What to Compost
~ fruit and vegetable scraps, meal leftovers
~ tea bags, coffee grinds and filters
~ egg shells
~ leaves and grass clippings
~ sawdust and wood shavings
~ straw and twigs
~ seaweed
~ manure from free-range animals
~ garden cuttings and old plants
~ wood ash
You can also add garden soil to your compost. A layer of soil will help to mask any odours, and micro-organisms in the soil will accelerate the composting process. Do not compost meat, bones or fish scraps (they will attract pests), perennial weeds (they can be spread with the compost) or diseased plants. Do not not include pet manures in compost that will be used on food crops. Banana peels, peach peels and orange rinds may contain pesticide residue, and should be kept out of the compost. Black walnut leaves should not be composted.
For kitchen wastes, keep a Iarge plastic container with a lid and a handle under the sink. Chop up any large chunks before you toss them in. When the container is full, then empty it into the compost pile. This reduces the number of trips you'll have to make.
With yard and garden wastes, different materials will decompose at different rates but they will all break down eventually. If you want to speed up the composting process, chop the larger material into smaller pieces. Leaves and grass clippings are also excellent for compost, but should be sprinkled into the bin with other materials, or put on in thin layers. Otherwise they will mat together and take longer to compost.
2006-11-28 12:45:15
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Use about an equivalent quantity of eco-friendly and brown organic and organic resources. do no longer use any poop from meat ingesting animals. Horse manure is passable, yet comprehend it really is severe in nitrogen. mix in a touch to that end. We use horse manure to make warm beds for an early initiate on plant life. to % up the composting cycle, you ought to apply some eco-friendly resources which will warmth up swifter. save the pile moist, yet no longer soggy moist and turn it a week or so. Compost is the black gold of gardening and also you could by no ability make too a lot. reliable luck with it.
2016-11-29 22:00:09
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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Don't forget to layer the compost. Like lasagna!
Seriously you'll need the greens (grass clippings veg and fruit) then your brown stuff. brown leafs dead plant material and then add some soil through in some worms to speed up the process dont' forget to stir every so often and sooner hopefully rather then later you'll have compost.
2006-11-28 16:49:36
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answer #3
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answered by farmgirl 3
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My grandma used to have a little plastic tub with holes in it that she would peel carrots into, put eggshells in, etc. Basically any organic material can go in, along with soil -- I hear that you can stick worms in there to speed the process of it composting, too. My local coffee shop recycles their grounds this way.
2006-11-28 14:05:29
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Way to go SarahLen!
Just add a few things, when I shell peas or beans I through in the pile.Also when I pickup the burrs under the magnolia tree, I through those in also.
2006-11-28 12:54:38
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answer #5
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answered by Rhonda 3
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the short answer is pretty much any vegetation. most anything except animal fat and bones. ashes and saw dust are good. but you don't want to use saw dust from conifirs or evergreens, they have tar and pitch in them.
alder dust is good for the garden.
2014-09-01 12:43:36
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answer #6
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answered by R K 7
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any fruit or veggis scraps,grass clippings and leaves.
2006-11-29 01:45:09
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answer #7
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answered by peckerwud2 3
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