I have been reloading in excess of 50 years now and have never found a satisfactory way to dispose of live primers. In my area, the trash is incinerated, and I have been getting complaints about the primers popping when they load the trash into the incinerator. I buy a lot of old cartridges and I recycle the components that I can. I save the bullets in the hope that one day I can use them in reloads. Same thing with the brass, but since I don't know who loaded the cartridges or when they look to be in bad condition, I decap the brass. I have been putting them in the garbage for years, but when the local government went to incinerating the trash, I began to get complaints. I had been just putting all the primers from a single pulling session into an old pill bottle and putting it in the next outgoing trash, but that caused larger explosions and that is what got me on their radar. Now, even if I only put one primer in the garbage and it goes off in the incinerator, I get a call threatening me with discontinuation of my garbage pick up. I have tried soaking the primers in various types of oil. Everything from penetrating oil to burnt motor oil, and even several months later, when I burn one or even hit one with a hammer, they still go off. All my life I was told to always avoid handling the primers with my fingers in case the oil from my fingers would kill the primer, and now when I want to kill them, nothing works. I know how to dispose of powder, I just scatter it in my flower beds and it makes a good fertilizer, but I don't think I want to risk it in my vegetable garden. There's no telling what in it that might poison me. Since I have neighbors nearby, I don't want to pop the primers, either by putting them in a case and shooting them, or by burning them. I don't want to scatter them in the woods por dig holes to bury them in. If anyone knows a way to get rid of them other than reloading them, I'd sure like to hear how. I have also soaked them in water for weeks at a time. When they are wet, they don't pop, but as soon as they dry out they will pop if burned. There must be a solution to this problem and I definitely DO NOT want to store them in bulk. I have already seen what can happen when you do. I'd rather fight a hand grenade than to have 500 live primers all explode at once, like they did at a friends shop many years ago. Dangerous stuff!!!