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Composting 101: How to figure out what’s happening in your community

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Confused about California’s new meals waste guidelines that went into impact Jan. 1? Be a part of the group.

Senate Invoice 1383’s guidelines to maintain meals waste out of our landfills is a win-win-win if you concentrate on the advantages: decreasing methane emissions, creating soil-enriching compost and producing gas. However in our houses, the legislation is creating consternation — to place it mildly. That’s partly as a result of the state left implementation of the principles to California’s 400-plus native governments. Every jurisdiction is arising with its personal guidelines about how one can handle meals waste, and a few — just like the cities of Lengthy Seaside and Los Angeles — are nonetheless making an attempt to place their packages in place.

So the primary rule of determining the brand new meals waste guidelines is to take a breath and understand these packages are a piece in progress.

“That is the most important change to your trash since we began recycling within the late Eighties,” mentioned Maria West, a spokeswoman for CalRecycle, and SB 1383 “provides native jurisdictions flexibility to do that the best way that works for them.”

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Listed below are some straightforward methods to seek out out what your jurisdiction is doing:

Verify on-line (and join newsletters or e-mail alerts): Each jurisdiction has an internet site, and most have complete pages dedicated to waste administration and recycling. Begin by visiting your jurisdiction’s web site to see what it says about meals waste and SB 1383. (This will not be useful in case your metropolis continues to be figuring out a plan. As an example, L.A. Sanitation’s proposal for dealing with meals waste gained’t be offered to the Metropolis Council till Feb. 3, so there’s no details about it on-line.)

Browse for offers: Many jurisdictions encourage dwelling composting and provide free lessons (many are on-line now attributable to COVID-19) in addition to rebates or reductions on compost bins or worm composting bins. These presents are sometimes discovered underneath public works departments within the recycling or sanitation sections. As an example, L.A. Sanitation has suspended its free, in-person composting workshops in the course of the pandemic however presents how-to movies on-line.

Get composting


A information to all the pieces you must learn about eliminating these desk scraps.
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Name your elected officers — or attend a council assembly: In case your jurisdiction’s web site or sanitation division isn’t supplying you with the solutions you want, contact your elected officers, such because the mayor or council member who serves your neighborhood. Within the metropolis of L.A. there are 15 council districts, and every councilmember has an internet web page.

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'Babes' gives us a funny (and gross) portrait of parenthood : Pop Culture Happy Hour

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'Babes' gives us a funny (and gross) portrait of parenthood : Pop Culture Happy Hour

Michelle Buteau and Ilana Glazer in a scene from the film Babes.

Gwen Capistran/Neon


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Gwen Capistran/Neon


Michelle Buteau and Ilana Glazer in a scene from the film Babes.

Gwen Capistran/Neon

The new movie Babes stars Ilana Glazer and Michelle Buteau as longtime best friends who’ve made very different life choices. It’s also about the inherent joys, stressors, and grossness of parenthood, and what it means to embrace your chosen family. It’s the feature directorial debut of Pamela Adlon (Better Things).

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Check out this under-the-radar wildflower spot while you still can

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Check out this under-the-radar wildflower spot while you still can

If you thought the wildflower season was over in Southern California, think again.

The easily accessible Highway 39, also known as San Gabriel Canyon Road, from Azusa north to Crystal Lake Recreation Area is one of the best hidden gems where you can still peep wildflowers — at least for a while longer.

While we haven’t had a superbloom this year — where flowers carpet entire hillsides and canyons all over — there was in abundance of wildflowers last week along Highway 39. Visiting reminded me of my trip to Anza Borrego Desert State Park in March to see desert wildflowers and bighorn sheep. In both spots, fantastic colors swirled in seemingly unexpected places. (However, Anza Borrego’s wildflower season ended in April.)

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Red bush monkeyflowers

1. California bluebells (Phacelia minor) grow on the hillsides around Highway 39 on May 8 in the Angeles National Forest north of Azusa. 2. As do red bush monkeyflowers (Diplacus aurantiacus var. puniceus), as seen on May 9. (Raul Roa / Los Angeles Times)

Thousands of people flock to the windy two-lane Highway 39 past the Morris and San Gabriel dams on their way to the east, west or north forks of the San Gabriel River for camping, hiking, picnics and recreation in the cool snowmelt. If you time your trip right, you may see what I saw: a localized explosion of wildflowers right next to the road and in the gullies and trails throughout the San Gabriel Mountains. As you drive north on Highway 39, you’ll notice a variety colors. Yellows, pinks and reds line the hillsides. Meanwhile, when a colleague visited Carrizo Plain National Monument, one of California’s most iconic wildflower viewing areas, in April, the wildflower display wasn’t as striking as years past. There were swaths of goldfields and pockets of other wildflowers there, but the tall, thick grass fueled by rainstorms crowded the views. The Carrizo display is “largely over this year,” according to Theodore Payne’s wildflower hotline.

Along Highway 39, there are many turnouts and parking lots to safely stop to get a closer look at the variety of native flowers on foot. (You’ll need a National Forest Adventure Pass to park, which is $5 for the day or $30 annually.) One of the best spots is the overflow parking lot for the Devil’s Canyon Dam Truck Trail right off the road up to the Coldbrook Campground.

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Spring water bubbles over rocks.

2 A motorcyclist rides past wildflowers growing on the hillsides around Highway 39.

3 A sign that says "parked vehicles must display a forest adventure pass" along Highway 39.

1. Elizabeth’s Spring bubbles right out of the side of the hill May 7 on Highway 39. 2. A motorcyclist rides past wildflowers growing on the hillsides around Highway 39. 3. Remember that you will need a National Forest Adventure Pass when parking in the Angeles National Forest. (Raul Roa / Los Angeles Times)

If you continue north, you can take a short hike to Lewis Falls in the Angeles National Forest and see Elizabeth’s Spring, a natural spring bubbling on the mountainside next to Highway 39. At the top of the road you’ll find Crystal Lake Recreation Area, where the Crystal Lake Cafe serves a simple menu including hamburgers, hot dogs, sandwiches, chili and brownies, and there are first-come, first-served camping sites.

1 A bee lands on a sunflower off Highway 39.

2 Wide throated yellow monkeyflower

1. A bee makes a pitstop on a sunflower along Highway 39 in the Angeles National Forest north of Azusa. 2. Wide throated yellow monkeyflower (Mimulus brevipes) frame the side of Highway 39. (Raul Roa / Los Angeles Times)

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1 A stalk of purple lupine

2 Purple nightshade

1. Silver lupine (Lupinus albifrons) grows on the hillsides May 8 around Highway 39 in the Angeles National Forest. 2. As does bluewitch nightshade (Solanum umbelliferum), as seen on the same day. (Raul Roa / Los Angeles Times)

On your trip, you may see wildlife such as bald eagles, deer and perhaps bears. Remember to stay on the trails and not pick wildflowers to help the blooms return next year. Keep an eye out for snakes and if you venture farther on some trails, use tick and mosquito repellent, wear comfortable shoes and carry plenty of water.

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Other spots worth a road trip to see wildflowers right now include Pinnacles National Park, the California Botanic Garden in Claremont and Los Padres National Forest near Los Olivos, reports the wildflower hotline.

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Looking to the past and future of Black Twitter : Pop Culture Happy Hour

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Looking to the past and future of Black Twitter : Pop Culture Happy Hour
For years, Black Twitter was the watering hole. It was where we could pop off jokes about Olivia and Fitz on Scandal. It’s also where you could call out social injustices. It was both a state of mind and a state of being online. A new Hulu docuseries called Black Twitter: A People’s History puts the massive global reach of that space into perspective. But what’s changed now that it’s owned by Elon Musk?
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