Current:Home > MarketsReady to toss out your pumpkins? Here's how to keep them out of the landfill -AssetBase
Ready to toss out your pumpkins? Here's how to keep them out of the landfill
View
Date:2025-04-15 19:38:10
The U.S. produces lots of pumpkins each year — more than 2 billion in 2020 alone. But that year, only one fifth were used for food, which means Americans are spending hundreds of millions of dollars on the gourds annually, just to toss them in the trash when Halloween ends.
So they end up in landfills, which were designed to store material — not allow them to break down. The lack of oxygen in landfills means organic matter like pumpkins produce methane gas, a greenhouse gas that's harmful for the climate.
Videos about how to responsibly dispose of your jack-o'-lanterns have been making the rounds on TikTok. Marne Titchenell, a wildlife program specialist for Ohio State University Extension, has noticed the popularity of the topic, and even told NPR that her second grader was sent home with an article about composting pumpkins.
What to do with your pumpkin
You can compost it. Titchenell said this is a good way to recycle pumpkins and other unused fruits and vegetables back into soil, which can be used to grow new plants. In New York and other places, neighborhoods even meet up to smash pumpkins and then have them composted. If you don't have compost, see if a community garden will take your pumpkins.
You can cook with it. Pumpkin is more nutrient-dense than you might think. A cup of cooked pumpkin contains more than 200% of the recommended daily intake of vitamin A, 20% of the recommended vitamin C and is a great source of potassium. Better Home and Gardens has recipes for toasted seeds and fresh pumpkin puree to be used instead of the canned stuff. This curried pumpkin soup from Epicurious was made for a 2015 NPR article.
You can put it out for wildlife. Remove any wax, paint or marker from the pumpkin, and leave it outside for squirrels and birds. To go the extra mile, scoop birdseed into the bowl of the squash. Cutting the pumpkin into quarters makes it easier to eat for bigger mammals like deer.
You can donate it. Some farms, zoos and animal shelters will accept pumpkins for animal feed. Pumpkins For Pigs matches people who want to donate their unaltered pumpkins with pigs (and other pumpkin-eating animals, the organization says on its site) in their region. The founder, Jennifer Seifert, started the project after years of guilt throwing away perfectly good pumpkins. She told NPR in an email that Pumpkins For Pigs' mission is to "reduce food waste by diverting pumpkins, gourds and other food items to farms and animal sanctuaries for feed or compost." She said that the process also brings communities together.
veryGood! (7146)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Texas is home to 9 of the 10 fastest growing cities in the nation
- Republican Lt. Gov. Jon Husted reports $5 million in the bank ahead of 2026 run for Ohio governor
- Don’t expect a balloon drop quite yet. How the virtual roll call to nominate Kamala Harris will work
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Proposal to block casino plans OK’d for Arkansas ballot; medical marijuana backers given more time
- Minnesota man gets 20 years for fatally stabbing teen, wounding others on Wisconsin river
- 2024 Olympics: Tom Daley Reveals Completed Version of His Annual Knitted Sweater
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Maya Rudolph sets 'SNL' return as Kamala Harris for 2024 election
Ranking
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Carrie Underwood Replacing Katy Perry as American Idol Judge
- Woman denied abortion at a Kansas hospital sues, alleging her life was put at risk
- Who Is Henrik Christiansen? Meet the Olympic Swimmer Obsessed With Chocolate Muffins
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Dylan Sprouse and Cole Sprouse reunite with Phil Lewis for a 'suite reunion'
- Utah congressional candidate contests election results in state Supreme Court as recount begins
- Horoscopes Today, July 31, 2024
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Judge approves settlement in long-running lawsuit over US detention of Iraqi nationals
Olympic triathletes don't worry about dirty water, unlike those of us on Germophobe Island
Prince William and Prince Harry’s uncle Lord Robert Fellowes dies at 82
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Who Is Henrik Christiansen? Meet the Olympic Swimmer Obsessed With Chocolate Muffins
When does 'Emily in Paris' Season 4 come out? Premiere date, cast, trailer
Feds arrest ex-US Green Beret in connection to failed 2020 raid of Venezuela to remove Maduro