Sustainability
How to Start Composting—& Things You Didn't Know You Could Compost
How to start composting, according to a zero-waste expert.
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9 Comments
Jerry W.
July 15, 2020
Composting at home is easier than it sounds. Start slowly and you won't go wrong.
www.JerryWhiting.com/compost/ and www.JerryWhiting.com/red-wigglers/
Share what you learn with others.
www.JerryWhiting.com/compost/ and www.JerryWhiting.com/red-wigglers/
Share what you learn with others.
JulieKay
January 24, 2020
I have been composting for years now... teach classes in my upstate NY community. You can put amounts of kitchen waste in your freezer( or outdoors in winter) and cells break down, ready to be added to compost
piles. We use a stainless indoor container then transfer to big kitty litter containers with lid in our garage until ready for a trip to the pile. Crush eggshells. Also stick a crumpled newspaper in bottom of the bin for easy dumping without waste stuck on the bottom! Good luck! So glad to see such interest... you can do it!!
piles. We use a stainless indoor container then transfer to big kitty litter containers with lid in our garage until ready for a trip to the pile. Crush eggshells. Also stick a crumpled newspaper in bottom of the bin for easy dumping without waste stuck on the bottom! Good luck! So glad to see such interest... you can do it!!
debbie J.
January 8, 2020
I give all my vegetable scraps to our pet cow, Sara and donkey, Ernestine...they in turn give me beautifully rich “composting material” in return 🥰🐴🐮
debbie J.
January 8, 2020
I also add used coffee grounds (and leftover coffee) to all my outside flowering plants, like Bougainville, bird of paradise, azaleas, hibiscus, gardenias...
gustadora
April 26, 2019
Great reminder. I'm fortunate to live in a town in California that has a composting program as part of our waste management. Our green bin contents are collected weekly like usual then each spring we get to pick up two free 10 lb. bags of really lush compost her household. Our flowers and veggies are really happy right now. The town couldn't have made it easier for us.
Linda M.
April 2, 2019
I’ve been having success with trench composting. Kitchen scraps are taken outside, placed in a hole dig and covered with some soil. Dig the next hole so you know where the last one went. No need to worry about balancing the fresh material with green materials. It’s also not necessary to buy a composter or worms, no need to turn composting materials. Anything you can put in a composting pile can be buried.
Smaug
April 10, 2019
That can be a good approach for small amounts of material, if you have the determination to carry it out. Of course, it has it's limits- burying pizza boxes is not quite so easy as, say, coffee grounds. You need a place where you can dig without disturbing growing plants, meaning parts of the yard will remain fallow, yet must be kept moist. And it can become pretty impractical. In my wild youth, I once decided to improve a plot (maybe 2-3 hundred square feet) by digging in leaves; after a fall spent digging (burying a foot deep pile of leaves on 100 sq feet takes considerable doing). The results were pretty good, but only a loony 20 year old would undertake it. But if you're talking a days worth of coffee grounds and zucchini peels, it can be a good approach and produce good results long term.
Tim
April 1, 2019
Pizza boxes, at least the grease-soaked bottoms, are also great to use for lighting charcoal in a chimney starter.
Smaug
April 1, 2019
I'm not sure how helpful this is as far as telling people how to get started, but there are a lot of resources for that. A few general tips; I live in California, where it may not rain for six months at a time, and virtually all of the manufactured compost bins I've tried have had far too much aeration- If you have a bin 2 feet across and 6" on each side are too dry to compost, you don't have much ; you're better off with a pit in the ground or a simple pile. This leaves you vulnerable to moles and roots getting into the pile, and if you have the bucks you can build a set of piles (you should really have at least two) with concrete floors, but it's not vital, and spending money on composting just doesn't seem right. Your piles will need to be covered (blue tarps work well), both to keep out pests (racoons and skunks in particular are apt to tear apart piles looking for worms and such) and to keep moisture in (in dry areas) or excess moisture out. I've never had any problem with composting sea food, egg shells etc., but they do need to be dug into the pile. If you want to compost garden waste on any scale, a small electric chipper is invaluable- they can be had for about $200- of the half dozen or so I've used the Duro Star "Eco Shredder" is probably the best. There is some controversy as to whether dried leaves constitute green (nitrogenous) or brown (carbonaceous) material- I vote for green. For home composting on a small level, some people simply trowel their waste into planting beds which can work if you're careful. Home compost piles seldom heat up enough for sterilization, so you need to be careful about weed seeds (or roots of some), diseased plants etc.












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