Writing.com. The Basics Of Worms And Compost. Now I said that the first point was a minor one to be certain, but let's look at how that same type of "mistake" can result in an extremely important, and very misleading statement.
In much of the literature I have been sent, reference has been made to the matter of the U.S. government passing "legislation", which requires that by the year 2000, "organic waste landfills" in California, must reduce their size by fifty percent. Since I am Canadian, I have no real knowledge of Californian legislation (I do know from Baywatch, however, that none of your women look anything like my ex-wife) but we have set a similar goal here in Canada, and I can't help but wonder if the noted difference is not another case of "accidental misquotation" (I think I just invented a phrase!) Tall Tales, Myths and Fables. It must have been the summer of my 11th or 12th year, and earlier that afternoon I had been over at my grandmothers house trimming her front lawn with the new gas mower.
My father had purchased it for her just a month or so earlier, and it was still hard to tell if Gram enjoyed owning it as much as I enjoyed using it. I liked everything about that mower. I liked the way it shone so brightly in the sunlight, I liked how easy and smooth it responded when I pulled on the starter cord, and I liked the way it rumbled when I cranked it up in preparation for some serious mowing.
There was also another thing I liked about that mower, and it was perhaps the most important thing of all. I liked just how grown up it always made me feel as I pushed it around my grandmother's yard, kind of lost in my own little space, the noise and interruptions of the everyday world lost beneath the soothing rumble of that "mighty" motor.