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Digestion Archive for November 2000
14 messages, last added Tue Nov 26 17:15:20 2002

[Date Index][Thread Index]

AW: DIG-L: C/N ratio of bread and bakery waste (general)



 Dear Sirs:

We would be interested in purchasing the below mentioned composting manual. Kindly send us the contact address where we can order it.

Thank you and best regards,
Peter Stepany

-----Ursprungliche Nachricht-----
Von:	sigma [SMTP:sigma@ix.netcom.com]
Gesendet am:	Freitag, 27. Oktober 2000 18:25
An:	CEnergySvc@aol.com; digestion@crest.org
Betreff:	Re: DIG-L: C/N ratio of bread and bakery waste (general)

Hello Lewis:
Cornell University has a composting manual available with much data on C/N
ratios on a wide variety of materials.

I trust this helps.
Len

                           Len Walde, P.E.
                Sigma Energy Engineering, Inc
            Recycling Problems into Opportunities
           for Agriculture, Industry and Commerce
              through "Symbiotic Recycling" tm

           Contact:
              140 Spring Road, Orinda, CA
                             94563-3311
                  Ph: 925-254-7633
                  Fax: 925-253-9108  (Call if busy)
                  E-mail: sigma@ix.netcom.com


-----Original Message-----
From: CEnergySvc@aol.com <CEnergySvc@aol.com>
To: digestion@crest.org <digestion@crest.org>
Date: Friday, October 27, 2000 6:22 AM
Subject: DIG-L: C/N ratio of bread and bakery waste (general)


>Hello all
>
>I've been following this list for the past year but this is my 1st
posting --
>thank you all for the info, insight, and ideas.
>
>I have received interest from a bakery and other food processing operations
>concerning waste processing (old and inedible breads) and would like to use
>these as a supplementary feed stock for a larger livestock waste digestion
>system.  Most of my knowledge is in systems engineering (rather than
>biochemistry) and would like to find a source for the Carbon Nitrogen
ratios
>and other relevant facts for a wide range of organic wastes including:
>bread and other baked goods
>vegetables
>dairy products
>various grasses
>duck weed
>poultry litter (caged layer and broiler)
>hog
>beef cattle
>dairy cows
>fish processing wastes
>various leaves
>various paper products (non-coated)
>human waste (feces and urine)
>any others?
>
>Is there such a source/list/table?  Any assistance would be appreciated.
>I'll be sure to keep the list informed of our progress.  Please respond to
<A
>HREF="lew@saveenergy.net">lew@saveenergy.net</A>  (not .org  as that URL
>redirects to Alliance to Save Energy's home page)
>
>Thank you again,
>Lewis Woodward
>DIGESTION List Sponsors, Archive and Information
>http://www.crest.org/renewables/digestion-list-archive
>http://www.crest.org/renewables/biomass-info/
>Beginners Tour of Biogas
>http://WWW.roseworthy.adelaide.edu.au/~pharris/biogas/beginners

DIGESTION List Sponsors, Archive and Information
http://www.crest.org/renewables/digestion-list-archive
http://www.crest.org/renewables/biomass-info/
Beginners Tour of Biogas
http://WWW.roseworthy.adelaide.edu.au/~pharris/biogas/beginners

DIGESTION List Sponsors, Archive and Information
http://www.crest.org/renewables/digestion-list-archive
http://www.crest.org/renewables/biomass-info/
Beginners Tour of Biogas
http://WWW.roseworthy.adelaide.edu.au/~pharris/biogas/beginners