Anonymous wrote:What will you do with the compost you produce? That was our issue - we have a lot of landscaping, but no real use for the volume of compost we generated.
Thankfully now Arlington county takes it in our yard waste bin.
Anonymous wrote:I keep my compost in the freezer until I take outside-- no smell/fruit flies, and helps to break it down. Then "cold" compost in three layer bins. (Didn't know it was called that. My master naturalist friend and I just call it lazy composting!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cold compost in my backyard. I built a simple three section open system with some old wood pallets and strong nails. I use the Grove brand compost bags and the OXO lidded bin to store waste, then take it out every 2-3 days to the pile. I turn the pile when I add new material, and add more browns (shredded paper or dry leaves) if it seems too wet. I never have a problem with dryness in this climate. I take all my leaves to a huge pile and pull from that throughout the year.
We generally compost year round except the deep freeze months and compost egg cartons, coffee filters, egg shells, and all fruit/vegetable waste except onions and citrus.
It’s really a lot easier than I anticipated. And so satisfying! All I had to buy was nails, the bin, bags, and a pitchfork. The pallets were free from the hardware store.
Many of my neighbors use compost crew or compost cab, but complain about the cost and the unreliability.
I wish our trash companies would get their acts together and make composting part of regular waste collection!
why no onions or citrus?
NP. A veteran gardener taught me long ago to avoid hot chili peppers, citrus and onions because the earthworms don’t like them.
I dunno -- I've tossed both citrus and onions into my compost and never had a problem. It's really simple, really. You toss in anything "plant" and it eventually breaks down enough to be mixed into your soil (only non-plant exception for me is eggshells). You can mix, use staged bins, but it really isn't necessary. Just put it in a pile and wait. You can read about optimum carbon/nitrogen mix, but at the end of the day, it isn't necessary.
Anonymous wrote:What will you do with the compost you produce? That was our issue - we have a lot of landscaping, but no real use for the volume of compost we generated.
Thankfully now Arlington county takes it in our yard waste bin.