Prasagraj: City-based temples produce tons of flower waste, and the problem is getting bigger during the Saleh Month of Shrawan and the Navratri Festival.
However, the management of the famous Mankameshwar Temple in the city has planned to overcome the problem of waste interest by establishing an in-house composting unit for waste disposal.
Principal of Mankameshwar Temple, Brahmachari Sridharand told Tii, “We have compiled new plans to handle flower waste and puja temples and turn them into compost with natural substances”.
He added, “Initially, the Kanpur-based agro unit handled waste disposal, leaves and bouquets but unit employees stopped working during Corona’s pandemic and followed which, the temple staff designed a plan to change the waste and puja into compost.” “With a fast week Approaching and the strength of worshipers who offer flowers, bouquets of flowers and leaves of various species of plants to gods of Shiva during Saleh will increase multiply, produce a few tons of flower waste, we will take waste flowers, leaves and bouquets to our Gaushala and try to change it to natural compost, “Sridharand said.
“We will offer natural compost for worshipers including farmers who are free of charge to plant fruits and flowers,” he added.
The process is simple.
The volume of leaves, flowers and bouquets of the temple waste are collected into a trash can.
Waste runs well to a large dump or a large drum that has a soaking water system and adds natural substances, changing waste to organic after a certain period and produces clean fertilizer, “tells the Imam of the Temple of Mankameshwar Temple.” Many people arrive at the temple place to find compost Naturally to plant plants, “he added.
In addition, the Bade Hanuman Temple Management Committee also reverses flower waste to natural fertilizers.
Swami Anand Giri from Lord Hanuman Temple said,” We use the simplest composting form in our field and get natural fertilizers to plant plants And vegetables “.
Experts claim that waste flowers, leaves and bouquets are placed in the trash in the fields and gaushalas.
After a few months, the lowest layer breaks down and turns into black powder.
This compost and can be used as a manure, which they explained.
“This is a properly zero maintenance process and everything is in nature here,” added it A.
The fact is, most of the city’s leading temples, to overcome the problem of flower waste, has now begun to change the waste of flowers and kitchens produced in their place to be compost.
The temple’s authority also claimed that they had ideas about composers, which were installed in many temples in the southern state but we have chosen the natural process to decompose flower waste.
Imam Chief Temple Maa Kalyani Devi, Shyam Pathak said, “The volume of flower waste increases multiply during the celebration season and we then make settings that are suitable for the disposal.”