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Old 09-08-2007, 10:06 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Keith Kent Keith Kent is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Sep 2006
Posts: 69
Default Confused about compost (and tiny flies)



"dominic Lucas" wrote in message
...
In article m,
VX wrote:

I've been using a compost bin and putting all garden waste in them and
also
kitchen waste that seems to be the same sort of thing, ie plant material
only. This means in addition to prunings etc from the garden I also put
in
salad leftovers, vegetable scraps (uncooked), banana peel, rotten apples
and
apple cores, used teabags, and not a lot else.

In warm weather there is a steady prescence of tiny flies in and around
the
bin, along with a few wasps. The tiny flies pose a real problem since
windows
are nearby- so I need to either stop using this type of composting, or if
possible change what gets composted to remove the fly problem.

But I have a feeling that these tiny flies will be hanging around
whatever I
put in the compost bin. They seem to hang around bags of commercial
compost
and even potted plants that are planted in compost!

Can anyone clarify this for me- is there any restriction on what material
I
compost that would mean I no longer get these tiny flies in attendance?

My confusion arises partly from the idea of "garden waste" versuns
"kitchen
waste"- if the latter is all uncooked vegetable matter like peelings (and
I
suppose the exception, cooked teabags), how can any other organism tell
that
it has been inside a kitchen?

TIA for any insight.


I have the same problem, small flies and wasps (anyone know why wasps
would hang around compost bins?) the flies don't fly very much, they
seem to give up after about 3ft, and head back to the compost. The wasps
may well be drawn by other composted items, like old raspberries. So far
the only was I have found of reducing the problem, is covering the
compost with a thin layer of soil from time to time, also, when putting
food waste in, cover it with papers, other weeds, anything not food
waste. One thing that might work is put the household compost out, then
mow the lawn! Unfortunately I can't comment on that one, my lawn mower
doesn't produce clippings.

Hope some of that helps, if you find an answer, let us know

Dominic


Where ever there is compost there will be insects trying to get in
there.They don`t bother me outside,but wouldnt like them inside so to keep
them to a minimum only use a indoor composter with a secure lid and give it
a wash when you empty it.I also find that kitchen paper towel/any ripped up
paper helps.A composter without a lid you will always have a problem.
Cheers Keith
PS i tried smoking dried bannnas when i was about 16 ,they did seem to give
me a buzz at the time.But i am not so sure wether they did ,it was probably
that lovely summer evening chilling with my mates when my parents went on
holiday and left me homealone for the first time!