06/05/2018
If you are interested in composting and giving back to the earth. Hit up the Scrapz Sisters! Composting and making healthier dirt for ‘The Not So Secret Garden’
NOW SERVING: MARBLE FALLS, BURNET, HORSESHOE BAY, COTTONWOOD SHORES, GRANITE SHOALS, KINGSLAND
Always wanted to compost your food but don't have the space or time? Scrapz wants to show our planet a little love by helping you to compost your unwanted food waste!
How It Works:
1- Sign up for weekly compost service. Marble Falls and Horseshoe Bay area only.
2- We will deliver a 5-gallon bucket with lid and liner to your house with instructions on what to compost.
3- You fill the bucket with food waste throughout the week.
4- Once a week (Mondays) we come to your house and empty your bucket so you can start all over again. No need to be home- we'll just stop by your front porch! We are also happy to pick up bags of yard waste (grass clipping and leaves) as well as flattened cardboard.
Home Pick-Up Pricing:
1 bucket- $15/month
2 buckets- $20/month
*For business pricing please message Scrapz*
What Happens To My Food Waste?
Your compost is brought to the Not So Secret Garden where students will work to eventually turn the scraps into nice, healthy dirt to be used in planting delicious, organic vegetables for the community. The Not So Secret Garden is a teaching garden used to educate local homeschool families about all aspects of gardening and healthy living. We have been in operation for over five years and served many homeschool families as well as our community at large through education and food sharing.
Why Compost?
In the United States 60 million tons of food scraps and yard trimmings are dumped in our landfills each year- taking up space and creating greenhouse gases that contribute to negative climate change. By composting you are saving space in the landfills, reducing greenhouse gases and turning your "trash into treasure" by providing materials to create new, healthy dirt to grow thousands of pounds of nutritious, organic food. Healthy dirt also serves as a filter, keeping toxins out of our rivers and lakes.