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2006-07-27 12:00:56 · 7 answers · asked by Leezles 1 in Food & Drink Other - Food & Drink

7 answers

http://vegweb.com/composting/

I found that on google. I am a busy student, so i keep my compostable waste in plastic bags in a bin in my fridge until I have time to compost!

2006-07-27 12:35:36 · answer #1 · answered by magerk 3 · 2 1

Do a yahoo search on home composters and buy a bin (smith and hawken make good ones). The secret key is mixing an equal amount of brown and green material together. Keep it a little moist (like a wrung out sponge). Composting is fun and really helps grow your plants/garden.

2006-07-27 12:09:51 · answer #2 · answered by acwiedlin 2 · 0 0

do no longer USE merely evening CRAWLERS look on the web pages I even have listed on vermicomposting. circulate with pink wigglers. I have been given mine from the bait save yet you will get pink wigglers for the superb composting effects. I even have listed some web pages under that can assist you. From the positioning: what's so particular approximately pink Wigglers? pink Wigglers (Eisenia foetida) are from the comparable family individuals because of the fact the person-friendly earthworm or evening Crawlers (Lumbricus terrestris) you notice on your driveway after a rain. an substantial distinction, and the foremost reason pink Wigglers are favored vermiculture experts, is that evening Crawlers prefer to entice meals down into burrows (as much as six ft deep), while pink Wigglers prefer to eat on the circulate. Being precise feeders, pink Wigglers scavenge for meals merely 6" - 12" under the exterior, making them proper for a composting environment.

2016-11-03 03:39:34 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I built a bin out of old decking and started it with ashes, woodchips, yard waste, and veggie peels. The ashes help the process and eliminate the odor. Make sure you get the rake and stir it around every so often. Also, don't put a bottom on it and give it feet so it is up off the ground a little bit - the air needs to circulate.

2006-07-27 12:07:12 · answer #4 · answered by Nitris 3 · 0 0

kitchen waste like eggshells, vegetable and fruit cores, peels and rinds. anything organic i suppose. also grass clippings and leaves work. i am not sure but paper(with no ink) might also do the trick.you can get some earthworms and toss them in the mix, they love that stuff. although they will probably naturally get to it anyway. a good warm spot should help the process.
composting is not fast, but it's rewarding and good for the earth. This is information that i remember from elementary shool(my dear Watson) but times they have changed so maybe this is outdated. hope this helps.

2006-07-27 12:10:22 · answer #5 · answered by Edgar R 1 · 0 0

You can either buy one of those big green bin things from a DIY store or get a bucket. You put old grass and twigs and other organic stuff in the bin (or put vegetable or fruit in the bucket) and wait for while until in decomposes or something...

2006-07-27 12:03:58 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

put your yard clippings into a pile. add your leftover salad from dinner, the eggshells from breakfast, the used litter from your hamster cage...anything that will break down easily(no plastic or meat) and make sure you "turn" it once or twice a month so it won't "rot" and stink up your yard....that's the most important thing. You can use a rake or pitchfork to "turn" your compost.
Happy gardening!!!!

2006-07-27 12:09:00 · answer #7 · answered by AuntTater 4 · 0 0

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