Home composting in Canada
Setting up backyard or green-bin composting, what municipalities accept, and how to avoid pests and odours.
Read article →Notes on cutting single-use items, simplifying daily routines, and sorting household waste under the programs Canadians actually use at home.
What this site covers
Each topic focuses on a single part of the home where small, repeatable changes lower waste without adding cost or complexity.
Swaps for paper towels, plastic wrap, and bottled water that hold up to daily use and reduce weekly bin volume.
How organics, recycling, and garbage streams are separated in many Canadian municipalities, and where mistakes happen.
Choosing goods by repairability, materials, and warranty rather than price alone, so replacements come less often.
Articles
Three detailed write-ups with concrete steps, regional notes for Canada, and references to publicly available government sources.
Setting up backyard or green-bin composting, what municipalities accept, and how to avoid pests and odours.
Read article →
Replacing throwaway items with washable alternatives and planning shopping to cut packaging waste.
Read article →
Reading materials, repairability, and warranties so everyday items last longer and are replaced less often.
Read article →A simple order of operations
Ask whether an item is needed, whether a durable version exists, and whether it can be borrowed or bought second-hand. The cheapest waste to manage is the waste never created.
Separate organics, recyclables, and refundable containers according to local rules. Sorting at the source keeps materials usable and reduces what reaches landfill.
Contact
Send a note about composting rules, durable swaps, or anything covered on the site. Messages are handled by the editorial desk.
Editorial desk
editor@oakgrovehouse.org