per week. The amount varies due to seasonal changes and type of containers used for collection. Upon arrival, the food wastes is mixed "and after about three hours, you won‘t be able to see any of the food wastes. This keeps the site clean and odorless." The food wastes composting experiment began when Compost Management opened the site in Save $300.00 on our heating and cooling package, or choose a free Honeywell Electronic Air Cleaner and setback thermostat Plus make no payments for 90 Days !* Call Today! 335â€"7310 October 1991 and will continue as a pilot project until June when it will be closed pending a future decision by either the City of Mississauga or Peel Region to reâ€"open the site and continue the composting operation. "This is a Research and Development project, a totally experimental site," said English. Other items composted at this Mississauga site include vacuum cleaner bags, ashes and cereal boxes. Much of Compost Management‘s work is experimenâ€" tal, having operated two pilot proâ€" jects in Oakville â€" one for Halton Region for yard wastes and another for Oakville to compost leaves. Compost Management currently operates a dozen sites totalling about 25 acres, the most recent addition being Scott‘s Farm in Horby about three weeks ago, a 5 1/2â€"acre site handling a "variety of industrialâ€"commercial organic byâ€" products, food processing wastes, low grade papers, wood pellets, some gelatin, old drywall fragments and so on," explained Taylor. KILL ODOR PROBLEM "The first thing we had to do was to take care of was their odor problem, and that‘s been taken care off." He added the site was threatâ€" ened with closure by the Ontario Ministry of Environment and Energy and is now being watched closely. In addition to the Mississauga and Scott‘s Farm sites, the company also has composting operations in Sarnia, Fort Erie, Port Colborne, Brantford, Brampton, Scarborough, Alliston, Kingston, Pittsburgh Township, and Brockville. Although most sites are handling yard wastes, there is some experiâ€" mentation taking place, explained Taylor, "In Alliston, we‘re compostâ€" ing grain wastes from a farmers‘ coâ€" op, and in Pittsburgh, we‘re doing industrial wastes from a dye making plant." He explained an orange cheddar cheese dye is produced from the tiny colored seeds harvestâ€" ed from annatto, tropical bushes in Central America, leaving the remaining seed pulp for composting "because it is too expensive to land fill them." Taylor sits on the twoâ€"yearâ€"old Composting Council of Canada, and prior to launching Compost Management in January 1989, he ran the nonâ€"profit Recycling Council of Ontario for six years, working as a consultant to the Blue Box program. He was encouraged by a New Yorker who run a similar composting operation in the United States. About twoâ€"thirds of his sites are funded by the Ministry of Environment and Energy. World Day of Prayer on Friday World Day of Prayer services will be held Friday, March 5th, at St. Paul‘s United Church, 454 Rebecca St., at 1:30 p.m., and at Trinity United Church, 1250 McCraney St. at 7:30 p.m. The service, prepared by Guatemalan women, will focus on healing, in recognition of 1993 being Year for the World‘s Indigenous People, as declared by the United Nations. "The â€" voices of seven Guatemalan women woven through the order of workshop give powerâ€" ful testimony through scripture readings, poetry and song to their love for and commitment to their suffering nation," states a World Day of Prayer press release from the Women‘s Interâ€"Church Council, which sponsors the service in more than 2,000 communities across Canada. Ten _ Days for _ World Development, which coâ€"incides with the World Day of Prayer, hosts an evening with Rev. Jim Cairney of Tansley United Church, Burlington, at Walton Memorial United Church, 2489 Lakeshore Rd. W. in Bronte, on Thursday March 4th. The evening begins with a potluck supper at 6:30 p.m., folâ€" lowed by Cairney discussing how trade decisions made in Canada are hurting Third World citizens, at 7:30 p.m. Free admission, bring favorite dish. The World Day of Prayer is an ecumenical effort taking place annually in over 170 countries worldwide on the first Friday of "Canadians are invited to join in solidarity with Guatemala as people worldwide pray for the refugees, homeless, drug abusers and people with AIDS in their midst." READERS « BOOKS « CRYSTALS FREE LECTURES & DEMOS CHECK YOUR HOROSCOPE EVERY WEEK WITH PAT O‘KEEFE Friday:.......12 â€" 10 pm Saturday:..11 â€" 10 pm Sunday: ....11â€" 7 pm ADMISSION *5." CALL845â€"5585 #5020 March 3, 1993 apaiqes -'.44\

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