Ready to Throw Out Your Pumpkins? Try These Eco-Friendly Ideas Instead

Eco-friendly ideas for pumpkin disposal Kittery

You came, you carved and you conquered Halloween - now, what do you do with your pumpkins?  According to the U.S. Department of Energy, 1.3 billion pounds of pumpkin ends up in landfills across the country, each year.  Organic waste like pumpkins does not properly break down in oxygen deprived landfills. Instead, the decomposition process generates methane, a potent greenhouse gas, which gets released into the atmosphere.

As an alternative to adding to landfill waste, here are some eco-friendly ideas to help you get rid of this year’s jack-o-lantern.

Compost it at the Kittery Resource Recovery Facility

Residents looking to dispose of pumpkins in a sustainable way, can bring them to the Kittery Resource Recovery Facility (KRRF) and add them to the compost pile during Hazardous Waste hours.  This portion of the facility is open on Wednesdays, from 9 AM - 5 PM and on Saturdays, from 7:15 AM - 3:15 PM.  

Disposing of pumpkins in the compost pile is free to residents with a valid KRRF sticker.

Re-purpose or Compost Pumpkins At Home

If you have pumpkins that were never carved and are still in great condition, consider using them in the kitchen as part of a soup, puree or mash.  You can even re-purpose them into fall decor by slicing pumpkins in half and turning them into a bird feeder or planter.

Consider adding pumpkins to your compost pile or garden at home.  Gardeners can add pumpkins to their compost pile after removing any remaining seeds and being sure to cut off decorative material such as glitter, paint, stickers and candle wax. Slice the pumpkin into smaller pieces, scatter and bury them into the pile.

Feed the Animals

Provided your pumpkin isn’t moldy and hasn’t been treated with any chemicals to keep it looking shiny, consider donating your pumpkin to a local farm for animal feed. While individual animal tastes vary from farm to farm, many pigs, chickens, cattle, sheep and goats will eat pumpkins.  The ones that don’t, might even still use them as toys!

Whether baking, re-purposing or composting, we hope you can get creative and have fun finding new ways to reduce waste throughout the Kittery community.