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Starting a compost area
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- Lemon Quarter
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Starting a compost area
Afternoon all.
With our local council ceasing the collection of 'green' waste until further notice, I need to find something to do with my grass cuttings/tree roots/weeds.
I don't have a compost bin so need to set up some sort of compost area in my garden where I can store this stuff until they start again. I have a few old coal bags in my shed, so I suppose these would do to hold the cuttings for the time being.
I'm not an experienced gardener so if anyone has any tips for starting a compost 'pile' I'd be grateful.
Thanks again, OLTB.
With our local council ceasing the collection of 'green' waste until further notice, I need to find something to do with my grass cuttings/tree roots/weeds.
I don't have a compost bin so need to set up some sort of compost area in my garden where I can store this stuff until they start again. I have a few old coal bags in my shed, so I suppose these would do to hold the cuttings for the time being.
I'm not an experienced gardener so if anyone has any tips for starting a compost 'pile' I'd be grateful.
Thanks again, OLTB.
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: Starting a compost area
OLTB wrote:Afternoon all.
With our local council ceasing the collection of 'green' waste until further notice, I need to find something to do with my grass cuttings/tree roots/weeds.
I don't have a compost bin so need to set up some sort of compost area in my garden where I can store this stuff until they start again. I have a few old coal bags in my shed, so I suppose these would do to hold the cuttings for the time being.
I'm not an experienced gardener so if anyone has any tips for starting a compost 'pile' I'd be grateful.
Thanks again, OLTB.
Good guide here, courtesy of the Eden Project:
https://www.edenproject.com/learn/for-e ... 0-top-tips
Human urine is a good compost accelerator (extra nitrogen). I would avoid putting many leaves on the pile, if you have a lot then place them in a bin bag with a few holes in and wait. They make excellent potting compost or mulch after a year or two. One big pile is better than a number of small ones. If you are so inclined, chop up tree roots and anything tough and fibrous into smaller pieces.
RC
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: Starting a compost area
Catch with mainly grass is it can go to slime, whilst likely not organic mixing with shredded paper can help avoid the dreaded green slime.
It seems I will need to rebuild my compost bin ( disassembled behind shed), two birds with one stone as working from home my shredder is producing more than normal paper waste.
It seems I will need to rebuild my compost bin ( disassembled behind shed), two birds with one stone as working from home my shredder is producing more than normal paper waste.
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: Starting a compost area
2 compost heaps which you use in alternation, put them on bare soil (sprinkle some soil in as you build it to add microbes). Mix green and brown stuff to give variety and avoid layers. If under trees add water if it starts getting dry. Every six months move it about a bit and extract the completed compost. Don't add animal products.
As my paper recycling has stopped, I'm going to experinent with composting that, but am not optimistic
If you are keen, dig over a scruffy area and bury green waste as you, it will rot nicely 6" under.
As my paper recycling has stopped, I'm going to experinent with composting that, but am not optimistic
If you are keen, dig over a scruffy area and bury green waste as you, it will rot nicely 6" under.
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- Lemon Slice
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Re: Starting a compost area
JohnB wrote:As my paper recycling has stopped, I'm going to experinent with composting that, but am not optimistic
It's fine, if in balanced with other stuff. It works perfectly as a "brown" element. Printer paper is better off shredded, newspaper ripped up a bit and only a few sheets at a time, best to wet it too to help it break up.
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- The full Lemon
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Re: Starting a compost area
ReformedCharacter wrote:Human urine is a good compost accelerator (extra nitrogen).
Yep, I regularly initiate stream over my (one very large) compost pile. I've never seen any need for fancy equipment to compost although, that said, my garden is quite large and so the rotting pile is some 200 feet from the house.
And before you ask my garden walls are 12 feet high, so the neighbours cannot see my stream or wherefrom it emanates.
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- Lemon Half
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Re: Starting a compost area
I have two, each about a 2ft cube, made from old bits of fence post and barge boards. Lined with old compost bags, and covered with old pieces of carpet. At the height of summer a full cutting of the grass will fill one completely. It willthen rot down in time for the next cutting. The carpet and other things on top keep the heat in. I usually have an old compost sack below the carpet. You will probably find that you get ants nesting in the bin, and slowworms will come to eat the ants.
Keep filling the one bin, with whatever you have, grass cuttings, vegetable waste, weeds, but try to avoid things like ivy or convolvulous, as they may take root.
Come the spring, move the contents of the bin into the other one and leave for 12 months. Keep filling the original bin and repeat after 12 months, using the contents of the second bin in your garden. I used to use it to fill my potato and bean trenches, but having given up vegetable gardening, my neighbour has it for her allotment.
TJH
Keep filling the one bin, with whatever you have, grass cuttings, vegetable waste, weeds, but try to avoid things like ivy or convolvulous, as they may take root.
Come the spring, move the contents of the bin into the other one and leave for 12 months. Keep filling the original bin and repeat after 12 months, using the contents of the second bin in your garden. I used to use it to fill my potato and bean trenches, but having given up vegetable gardening, my neighbour has it for her allotment.
TJH
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- Lemon Half
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Re: Starting a compost area
I use several big plastic compost bins, but of course with all the DIY shops closed, that will not help you.
Basically, composting works best if the highest temperatures can be built up by decomposition, so it is best to have one large heap, rather than several small ones. A sort of cube shape, held up by wooden (or other) boards is adequate, and a cover to keep the heat in, and most of the cold rain out. A bit of old carpet works well. As others have said, grass cuttings alone make a slimy mess, but if mixed up with kitchen scraps and coarser stuff like small sticks etc, that is better. It also helps turning it over with a fork occasionally to get air into the heap.
I would not advise peeing on it. In my experience, that attracts rats to make a home in it. And you don't want that.
Basically, composting works best if the highest temperatures can be built up by decomposition, so it is best to have one large heap, rather than several small ones. A sort of cube shape, held up by wooden (or other) boards is adequate, and a cover to keep the heat in, and most of the cold rain out. A bit of old carpet works well. As others have said, grass cuttings alone make a slimy mess, but if mixed up with kitchen scraps and coarser stuff like small sticks etc, that is better. It also helps turning it over with a fork occasionally to get air into the heap.
I would not advise peeing on it. In my experience, that attracts rats to make a home in it. And you don't want that.
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: Starting a compost area
Thanks all so much for your very useful replies.
I can see in the garden that weeds are starting to show themselves and was wondering what to do with these - can these be composted with everything else, or am I just storing trouble for myself and they'll just start growing again in the compost where they have lots of nutrients to help them grow?
Thanks again, OLTB.
I can see in the garden that weeds are starting to show themselves and was wondering what to do with these - can these be composted with everything else, or am I just storing trouble for myself and they'll just start growing again in the compost where they have lots of nutrients to help them grow?
Thanks again, OLTB.
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- Lemon Half
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Re: Starting a compost area
OLTB wrote:Thanks all so much for your very useful replies.
I can see in the garden that weeds are starting to show themselves and was wondering what to do with these - can these be composted with everything else, or am I just storing trouble for myself and they'll just start growing again in the compost where they have lots of nutrients to help them grow?
Thanks again, OLTB.
Depends. The idea of having high temperatures in the heap is that in addition to accelerating decomposition, it kills the weeds and seeds. In my experience it doesn't happen quickly, but most annual weeds will die. I often throw weeds onto my path to die in the sun for a week or two before composting. Some weeds with strong storage type roots like dandelions, ivy, buttercups I would put on the bonfire.
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- Lemon Half
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Re: Starting a compost area
Lootman wrote:ReformedCharacter wrote:Human urine is a good compost accelerator (extra nitrogen).
Yep, I regularly initiate stream over my (one very large) compost pile.
Thanks for the reminder. It was Bob Flowerdew, I think, who called it personally initiated soil stimulant?
Our two compost bays are six feet square (they're made from old doors), but sadly I find that I can no longer get the essential supply to reach right to the very back of the heaps. And my wife refuses to even try.
BJ
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: Starting a compost area
bungeejumper wrote:It was Bob Flowerdew, I think, who called it personally initiated soil stimulant?
Recycled cider I've heard Bob call it.
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: Starting a compost area
Composting most weeds good, they and their seeds won't survive. Obsessive composters (and there are some who enjoy composting rather than gardening) will drown things in water for a month or so, but who wants slimy buckets full of mosquito larvae in their garden
Big heaps get hotter and kill off more stuff
Big heaps get hotter and kill off more stuff
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- Lemon Half
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Re: Starting a compost area
JohnB wrote:Composting most weeds good, they and their seeds won't survive. ....Big heaps get hotter and kill off more stuff
We are big fans of so-called composting duvets, which raise the temperature and speed up the fermentation hugely. Weed seeds don't stand a chance.
As in https://www.gardeningworks.co.uk/Big-Sq ... Duvet.html - but really they're nothing more than cheapo groundsheets stitched into a bag shape (a quid, anyone? https://www.poundland.co.uk/ground-sheet-2-metres), and then filled with whatever insulating material you've got to hand. Dammit, we've all got a dead sweater and a sackful of bubble wrap knocking around the place, haven't we?
If that's too much to spend, a lump of old wool carpet (not nylon) or a few of Amazon's cardboard boxes will perform the same insulating trick.
One year, the plan backfired on us. We found a clutch of grass snake eggs, and a rather annoyed mother snake nearby. That was the end of our composting in that bin until the brood had safely hatched and moved on!
BJ
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: Starting a compost area
high temperatures are not obligatory.
the essential objective is to get it all rotted .
an 80% job will take 20 % of the time .
weed seeds will always be with us...
the essential objective is to get it all rotted .
an 80% job will take 20 % of the time .
weed seeds will always be with us...
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: Starting a compost area
I find my heaps stall because they get to dry. My garden's 'unpleasueance' is under pine trees and I need to add water. So make sure your duvet is permeable.
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- Lemon Half
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Re: Starting a compost area
JohnB wrote:I find my heaps stall because they get to dry. My garden's 'unpleasueance' is under pine trees and I need to add water. So make sure your duvet is permeable.
I found that happened two years ago. I left the top off the year-old bin for the rain to get in for a while. That seemed to work.
TJH
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- Lemon Slice
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Re: Starting a compost area
When we lived in central London we were fortunate to have a large garden and I got into composting.
I built two bays side by side from industrial palletts on edge. Horizontally across the front of both the two bays I secured 6 of 2x1 full length boards secured top and bottom of the boards by rotateable bent nails in the pallete frame. Allows easy removal as and when required for ease of removal of the compost.
I laid a few layers of cardboard on the base of the bays and chucked in some grass cuttings. I then got a dozen large bags of horse manure. (Courtesy of Knightsbridge Barracks stables) and in they went.
I also bought some bone and blood meal and mixed liberal amounts to the grass and manure as I added it. Finally I gave it all a sprinkling of water to keep it damp. From then on all garden and vegetable waste was loaded in and the top covered with old carpet. You could have poached an egg inside the piles from the heat that was generated.
After emptying and using the 1st bay load I transferred the contents of the 2nd bay into the first enabling it to be subjected to a good mix up and from then on proceeded to refill the 2nd bay.
I was able to gain a great sense of achievement when it all stated to work. Small things amuse etc.
Good luck with whatever you decide to do.
I built two bays side by side from industrial palletts on edge. Horizontally across the front of both the two bays I secured 6 of 2x1 full length boards secured top and bottom of the boards by rotateable bent nails in the pallete frame. Allows easy removal as and when required for ease of removal of the compost.
I laid a few layers of cardboard on the base of the bays and chucked in some grass cuttings. I then got a dozen large bags of horse manure. (Courtesy of Knightsbridge Barracks stables) and in they went.
I also bought some bone and blood meal and mixed liberal amounts to the grass and manure as I added it. Finally I gave it all a sprinkling of water to keep it damp. From then on all garden and vegetable waste was loaded in and the top covered with old carpet. You could have poached an egg inside the piles from the heat that was generated.
After emptying and using the 1st bay load I transferred the contents of the 2nd bay into the first enabling it to be subjected to a good mix up and from then on proceeded to refill the 2nd bay.
I was able to gain a great sense of achievement when it all stated to work. Small things amuse etc.
Good luck with whatever you decide to do.
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: Starting a compost area
Is a compost heap/bin smelly? The best flat site in our garden would be about 6 to 8 feet away from a patio table. Other option would be where our garden waste bin normally is.
Any recommendations on good compost bins?
Any recommendations on good compost bins?
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- Lemon Half
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Re: Starting a compost area
It all depends what you put in it. If it is mainly grass cuttings, very little smell. If you put lots of onion or garlic in, it's your own lookout.
TJH
TJH
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