Do you compost
We recently moved out in the country. Nothing to do but we had to make a
compost pile. I admit, it's a handy place for garbage we would usually put in the can for a week. Yech! Does it work? How much work is it? How often are you supposed to turn it? Do you keep it wet? Do you get enough compost to justify the work? TIA Steve |
Do you compost
"SteveB" wrote in message ... We recently moved out in the country. Nothing to do but we had to make a compost pile. I admit, it's a handy place for garbage we would usually put in the can for a week. Yech! Does it work? How much work is it? How often are you supposed to turn it? Do you keep it wet? Do you get enough compost to justify the work? TIA Steve You can make it as much work as you want. Generally speaking, the more work you put in the quicker it becomes useable. We were in a rush the first few years so we turned it, kept it moist, etc - but now we just leave it sit and wait a while longer. The pile we just started a couple weeks ago is about 8' wide, 4' deep and 15' long. We have a neighbor friend in the lawn care business and he brings a few truck loads for us - then we just add to it - our own leaves / grass clippings, household garbage, some manure, and maybe a broken bag of caked up lawn fertilizer. |
Do you compost
On Nov 4, 3:33 am, "SteveB" wrote:
We recently moved out in the country. Nothing to do but we had to make a compost pile. I admit, it's a handy place for garbage we would usually put in the can for a week. Yech! Does it work? How much work is it? How often are you supposed to turn it? Do you keep it wet? Do you get enough compost to justify the work? TIA Steve You'll get a difference of opinion from many people on this subject, but here's my experience. They are a lot of work and what compost I got wasn't worth the effort. I now buy my compost and use the time for other more worthwhile work. A lot of variables go into having a good workable compost pile. Like do you have the right amount of natural rainfall to keep it moist but not wet or dry? Do you have a source of equal amounts of green and brown material to feed the pile? Are you physically able to turn it every few weeks? In my case we've had a drought for years so it took watering with a hose on a regular basis. I had to bag grass clippings and leaves to feed the pile rather than mulch them. It took almost 2 hours of hard work every time I turned it. Even with all that, only about half of it would break down into compost. Plus I once got a den of snakes in it (guess they liked the heat it produced). I'm sure others have had satisfactory results, but I quit trying. Red |
Do you compost
"SteveB" wrote in message ... We recently moved out in the country. Nothing to do but we had to make a compost pile. I admit, it's a handy place for garbage we would usually put in the can for a week. Yech! Does it work? How much work is it? How often are you supposed to turn it? Do you keep it wet? Do you get enough compost to justify the work? Here in Seattle, I dump my lawn clippings and occasional kitchen waste and weeds into the compost bins, in layers of 3-4 inches. I then sprinkle a bit of dirt over it to innoculate it with the necessary bacteria. I keep adding until the bin is full, meanwhile using the compost from the other bin. Once I've emptied the other bin, or have no room to spare in the full one, I start filling the other bin. When I need the compost from the full bin, I fork the top of the full bin, which is not fully composted, into the other bin until I get to good compost, and use the compost as needed. I don't turn it, and don't water it - but this is Seattle. Want an easy bin? Take 4 wooden pallets. prop them side to side to form a cube with the 'top' boards to the inside of the cube. Tie a rope or wire to adjacent corners to hold the top corners together, or nail a short board across each corner. When you want to empty a bin, remove the ties to the front pallet, and remove it. 2 or 3 bins, side by side will handle a good size yards clippings and keep you ahead of the composting process. Pallets will last a few years before the rot enough to need replacing. Bob |
Do you compost
|
Do you compost
"GWB" wrote in message ... I just ordered one of these: http://www.thecomposter.com/products...x.html?=Google good idea but kind of small isn't it? i put all my compost material on the curb now and buy it back as Dillo Dirt. totally worth it for me. i used to compost but it is kind of a pain. for op: if you're composting for a garden you could consider row composting. Basically you just bury the material where you are planing your gardin. More info on the web. |
Do you compost
"SteveB" wrote in message ... "jthread" wrote in message ... "GWB" wrote in message ... I just ordered one of these: http://www.thecomposter.com/products...x.html?=Google good idea but kind of small isn't it? i put all my compost material on the curb now and buy it back as Dillo Dirt. totally worth it for me. i used to compost but it is kind of a pain. for op: if you're composting for a garden you could consider row composting. Basically you just bury the material where you are planing your gardin. More info on the web. My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. So why do I compost, you ask. So that I have a place to put my grass clippings, kitchen trash, and various items. I thank all the people who were in on the discussion and had positive things to add on the topic. I learned a lot. About composting, and about posters. Steve good for you dude. i'm really glad the city p/u's our clipping or i'd have a compost pile too. i had one at my house in round rock but because the yard was so large i filled my bin with about 4 mowings. i needed about 3 bins to keep up. i didn't want to mulch cause the lawn really needed to breath. it was choked from the previous owner cause he always mulched. you have to keep after a compost pile. it needs green and brown waste, dirt, water, sunlight, turning. it's quite a chore. I really like that barrel idea cause the turning is the really hard part. but in my old house that would of held about 1.5 mowings. and i mowed once a week in the summer. |
Do you compost
"jthread" wrote in message ... "GWB" wrote in message ... I just ordered one of these: http://www.thecomposter.com/products...x.html?=Google good idea but kind of small isn't it? i put all my compost material on the curb now and buy it back as Dillo Dirt. totally worth it for me. i used to compost but it is kind of a pain. for op: if you're composting for a garden you could consider row composting. Basically you just bury the material where you are planing your gardin. More info on the web. My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. So why do I compost, you ask. So that I have a place to put my grass clippings, kitchen trash, and various items. I thank all the people who were in on the discussion and had positive things to add on the topic. I learned a lot. About composting, and about posters. Steve |
Do you compost
On Nov 4, 4:33 am, "SteveB" wrote:
We recently moved out in the country. Nothing to do but we had to make a compost pile. I admit, it's a handy place for garbage we would usually put in the can for a week. Yech! Does it work? How much work is it? How often are you supposed to turn it? Do you keep it wet? Do you get enough compost to justify the work? TIA Steve I simply pile the leaves up in three piles, and add discarded vegetable, and occasionally add bagged grass clippings in it (in case the grass is too long to be mulched). I just pile them up. I don't use any barrel or cage or anything. I used to turn the compost piles and water them whenever I was done with mowing the lawn. This means I used to turn them every week or so. Now, I only turn them during fall when I add a lot quantity of leaves into the piles, and once in summer (to check their status). Otherwise, I don't turn them or water them at all. And the result is just as good. Yes, this takes 8 to 9 months to compose them. This is OK because I am not in a hurry. Basically, I just let the nature to take its course. I mainly use the compost in the vegetable garden because the soil in there is very sandy. I need the compost to improve the soil texture. The soil in there is definitely getting quite well after I have added compost in there year after year for the past 7 years. One possible problem that I can think of is that I can compose the leaves in less than one year because I use a garden vacuum to gather the leaves, and the garden vacuum grounds the leaves to small pieces, and that helps the composing to go fast. If the leaves were not grounded, the composing likely would take longer. I could have used the free compost from the local government. But that would make my car dirty. If I had a pickup truck, I might have used the free compost from the local government. By the way, I live in northern New Jersey. Jay Chan |
Do you compost
On Nov 6, 11:02 am, "SteveB" wrote:
My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. Good enough for flower beds and general landscape use, but not for vegetable gardens. You have no idea what herbicides & insecticides was used on those "organic materials" before they went to the landfill for composting. People put some really nasty things at really nasty rates on their yards before they cut, bag, and put on the curb for pickup. Red |
Do you compost
"Red" wrote in message ups.com... On Nov 6, 11:02 am, "SteveB" wrote: My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. Good enough for flower beds and general landscape use, but not for vegetable gardens. You have no idea what herbicides & insecticides was used on those "organic materials" before they went to the landfill for composting. People put some really nasty things at really nasty rates on their yards before they cut, bag, and put on the curb for pickup. Red You think that's bad? Dillo Dirt includes treated sewage sludge. According to the web site they claim it's save for use in gardens. I only use it on my yard and flower beds but there is a chance we are eating food watered by effluent from a waste water treatment plant anyway. http://www.ci.austin.tx.us/water/dillo.htm Yummy! Oh well, it usually just gets dumped in a river anyway. In Las Cruces, NM the old treatment plant was so bad the effluent was dirtier than the influent. Dumped right into the Rio Grande and to the pecan, lettuce, onion, chili and all the other crops grown down there. They (Las Cruces) built a new plant back in the 70's. We used to go swimming in that river all the time. Jim |
Do you compost
jthread wrote:
"SteveB" wrote in message ... "jthread" wrote in message ... "GWB" wrote in message ... I just ordered one of these: http://www.thecomposter.com/products...x.html?=Google good idea but kind of small isn't it? i put all my compost material on the curb now and buy it back as Dillo Dirt. totally worth it for me. i used to compost but it is kind of a pain. for op: if you're composting for a garden you could consider row composting. Basically you just bury the material where you are planing your gardin. More info on the web. My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. So why do I compost, you ask. So that I have a place to put my grass clippings, kitchen trash, and various items. I thank all the people who were in on the discussion and had positive things to add on the topic. I learned a lot. About composting, and about posters. Steve good for you dude. i'm really glad the city p/u's our clipping or i'd have a compost pile too. i had one at my house in round rock but because the yard was so large i filled my bin with about 4 mowings. i needed about 3 bins to keep up. i didn't want to mulch cause the lawn really needed to breath. it was choked from the previous owner cause he always mulched. you have to keep after a compost pile. it needs green and brown waste, dirt, water, sunlight, turning. it's quite a chore. I really like that barrel idea cause the turning is the really hard part. but in my old house that would of held about 1.5 mowings. and i mowed once a week in the summer. Mulching is good for the lawn as long as you don't take more than 1/3 of the grass height in a mowing. Also, if you aerate once every couple of years, your lawn will have no problem digesting the clippings. If the previous owner abused the lawn by letting the thatch build up, by improper mowing techniques, then you may want to have it power dethatched and overseeded at least once. You will be amazed by the results. Why would you want to remove the life giving nutrients from your lawn? That's what you do when you bag. You just have to allow your turf to digest the clippings by proper management and proper mowing practices. |
Do you compost
Red wrote:
On Nov 6, 11:02 am, "SteveB" wrote: My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. Good enough for flower beds and general landscape use, but not for vegetable gardens. You have no idea what herbicides & insecticides was used on those "organic materials" before they went to the landfill for composting. People put some really nasty things at really nasty rates on their yards before they cut, bag, and put on the curb for pickup. Red People put all those chemicals on their lawn, and then collect it all up and send it to the waste center, which in turn means they will have to put more chemicals on to replace what they removed. Stupid idea. Good for the chemical companies. Bad for your yard and the environment. I have no problem with using chemicals. It is the misuse and overuse that is the problem. |
Do you compost
wrote in message news:vt2Yi.188561$Fc.30933@attbi_s21... jthread wrote: "SteveB" wrote in message ... "jthread" wrote in message ... "GWB" wrote in message ... I just ordered one of these: http://www.thecomposter.com/products...x.html?=Google good idea but kind of small isn't it? i put all my compost material on the curb now and buy it back as Dillo Dirt. totally worth it for me. i used to compost but it is kind of a pain. for op: if you're composting for a garden you could consider row composting. Basically you just bury the material where you are planing your gardin. More info on the web. My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. So why do I compost, you ask. So that I have a place to put my grass clippings, kitchen trash, and various items. I thank all the people who were in on the discussion and had positive things to add on the topic. I learned a lot. About composting, and about posters. Steve good for you dude. i'm really glad the city p/u's our clipping or i'd have a compost pile too. i had one at my house in round rock but because the yard was so large i filled my bin with about 4 mowings. i needed about 3 bins to keep up. i didn't want to mulch cause the lawn really needed to breath. it was choked from the previous owner cause he always mulched. you have to keep after a compost pile. it needs green and brown waste, dirt, water, sunlight, turning. it's quite a chore. I really like that barrel idea cause the turning is the really hard part. but in my old house that would of held about 1.5 mowings. and i mowed once a week in the summer. Mulching is good for the lawn as long as you don't take more than 1/3 of the grass height in a mowing. Also, if you aerate once every couple of years, your lawn will have no problem digesting the clippings. If the previous owner abused the lawn by letting the thatch build up, by improper mowing techniques, then you may want to have it power dethatched and overseeded at least once. You will be amazed by the results. Why would you want to remove the life giving nutrients from your lawn? That's what you do when you bag. You just have to allow your turf to digest the clippings by proper management and proper mowing practices. I did just about everything you suggested. Except reseed. That yard looked like a park when I sold it. The realtor put "park like yard" in the desc. for the property. Thanks to Dillo Dirt, a lot of hard work, and water. I don't really want to discourage mulching. Just like everything: moderation is the key. When I sold it I made about $30k profit even after realtor fees on that one. :-) Not bad for an 18 month turn around. I sure hope the market hold here!!! That yard really needed a break from mulching. Also. there is always plenty of mulch left on the yard even when I use my catcher. Jim |
Do you compost
wrote in message news:vx2Yi.171454$Xa3.150789@attbi_s22... Red wrote: On Nov 6, 11:02 am, "SteveB" wrote: My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. Good enough for flower beds and general landscape use, but not for vegetable gardens. You have no idea what herbicides & insecticides was used on those "organic materials" before they went to the landfill for composting. People put some really nasty things at really nasty rates on their yards before they cut, bag, and put on the curb for pickup. Red People put all those chemicals on their lawn, and then collect it all up and send it to the waste center, which in turn means they will have to put more chemicals on to replace what they removed. Stupid idea. Good for the chemical companies. Bad for your yard and the environment. I have no problem with using chemicals. It is the misuse and overuse that is the problem. I've A/B'ed store bought compost and dillo dirt. So far Dillo Dirt "seems" a little better. But your point is valid and a lot of people here won't use it. I'm going to continue as long I have success. I like the idea of keeping the yard waste out of the land fills. Jim |
Do you compost
"SteveB" wrote in message ... Is it me, or has this thread made the corner and headed towards rational discourse? Steve ;-) Sometimes you just have to listen. Funny how people get so opinionated regarding a thing like compost. But, I've heard other people say negative things about DD. I go by how green and lush my yard is. Give and take. Jim |
Do you compost
"Jay Chan" wrote I mainly use the compost in the vegetable garden because the soil in there is very sandy. I need the compost to improve the soil texture. The soil in there is definitely getting quite well after I have added compost in there year after year for the past 7 years. Jay Chan Here in Southern Utah, I basically live on top of a lava and caliche cap with red sandstone dunes on top of that. The garden was made by the builder, and irrigation put in. Thank goodness. But it looks like it was never mulched. I know I need to supplement it, and thusly, asking this question. Steve |
Do you compost
"Red" wrote in message ups.com... On Nov 6, 11:02 am, "SteveB" wrote: My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. Good enough for flower beds and general landscape use, but not for vegetable gardens. You have no idea what herbicides & insecticides was used on those "organic materials" before they went to the landfill for composting. People put some really nasty things at really nasty rates on their yards before they cut, bag, and put on the curb for pickup. Red Great info that I would have never thought of. Or found on Google. g Steve |
Do you compost
"jthread" wrote in message ... "Red" wrote in message ups.com... On Nov 6, 11:02 am, "SteveB" wrote: My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. Good enough for flower beds and general landscape use, but not for vegetable gardens. You have no idea what herbicides & insecticides was used on those "organic materials" before they went to the landfill for composting. People put some really nasty things at really nasty rates on their yards before they cut, bag, and put on the curb for pickup. Red You think that's bad? Dillo Dirt includes treated sewage sludge. According to the web site they claim it's save for use in gardens. I only use it on my yard and flower beds but there is a chance we are eating food watered by effluent from a waste water treatment plant anyway. http://www.ci.austin.tx.us/water/dillo.htm Yummy! Oh well, it usually just gets dumped in a river anyway. In Las Cruces, NM the old treatment plant was so bad the effluent was dirtier than the influent. Dumped right into the Rio Grande and to the pecan, lettuce, onion, chili and all the other crops grown down there. They (Las Cruces) built a new plant back in the 70's. We used to go swimming in that river all the time. Jim Amazing how we survived Lawn Darts, potato guns, firecrackers, and all the stuff that kids today are "protected" from. And there's nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us SLAP! Sorry. Steve |
Do you compost
Is it me, or has this thread made the corner and headed towards rational
discourse? Steve ;-) |
Do you compost
SteveB wrote:
"jthread" wrote in message ... "Red" wrote in message ups.com... On Nov 6, 11:02 am, "SteveB" wrote: My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. Good enough for flower beds and general landscape use, but not for vegetable gardens. You have no idea what herbicides & insecticides was used on those "organic materials" before they went to the landfill for composting. People put some really nasty things at really nasty rates on their yards before they cut, bag, and put on the curb for pickup. Red You think that's bad? Dillo Dirt includes treated sewage sludge. According to the web site they claim it's save for use in gardens. I only use it on my yard and flower beds but there is a chance we are eating food watered by effluent from a waste water treatment plant anyway. http://www.ci.austin.tx.us/water/dillo.htm Yummy! Oh well, it usually just gets dumped in a river anyway. In Las Cruces, NM the old treatment plant was so bad the effluent was dirtier than the influent. Dumped right into the Rio Grande and to the pecan, lettuce, onion, chili and all the other crops grown down there. They (Las Cruces) built a new plant back in the 70's. We used to go swimming in that river all the time. Jim Amazing how we survived Lawn Darts, potato guns, firecrackers, and all the stuff that kids today are "protected" from. And there's nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us SLAP! Sorry. Steve Your mother in law sent you that FW: too? |
Do you compost
"GWB" wrote in message ... I just ordered one of these: http://www.thecomposter.com/products...x.html?=Google I couldn't fit one mowing of clippings in it. Bob |
Do you compost
"jthread" wrote in message ... My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. Our citys compost at one time was contaminated by chemicals some homeowners use on their yard. It killed some plants it was used on. So why do I compost, you ask. So that I have a place to put my grass clippings, kitchen trash, and various items. I thank all the people who were in on the discussion and had positive things to add on the topic. I learned a lot. About composting, and about posters. Steve good for you dude. i'm really glad the city p/u's our clipping or i'd have a compost pile too. i had one at my house in round rock but because the yard was so large i filled my bin with about 4 mowings. i needed about 3 bins to keep up. i didn't want to mulch cause the lawn really needed to breath. it was choked from the previous owner cause he always mulched. you have to keep after a compost pile. it needs green and brown waste, dirt, water, sunlight, turning. it's quite a chore. Mine works fine with 99% greens, a little sprinkle of dirt, no added water or turning. It's easier than loading the stuff into bins and hauling them to the street. I really like that barrel idea cause the turning is the really hard part. but in my old house that would of held about 1.5 mowings. and i mowed once a week in the summer. Try just skipping the turning and giving it more time. Bob |
Do you compost
"Bob F" wrote in message ... "jthread" wrote in message ... My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. Our citys compost at one time was contaminated by chemicals some homeowners use on their yard. It killed some plants it was used on. Ya know i could see that happening! But how did it get into the compost (enough to cause damage) if they are just putting in clipping and such? And where do you live? So why do I compost, you ask. So that I have a place to put my grass clippings, kitchen trash, and various items. I thank all the people who were in on the discussion and had positive things to add on the topic. I learned a lot. About composting, and about posters. Steve good for you dude. i'm really glad the city p/u's our clipping or i'd have a compost pile too. i had one at my house in round rock but because the yard was so large i filled my bin with about 4 mowings. i needed about 3 bins to keep up. i didn't want to mulch cause the lawn really needed to breath. it was choked from the previous owner cause he always mulched. you have to keep after a compost pile. it needs green and brown waste, dirt, water, sunlight, turning. it's quite a chore. Mine works fine with 99% greens, a little sprinkle of dirt, no added water or turning. It's easier than loading the stuff into bins and hauling them to the street. I really like that barrel idea cause the turning is the really hard part. but in my old house that would of held about 1.5 mowings. and i mowed once a week in the summer. Try just skipping the turning and giving it more time. Bob |
Do you compost
"SteveB" wrote:
Here in Southern Utah, I basically live on top of a lava and caliche cap with red sandstone dunes on top of that. The garden was made by the builder, and irrigation put in. Thank goodness. But it looks like it was never mulched. I know I need to supplement it, and thusly, asking this question. Steve It sounds like a post card, Steve. |
Do you compost
"SteveB" wrote:
"jthread" wrote in message ... "Red" wrote in message ups.com... On Nov 6, 11:02 am, "SteveB" wrote: My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. Good enough for flower beds and general landscape use, but not for vegetable gardens. You have no idea what herbicides & insecticides was used on those "organic materials" before they went to the landfill for composting. People put some really nasty things at really nasty rates on their yards before they cut, bag, and put on the curb for pickup. Red You think that's bad? Dillo Dirt includes treated sewage sludge. According to the web site they claim it's save for use in gardens. I only use it on my yard and flower beds but there is a chance we are eating food watered by effluent from a waste water treatment plant anyway. http://www.ci.austin.tx.us/water/dillo.htm Yummy! Oh well, it usually just gets dumped in a river anyway. In Las Cruces, NM the old treatment plant was so bad the effluent was dirtier than the influent. Dumped right into the Rio Grande and to the pecan, lettuce, onion, chili and all the other crops grown down there. They (Las Cruces) built a new plant back in the 70's. We used to go swimming in that river all the time. Jim Amazing how we survived Lawn Darts, potato guns, firecrackers, and all the stuff that kids today are "protected" from. And there's nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us SLAP! Sorry. Steve Haha! jthread lives in a van down by the river. Best filter the turd out of your newsreader. |
Do you compost
seems i have a stalker. tee hee
is that like an internet milestone? "Steveo" wrote in message ... "SteveB" wrote: "jthread" wrote in message ... "Red" wrote in message ups.com... On Nov 6, 11:02 am, "SteveB" wrote: My situation is this: I can back my truck up at the local landfill, and for $20, they will fill the back of an 8' bed with compost that they have made of organic materials they have made. This compost includes fertilizers and all the best of things my taxes can buy. Good enough for flower beds and general landscape use, but not for vegetable gardens. You have no idea what herbicides & insecticides was used on those "organic materials" before they went to the landfill for composting. People put some really nasty things at really nasty rates on their yards before they cut, bag, and put on the curb for pickup. Red You think that's bad? Dillo Dirt includes treated sewage sludge. According to the web site they claim it's save for use in gardens. I only use it on my yard and flower beds but there is a chance we are eating food watered by effluent from a waste water treatment plant anyway. http://www.ci.austin.tx.us/water/dillo.htm Yummy! Oh well, it usually just gets dumped in a river anyway. In Las Cruces, NM the old treatment plant was so bad the effluent was dirtier than the influent. Dumped right into the Rio Grande and to the pecan, lettuce, onion, chili and all the other crops grown down there. They (Las Cruces) built a new plant back in the 70's. We used to go swimming in that river all the time. Jim Amazing how we survived Lawn Darts, potato guns, firecrackers, and all the stuff that kids today are "protected" from. And there's nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us nothing wrong with us SLAP! Sorry. Steve Haha! jthread lives in a van down by the river. Best filter the turd out of your newsreader. |
Do you compost
On Nov 6, 12:26 pm, "jthread" wrote:
You think that's bad? Dillo Dirt includes treated sewage sludge. According to the web site they claim it's save for use in gardens. I only use it on my yard and flower beds but there is a chance we are eating food watered by effluent from a waste water treatment plant anyway. There have been many articles lately about nasty fish and seafood imported into the US from overseas markets. The worse is Tilapia which are bottom feeders and are raised in cesspools. Tainted toys get the media attention because it affects kids, but we adults are getting some really bad shit also (pun intended) ;) Red |
Do you compost
"Red" wrote in message ups.com... On Nov 6, 12:26 pm, "jthread" wrote: You think that's bad? Dillo Dirt includes treated sewage sludge. According to the web site they claim it's save for use in gardens. I only use it on my yard and flower beds but there is a chance we are eating food watered by effluent from a waste water treatment plant anyway. There have been many articles lately about nasty fish and seafood imported into the US from overseas markets. The worse is Tilapia which are bottom feeders and are raised in cesspools. Tainted toys get the media attention because it affects kids, but we adults are getting some really bad shit also (pun intended) ;) Red Speaking of... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/406067.stm Gives a new meaning to "I've got some good $h!t." |
Do you compost
"jthread" wrote in message ... Our citys compost at one time was contaminated by chemicals some homeowners use on their yard. It killed some plants it was used on. Ya know i could see that happening! But how did it get into the compost (enough to cause damage) if they are just putting in clipping and such? And where do you live? It was one herbicide that just didn't biodegrade, that was effective at very low doses. Seattle |
Do you compost
"Bob F" wrote in message ... "jthread" wrote in message ... Our citys compost at one time was contaminated by chemicals some homeowners use on their yard. It killed some plants it was used on. Ya know i could see that happening! But how did it get into the compost (enough to cause damage) if they are just putting in clipping and such? And where do you live? It was one herbicide that just didn't biodegrade, that was effective at very low doses. Seattle Wow, scary stuff. |
Do you compost
"Bob F" wrote in message ... "jthread" wrote in message ... Our citys compost at one time was contaminated by chemicals some homeowners use on their yard. It killed some plants it was used on. Ya know i could see that happening! But how did it get into the compost (enough to cause damage) if they are just putting in clipping and such? And where do you live? It was one herbicide that just didn't biodegrade, that was effective at very low doses. Seattle You don't know the name of the chemical do you? Jim |
Do you compost
The chemical found in Seattle and Spokane was Clopyralid from lawn weed
killer. At that time it was a favorite chemical for lawn care companies and was even in some weed and feeds. Picloram has also been found in compost that used straw where the field had been sprayed with Tordon but that only showed up in towns next to large farms. The contaminated compost could be used on lawns but if it was put in a garden it would be three years before a tomato plant would live in the soil. (If you wanted to grow tomatoes on ground that has chemicals in it.) Bill "jthread" wrote in message ... "Bob F" wrote in message ... "jthread" wrote in message ... Our citys compost at one time was contaminated by chemicals some homeowners use on their yard. It killed some plants it was used on. Ya know i could see that happening! But how did it get into the compost (enough to cause damage) if they are just putting in clipping and such? And where do you live? It was one herbicide that just didn't biodegrade, that was effective at very low doses. Seattle You don't know the name of the chemical do you? Jim |
Do you compost
"hollenback" wrote in message ... The chemical found in Seattle and Spokane was Clopyralid from lawn weed killer. At that time it was a favorite chemical for lawn care companies and was even in some weed and feeds. Picloram has also been found in compost that used straw where the field had been sprayed with Tordon but that only showed up in towns next to large farms. The contaminated compost could be used on lawns but if it was put in a garden it would be three years before a tomato plant would live in the soil. (If you wanted to grow tomatoes on ground that has chemicals in it.) Bill Thanks, I did a Google on it and found an article about finding Clopyralid in compost in the Seattle area, but not specifically in Seattle's Public Services compost. I emailed both the Austin TX and Seattle's Utility departments and asked basically: How are we protected from this type of contamination? I'll post the answers in a new header. Jim -- "I like this opera crowd. It makes me feel tough". |
Quote:
Cheers |
Do you compost
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 09:40:18 -0800, Jay Chan
wrote: I could have used the free compost from the local government. But that would make my car dirty. If I had a pickup truck, I might have used the free compost from the local government. Towns around here collect yard waste separately for composting, and give it away also. My concern is I don't know what *other* people dump on their lawns & gardens before bagging the refuse for the city to collect. No way would I use it on food plants. Ornamentals....maybe. There's too many people that simply do not read directions on their lawn chemicals and overapply thinking that more is better. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:18 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter