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Old 01-08-2008, 07:09 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening;,rec.gardens;,rec.gardens.edible
AZ Nomad[_3_] AZ Nomad[_3_] is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Mar 2008
Posts: 41
Default Compost Making. Utterly Confused!!

On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 12:59:28 -0500, Omelet wrote:
In article ,
AZ Nomad wrote:


On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 11:44:51 -0500, Omelet wrote:
In article ,
Ed ex@directory wrote:


I took on an allotment plot earlier this year, and quickly cleared half
of it to grow at least some crops this season whilst I intensively
double-dig and clear the other half. All of that is going well.

So, now I want to make a compost bin. Eventually I plan to have 3.

I have scavenged 4 pallets each of which is 3ft x 4ft which I intend to
use to build a box that is 3ft square and 4 ft high. One of the sides
will be loosely (but securely) tied in so that it is removable for access.

But what to do next? I have read so much here and on google that I am
utterly confused.

Firstly, should I line the box with something like lino or old carpet in
order to keep the heat in or leave it as it is to allow for aeration?

Secondly, do I have to stick to a strict regime as to how I build up the
layers? I was just thinking of simply piling in layers of stuff as and
when I harvested crops throughout the season , maybe throw in some grass
cuttings from home, maybe throw in paper from the shredding machine,
maybe throw in some straw if it available.

Do I have to add accelerators? Do I have to add lime? Do I have to turn
it? Do I add worms? Do I have to pee on it LOL!!

Making compost seems to have become such a scientific skill that I am
now quite wary of even starting to do so, lest I end up with some smelly
sickly sludge that it no good for anything.

Ed


Just dump it in a pile and keep it damp. Does not matter whether you
layer it or otherwise.


It's really not rocket science. g


I personally use construction grade giant trash bags. Fill them and
leave them open at the top. I let them sit for a year or so.


Makes great compost.


I use leaves and leave it in the rain gutters for a couple of years.
:-) Also makes great compost.


Lazy bastid. giggles


My neighbors did that. I was oh so tempted to hang a ladder over the
fence and snag that baby wild chili petin I saw growing in the rain
gutter on the corner of their house!


We raked a bunch of leaves into a corner of the yard once. Never did get
around to bagging them. They composted down in less than 6 months, in
the shade no less. Leave grass clippings on the lawn. They go away in
less than two weeks, and enrich the lawn.


Yet if you leave the kitchen trash on the front lawn, the neighbors
will complain. Go figgur.