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Have Some Class: Feed your Roots

Win a compost bin designed and autographed by celeb-types

Posted by Sarah van Schagen at 10:03 AM on 23 Feb 2007

Read more about: education | celebrity | gardening | waste

bins

Youth-focused group Global Inheritance has teamed up with hip-hoppers The Roots to get composting into schools across the U.S. As part of the Feed Your Roots campaign, elementary, middle, and high schools who develop composting programs will have the chance to win a Roots compost bin autographed by the band.

To enter, students/teachers must submit a detailed outline of the composting program as well as promotional materials. Entries are due May 1, and the Roots bins will be awarded later that month. See the Feed Your Roots site for more information.

During a pre-Grammy jam session, artists and celeb-types made their way to a special green room to sign a Roots compost bin that will be auctioned off to raise funds for the Feed Your Roots campaign. Below the fold, some images from the event (courtesy Global Inheritance):

Black Thought
The Roots' Black Thought doesn't have to think twice about signing a bin.

Isaiah Washington
Isaiah Washington admires the anatomy of his John Hancock.

will.i.am
Don't phunk with 'Pea will.i.am's signature.

Jill Scott
Jill Scott takes a long walk over to the compost bin.

Matisyahu
Matisyahu is all about the youth.

Common
Common testifies.

Questlove
There's no question that ?uestlove wants to be involved.

a little clumsy, perhaps?

In principle, this is a promising project, especially if the students and their teachers at each school that enters the contest have a real garden in mind.  That would be a great thing: one can readily imagine certain students getting excited about working in their own gardens, as well as about exerting authority in reforming how garbage from their school cafeterias is to be disposed of.  Of course, having their own garden presumably would require an offer by the school or the neighborhood to provide some serviceable land, and a commitment by the students and the adults who supervise them to remain engaged through the months of the summer vacation.

Aesthetically, I have doubts about the decorated and autographed compost bins as prizes.  The designs and the autographs are wonderful in themselves; but do they really work, on compost bins?  Of course it is a great idea to include compost bins as parts of the prizes to the schools, but I wonder if it made sense to decorate them.  The designs do not seem to show up well on them, and anyway, who would see them, aside from the student-gardeners themselves, if the bins are going to be placed outside, in an out of the way spot?

Would it not be more effective to reproduce the designs on large murals, to be hung perhaps in walls of cafeterias or some other suitable place?  And then also they might be printed in especially durable materials, and be affixed or transferred to signs at the gardens themselves.

Chickens deserve our true friendship! So do fish! So do other sentient beings! Let us learn to be kind.

Even if only the students see the bins...

...that's enough. Decorated bins can make a garden seem more personalized and more welcoming to those who work in it. My only question is a technical one: will the paint stick to the bins when the bins are outdoors? In my experience (having painted garbage cans myself) once the sun and the rain do their work, the paint eventually peels off. But perhaps these bins are destined to stay indoors?

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