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Old 17-10-2003, 06:02 PM
AnonnyMoose
 
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Default Needles up the wha-zoo!!

Well, so far all the replies say "compost." Easy enough. I've got compost
bins set up for my other green material, so I'll just have to incorporate
this stuff. But I'm wondering if I should compost this separately since I'm
thinking it will be awfully acidic when it breaks down. I could use it for
mulching the rhodies and acid loving plants. Any thoughts on that?

I'm near Portland, OR, so it's not too cold. Jan lives up in Alaska, where I
used to live, and that's what she was referring to.

karen


"J Kolenovsky" wrote in message
...
Wow, that could hurt at BM time.

Find a corner and build a bin and let this material compost down. I take
it from Jan's post, your up in the colder areas. If true, chop up into
smaller pieces, build a big pile and let it be for a long time and it
will cold compost. May take up to a year but will be totally worth it.

http://www.barc.usda.gov/anri/sasl/compost.html

JK


AnonnyMoose wrote:

How can I use this stuff?

The needles are falling from the redwoods, cedar, Grand Fir, Douglas Fir

and
Ponderosa Pine that grow in an island in my yard. The oak leaves are
starting to fall too. There is just too much to leave it all under the
trees. It will bury everything growing beneath! I'd like to leave some
under, but what can I do with the rest? We were blowing it all out and
tossing it, but that seems a waste of good material. I could mow it up

with
the mulching blades and spread it around the other beds. Or should I stack
it all in a pile and compost it? Suggestions?

Karen


--
J. Kolenovsky, A+, Network +, MCP
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