Onions
However, these pretty pictures are not the focus of my post. It is a greater evil - onion skins.
My house is directly across from an onion processing plant. These folks receive the crates full of onions, both local and from Mexico. The onions are "cleaned" and sorted, bagged and shipped out.
The onions are of three varieties - white, yellow, and purple.
The problem for me stems from the processing of these.
Noise
Once the plants begins to process, the noise begins. There are 5 giant "fans" on my side of the plant. I am not sure what their purpose is, but the noise from these is unbearable. I cannot shut it out when I am inside the house. Having a conversation outside is a shouting match. This noise is almost 24/7 at the peak of processing. For some strange reason, the plant is closed on Sundays.
Litter
As the onion is being sorted, by hand and as it make its way on conveyor belts, the outer layers of skin are shed. These skins are easily carried by the constant south winds that blow in March and April.
This is the biggest culprit. The conveyor belt takes unwanted onions and other refuse to the bin and fills these trucks for ultimate removal. The wind is blowing in your face as you see this picture. The conveyor belt is not enclosed = littering. The top of the bin is screened, but the screen is detached in several places = littering.
.
Onion skins at the bottom of the conveyor belt andf all around the truck. These will find their wings in time.
Eventually the flying onion skins make it across the street and into my yard. The location of the conveyor belt and the trash bin and the location of the giant fans are on the west side of the plant - my side. Here is what I have to deal with when the wind is blowing.
This problem has been ongoing for as long as the plant has been there. Unfortunately there has not been someone here at the house to address it as it should . Calls to the plant about the littering have been responded with "we can't control the wind."
I am hoping to be more forceful. I found a city statute that clearly addresses littering. I will also offer some solutions to the owners - sweep the grounds, fix the screens, spray the litter with water regularly and then pick it up. I will wait until the end of the onion season to confront the culprits. I heard that there are 4 more weeks remaining. It could end earliuer if we get a good soaking rain, that stops the harvest. Time will tell.
This has been a good onion skin week. There was little wind Saturday through Tuesday. Today the wind was strong but it was from the North. I don't know what suckers had onion skins on their property. The end is near.
Joe
Go all Norma Rae on them. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YvqpyDWvDyE but instead of "union" the sign should read "Litter" or something. ;-)
ReplyDeleteI'm surprised that they haven't claimed that it is all bio-degradable and therefore not "litter."
In looking at the pictures the one with all the skins floating in the air reminded me of some king of weird snow globe like scene. Maybe there is some money in that...bill it as "Texas Snow" and sell it to cold climates.
I wonder how much pull, good old boy wise, the plant has with the city. Does the plant make a yearly contribution to the retirement funds of the mayor and city council? (I know, too long living in Pleasantville).
On last thought with the onion skin plague: can they be mulched for the garden?