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#1
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waste oil ?
Hello can you help.
On each change of oil in the chip pan I have a pint or two of used sunflower oil. Can this be used directly to the garden or will it be quagmire for ever more. .............................Leslie |
#2
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waste oil ?
"Leslie" wrote in message ... Hello can you help. On each change of oil in the chip pan I have a pint or two of used sunflower oil. Can this be used directly to the garden or will it be quagmire for ever more. I wouldn't want to put that on my garden, far better to take it to your local recycling point when there's enough, they may even have a dedicated container for biofuel suitable material. I only get small amounts of it, unlike engine oil, so I bung it in with that. Steve |
#3
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waste oil ?
"Leslie" wrote in message ... Hello can you help. On each change of oil in the chip pan I have a pint or two of used sunflower oil. Can this be used directly to the garden or will it be quagmire for ever more. I add a bit of oil to my compost heap from time to time Leslie. I bury it down a ways in a fairly large heap. Likely not the best for the compost but it seems not to do too much damage. rob |
#4
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waste oil ?
"George.com" wrote in message ... "Leslie" wrote in message ... Hello can you help. On each change of oil in the chip pan I have a pint or two of used sunflower oil. Can this be used directly to the garden or will it be quagmire for ever more. I add a bit of oil to my compost heap from time to time Leslie. I bury it down a ways in a fairly large heap. Likely not the best for the compost but it seems not to do too much damage. rob I don't think it is much of a problem on the compost heap. We found a patch of sump oil when builders had left our first house-all traces had disappeared after a season, lawn and borders growing around it. Oil spillages on beaches are now cleared biologically, it takes time to build up the population of microflora and microfauna. regards David T |
#5
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waste oil ?
In article , "david taylor" writes: | | I don't think it is much of a problem on the compost heap. We found a patch | of sump oil when builders had left our first house-all traces had | disappeared after a season, lawn and borders growing around it. There are major differences between cooking oil, mineral oil, and the heavier tars extracted from that. The first type of oil is widespread in the biosphere, and is readily broken down by bacteria if there is any associated water and oxygen. The second is rather different, and needs specialised bacteria to break it down, so takes longer. The third is durable over a period of years or decades, even in the presence of water and oxygen. As lots of people have said, cooking oil on the compost heap is fine, unless there is enough to exclude water or oxygen. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
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