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Garbage Enzyme

By ericsoon

I always thought that garbage is just one of the pollution factors. Environment maintenance isn’t really my field of interest. However, I am pretty awed to know that garbage isn’t entirely useless.

Some of the garbage can be recycled, some cannot. Recycling materials only enables us to reuse. On the biological part, garbage enzyme is more “multi-purpose-ful”. Refer to here.

It can be used as cleaning fluid, soil fertilizer, natural pesticide and herbicide, anti-bacteria agent, as well as foul odor remover.

Somehow, garbage just do not seem to be in a positive relationship with all the four uses above. But hey, it’s true.

It’s easy to make garbage enzyme. All you need is water, organic kitchen waste, the black sugar found in 3-layer teh c peng, and an air-tight container of any preferred size.

The ingredients ratio as follows:

Sugar : Organic Waste : Water

1 : 3 : 10

By the way, you do not have to be so precise and calculative.

Leave the solution sealed tight for 3 months, and the solution is ready for usage. It might be a little disgusting to make use of decomposed organic waste, but the results are good. Start making a bottle at the beginning of a semester and you can spare some money on mosquito repellent during midnight study before final exam.

On a side note, organic waste does not include humans and animals’ biological waste.

So, who wants to start using the liquid as repellent? It’s a odor remover, so it shouldn’t be that smelly.

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3 people talked!

  1. Well, it’s true…
    My mother also using this method. They said this is good for cleaning… =D

    ToMCaT on 30 September 2008 at 1:04 pm
  2. My dad is into these stuff too. But his formula isn’t as interesting as yours with teh C peng syrup included. =P

    ember on 30 September 2008 at 10:18 pm
  3. The truth is, I don’t even know such cool scientific discovery exist until I watched the news on RTM2.

    But the organic waste does not seem to include meat. And that’s even more interesting.

    ericsoon on 30 September 2008 at 11:45 pm

talk!

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