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<blockquote data-quote="dennishoddy" data-source="post: 3690137" data-attributes="member: 5412"><p>Exactly. I spent a year in Korea at an isolated duty station. The local villages had a community honey pot. When enough was accumulated, one or more of the villagers would put a couple buckets on his shoulders and jog down the road to the rice fields where it was spread as fertilizer? </p><p>Another example is actually in the US. A lot of sanitary waste facilities process the waste left over that won't dissolve, treat it and put it on fields to be used as fertilizer. </p><p>Chicken farmers putting the waste on the farm lands in Arkansas that ended up in the Illinois river and Tenkiller lake have pretty much ruined that lake for scuba diving. Used to be clear. Now it's swimming through a green cloud. Drew Edmondson in 2005 filed lawsuit and became almost famous for it. Ran for Governor twice and failed though. </p><p>There were some court rulings on minor issues, but don't remember if it has ever been settled?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dennishoddy, post: 3690137, member: 5412"] Exactly. I spent a year in Korea at an isolated duty station. The local villages had a community honey pot. When enough was accumulated, one or more of the villagers would put a couple buckets on his shoulders and jog down the road to the rice fields where it was spread as fertilizer? Another example is actually in the US. A lot of sanitary waste facilities process the waste left over that won't dissolve, treat it and put it on fields to be used as fertilizer. Chicken farmers putting the waste on the farm lands in Arkansas that ended up in the Illinois river and Tenkiller lake have pretty much ruined that lake for scuba diving. Used to be clear. Now it's swimming through a green cloud. Drew Edmondson in 2005 filed lawsuit and became almost famous for it. Ran for Governor twice and failed though. There were some court rulings on minor issues, but don't remember if it has ever been settled? [/QUOTE]
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