Thread: Compost Quality
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Old 21-06-2013, 11:11 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Bob Hobden Bob Hobden is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Aug 2006
Posts: 5,056
Default Compost Quality

"Spider" wrote

Broadback wrote:
Spider wrote:
, Judith in England wrote:


I had heard that B&Qs multipurpose compost was this year much improved
compared
to the rubbish last year.

I bought a couple of bags - one of them was OK - the other bag had
bits of
plastic, bits of wood,silver paper, the usual rubbish.

I sent the rubbish back to B&Q.

They phoned up today to follow up my complaint: during the
conversation I was
told that they had only had 5 complaints about that compost this year!!

I didn't know that they had all written - but I think I know the other
5
people who were far from happy with the quality.

After I found the rubbish I asked a colleague (who had also
experienced the
poor quality of B&Q compost last year) what he was using this year.
he said
Westland Jack's Magic.

I bought three large bags from Homebase: perfect : just like the
compost we
used to get :-).

(In my letter to B&Q I had suggested that they went round to Homebase
and
bought some of it to test - to see if it met their own exacting
standards :-)





Good for you! That's what we should all be doing.
I shall look out for Jack's Magic and see what I think.

I bought cheep from Aldi, bits of twig in it and the very odd silver
paper, but at the price I am happy. I guess if you want non peat compost
then it is re-cycled stuff, that is fine with me.





Indeed. It's fine with me if I just want a sack or three of multi-purpose
to improve border soil, but most 'from green waste' compost is too coarse
for seed-sowing and even some cuttings. Further, it all too readily taken
on a greenish surface film which caps the surface of the soil. However, I
do use it mixed with an appropriate John Innes compost for potting up
larger cuttings, esp where I want the soil a bit more open than a straight
JI compost.


I've been using Notcutts own multicompost but I sieve it all to take out the
larger bits, this leaves a nice usable compost good enough for seeds and for
mixing with sharp sand, fine bark chips, course bark chips, or whatever else
is needed. What I sieve out, the lumps, I keep for potting up my Cymbidium
orchids.
--
Regards. Bob Hobden.
Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK