Good morning ladies,
DH and I are in the initial stages of planning our first veggi garden, and the topic of composting came up. We have never done that before, and we where wondering how long the process takes, what kind of composter to buy, and what exactly can be composted? I was also wondering if there is any kind of special process for the winter time since we live in a cold weather environment? Thank you ladies for all of your help!
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Re: ? about Composting.
https://www.epa.gov/osw/conserve/rrr/composting/by_compost.htm
You don't need to buy a composter. Just make a pile or build a small box. I live in a tropical climate, so no advice on the cold weather. Works great here. I started my pile this year and I already have dirt!
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"><a href="http://www.myfitnesspal.com/weight-loss-ticker"><img border="0" src="http://tickers.myfitnesspal.com/ticker/show/825/1820/8251820.png" /></a><p style="text-align:center;width:420px;"><small>Created by MyFitnessPal - Free <a href="http://www.myfitnesspal.com">Calorie Counter</a></small></p>Gardening and composting go hand in hand.
It can be as easy, or as intense as you feel like (and as cheap or expensive as you like too). Personally, I do a big yard waste 3-bin wooden composter out back...with "hot piles" (50% greens, 50% browns, moisten and stir) that I only turn every few months. It's a little faster then just throwing stuff in a pile and letting nature do its thing...but we have a big yard with lots of organic matter.
And then I do a small worm bin bench out front for kitchen/food scraps. My mom has had a worm bin she made out of those big storage tubs from target in her basement for years, turning out the "black gold"....no smell, no bugs.
I would highly recommend keeping kitchen/food scraps in a more secure bin (either worm bin or bury it, or buy a green cone, tumbler, etc)...since otherwise it could attract rodents and animals.
https://seattletilth.org/learn/resources-1/compost
https://www.seattle.gov/util/Services/Yard/Composting/index.asp
We live in a neighborhood that won't let us have a big open compost area, so we had to make something to contain it. Here is what we did. It works great.
I don't do anything to it. I just add my stuff and seal it off at the end of the year. By spring when we are planting, the compost is ready.
Big E (6) & Little E (2.5)