Beach Trash Bins Now at Panaga Club

We all love the accessibility of beaches here in Brunei so making sure they stay clean and beautiful is a responsibility that falls to each of us. Thanks to the determination of the FEL team and the Panaga Club team, two trash bins have been donated to the beach front area of the club. Now if you are taking an evening walk and want to collect trash or if you’re having a beach day with friends and family and need to get rid of your trash, you can deposit it here. Thank you again to Nazri Ramli (Beach Clean up Lead), Zhao Ren Chong (FEL Brunei Vice President) and everyone else who helped make this possible.

 

Rotting in Panaga: Advice From Composting Enthusiasts

By: Rachel Laramee 

When I started asking around Panaga for advice about composting, I found that most people fall into two categories. Some have been doing it forever. Others assume it’s like a neon sign calling monkeys, rats and snakes to visit the garden for all their meals.  

And if we’re being honest, it also sounds kind of gross and laborious. So why bother? 

The Nammaris’ kitchen scraps get some air while awaiting dispatch (photo credit: Rachel Laramee)

Well, there are some compelling reasons. Up to 30%  of household trash and lawn waste can be composted at home, and when this very biodegradable material slowly decomposes in the anaerobic conditions of a landfill, it creates huge amounts of methane. Also, collecting the waste and transporting it to landfills requires a lot of fuel. Home composting mitigates both of these environmental impacts and has the further benefit of reducing the need for chemical fertilizers in your home garden, which run off into our local water supplies and can wreak havoc on those delicate ecosystems. 

In short, composting is a great way to reduce your carbon footprint and help protect local marine-life, and it comes with the warm-fuzzy feelings you might expect from a save-the-planet gesture.  Moreover, it’s not hard at all.  

The Nammaris have been composting for years, and Diya was kind enough to walk me through their tried-and-true process. They collect their compostable materials (vegetable scraps, eggshells, coffee grounds) in open containers in the sinks in the laundry room. I’m happy to report that this weirdly does not stink. About once a week, Diya dumps the scraps into the plastic, rotating composting bins in the backyard along with some garden waste (cut grass, dry leaves). If the material gets too wet, he adds more yard clippings to the bins. He emphasized the importance of balancing carbon-rich (green) and nitrogen-rich (brown) material for faster decomposition.  

Tripti’s simple system yields rich potting soil (photo credit: Tripti Sharma)

Every few weeks, Diya transfers the contents of one of the bins to a brick-lined compost heap, which he built off the ground to keep it clear of the rainwater that floods the garden. He digs a hole in the heap, dumps the partially decomposed material into the hole and  covers it with more soil. After about a week, it’s broken down enough to

be used in the garden, where the basil in particular is flourishing.  

The Nammaris are not the only ones composting around here. Jenna Anand, who sought advice from Diya, has an even simpler system: “I’ve dug a pit (about a foot deep), lined it with bricks, and put waste in the pit. I then cover with sandy soil.” And that’s pretty much it. She collects kitchen scraps in a container and then transfers them to the compost pile. She keeps a shovel handy to dig a hole for the scraps, which helps turn the contents. “Typically things disappear very quickly,” she says. She doesn’t use the soil, but “some plants have sprouted out of the pile, which is of great interest to the kids.”

Diya build this compost heap with bricks left by the previous residents (photo credit: Rachel Laramee)

Outpost’s own POP Editor, Tripti Sharma, just started composting last December after getting a composter as a birthday gift. Her family has a long tradition of composting and she was eager to handle her house hold waste more responsibly. Her husband, Vivek, was supportive but skeptical, worried it would stink. Now, Tripti says, he doesn’t even notice it’s there.

Tripti uses one plastic composting bin and no compost heap. (I purchased a similar bin at The Tool Box in Bandar.) She collects kitchen scraps in a container and puts them into the composter every two or three weeks, along with an equal amount of brown material, including hay and sawdust from her pet rabbit’s cage. By the time that batch is ready to use in her garden, the kitchen scrap container is full again and ready to go into the vacated composter.  

But, really, what about the monkeys? 

You can also add garden waste to your composting (photo credit: Rachel Laramee)

Believe it or not, the composting Panagans I spoke with assured me this is not a problem. “I’ve never had any issues with monkeys as it is underground, buried,” Jenna says. Macaques are regular visitors to both the Nammaris’ and the Sharmas’ gardens, but because there’s no animal waste and because the kitchen scraps are mixed with yard waste, the  monkeys are not particularly interested in the compost. 

Ramon van Dijk has had some experience with opportunistic wildlife coming by for a snack. “In the beginning I just put some kitchen scraps out for the chicken,” he says, “but it also attracted mice. Then I started putting it into a hole I dug in the backyard and that worked ok, though monkeys did come and rummage through it a bit. Then recently I built the simple composting box from wood I found on the beach and that has proven to be quite handy… and rodents and monkeys are reduced/eliminated.”  

When one of the bins is full, the other is usually ready to be emptied onto the heap (photo credit: Rachel Laramee)

That said: Don’t put animal products (except egg shells) in your compost! These things will definitely decompose and would probably add lots of great nutrients to your garden soil, but they will also attract all of the rodents and reptiles you’d rather not see on the property.  

Ready to start composting? Check out the linked resources or chat with one of our friendly local composting enthusiasts. Switching to a more sustainable practice can seem like an enormous undertaking and a huge lifestyle shift. In reality, it’s just a matter of setting up a system and starting a new habit, which is probably not much more labor-intensive or time-consuming than whatever you were doing before. And what better time to switch up household habits than now, when many of us are spending so much time at home? As Jenna says, “It’s easy, just put it back in the ground.”  

 

Ramon – “My box is put together so there is plenty of space for air and water to circulate through the box to assist in the biodegrading process… composting is accelerated, dirt is more easily contained and used.” (Photo credit: Ramon van Dijk

Green (Nitrogen) and Brown (Carbon) Matter

Brown 
  • Dry leaves 
  • Straw or hay and  sawdust 
  • Paper (e.g., newspaper,  paper plates/napkins,  coffee filters) 
  • Cotton fabric 
  • Corrugated cardboard  (shredded, without waxy/slick paper coatings) 
Green 
  • Grass clippings 
  • Coffee grounds, tea  bags 
  • Vegetable/fruit scraps › Eggshells 
  • Animal manures (except  dog/cat poop)
  • Seaweed 

Here are further resources on composting:

Which Items are “Green” and Which are “Brown”

Small Scale Co-Composting Process and Efficient Methods

Composting at Home

Nature Walk in Panaga: Simpor

Environmental enthusiasts are joining forces to create a detailed listing of common plants found in Panaga. Starting from Panaga Club, ‘Nature Walk’ sign boards are placed on a 3 km loop along the bike path. In this new section of POP we will explore many different aspects of the wonderful biodiversity in Panaga Camp. Keep an eye on our Facebook page, “Outpost Seria, Brunei”, for more updates.

Local name: Simpor and Simpoh air

Scientific name: Dillena suffruticosa 

  • Brunei’s national flower.
  • A commonly seen shrub with large glossy green leaves, cheery yellow flowers and pink star-shaped “fruits”.
  • A plant of enormous vigour that blooms every day of its life – which may be fifty if not a hundred years!
  • The bud of a flower swells visibly and turns yellow on the morning before the day it would bloom. The next day around 3 a.m., the flower starts to open becoming fully bloomed about an hour before sunrise. The petals drop off by 4 p.m. and the sepals fold back on the young fruit in the evening.
  • The fruits take exactly five weeks to set and open at 3 a.m.. Each pink star-shaped fruit capsule is fully expanded long before sunrise, with 7-8 “rays” displaying purple seeds that have a fleshy bright red aril. These are eagerly eaten by birds and monkeys. So much so that it is difficult to come across an open fruit with the seeds still present.

Plant parts and uses:

  1. Leaves
  • Used  as plates and for wrapping and packing food.
  • For aiding in wound healing, relieving rheumatism and treating fever.

2. Fruit 

  • For treating cancerous growths.

3. Roots 

  • Studies have suggested anticancer, antiviral, antidiabetic, antiaging, neuro-protective, cardio-protective and atherosclerotic plaques disrupting properties. Also suggested to have beneficial effects towards asthma, osteoporosis, bone loss, skin damage and mineral absorption in intestines.