Garden / Lawn
Easy composting
You will need a compost bin, the type you decide on depends on the size of your yard, but there are a couple of options:
There are many types and sizes but at the end of the day, a basic plastic composting bin from a local garden centre should do fine. You just fill from the top and a few months later, you remove your compost typically from a small hatch at the bottom.
What can composted:
- all uncooked vegetable and fruit peelings
- teabags, tea leaves and coffee grounds
- egg shells
- dead flowers from the house
- and from the garden, soft pruning cuts, spent bedding plants, dead leaves, lawn clippings
- spent compost from hanging baskets or containers
- some dry materials such as shredded paper, rabbit and guinea pig bedding.
One thing you to remember is to mix different types of material. Too many grass clippings in a big mass for example, will turn smelly and slimy, or if there is too much dry material (paper) composting may not start properly. Mix occasionally.
What NOT to compost:
- Any meat products or bones; bread, cooked food - as these tend to attract vermin
- dog or cat waste
- woody material - may take too long to compost
- weeds - these can "infect" your compost with their seeds
- anything that is non-biodegradable (plastics).
A good idea is to keep a lidded container by the back door that you can fill and then empty into your composting bin every one or two days instead of making a trip every time you peel a vegetable!
In about 3 - 12 months (depending on conditions) - you'll have wonderful dark brown loose compost for your flower beds and borders.
Happy composting everyone!
