How to Make Your Own Compost


The steps you take to make your own compost is actually pretty simple. Is it fitting that instead of sending good material to the landfill you have decided to make good use of it yourself.

The less waste that is picked up by garbage trucks means the less trucks that will be running routes so composting is a great way to save gasoline.

First you will want to pick an out of the way spot. Compost does not smell but it can be a bit unsightly. You can use one of those fancy store bought tumblers but it is not necessary to produce compost.

The second thing you will need is good aeration. Air is the secret ingredient the more the material receives the faster it will break down. As I already said you can use a tumbler, crank it around once a day and your done.

You want to make a pile on the ground that is fine. Add a layer of green material then a layer of brown material then something really thick and porous like straw, hay or really thick cardboard. Imagine a compost lasagna.

Okay now “where cooking with gas” as my uncle would say. Which brings us to the third thing we need which is time. Now if your in a hurry you can use a tumbler but even the fastest tumbler takes about 6-8 weeks. A pile on the ground will work just fine but it needs to be turned every now and then.

How often you ask? well that depends on how fast you want compost. The more air it receives in the pile the faster it will compost. Just use a shovel or a pitch fork and turn it every so often and you will make your own compost in no time.

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Posted on April 29th, 2010 by Kitchen Compost and filed under compost - post | No Comments »

Kitchen Compost Bin – The Three Top Ways To Remove Fruit Flies Within Your Home


More and more people are focused on the natural environment. Probably the easiest things we can do to be more green is to compost food waste, provided you have access to a backyard. Composting helps to lessen your contribution to the waste stream, and as an additional side benefit, you wind up with a highly nutritious land amendment, compost. But gathering your kitchen scraps can result in an unwanted side effect: breeding fruit flies. There are a few easy steps anyone can do to prevent those flies from breeding on your kitchen scraps.

The next 3 tips should help you keep your fruit fly difficulty under control. If you are still having problems, you might want to acquire a cheap fruit fly trap.

Use a compost container along with a lid. There are loads of different types of things you can employ to gather your vegetable peels plus fruit skins. Many people make use of an old bowl. But fruit flies breed on the skins and peels of vegetables and fruits. While fruit flies may still breed in the container, they will not be in the air around your kitchen.

Empty your kitchen compost pail regularly. When fruit flies breed on the skins and peels of your fruits and vegetables, it is important to get rid of the decaying waste from your house in a timely manner. This means getting in the habit of taking your compost outside frequently. Try never to let it go more than 3 days.

Keep scraps in the fridge. If you are not going to take your compost out regularly, you may want to think about keeping your compost scraps in the fridge. The cold will slow down the development of the fruit flies. Just make certain to mark the scraps!

Acquire a kitchen compost bin. If you would like to obtain a kitchen compost bin or obtain additional info regarding other compost bins as well as composting recommendations, visit compostbinsforsale.com

Click here for the kitchen compost bin

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Posted on April 8th, 2010 by Graham Allmanson and filed under Compost | No Comments »

How much compost capacity would I need if I want to to heat a 3-bedroom house with it?


I like the idea of capturing heat from compost for heating purposes. Apparently, it gets hot enough for it. But how big a container of compost will be required to keep a house warm in a climate like, say, that of Oregon?

i’m guessing that you won’t be able to do it.
consider that your furnace generates heat in the vicinity of several hundred degrees.
and stays lit for a while.

a compost heap does get warm, but not nearly as much.
it stays warm because it insulates itself, not because it’s generating a large amount of energy.

if you were to take heat out, you’d cool the pile, which would reduce the temperature, which would slow down the reaction quite a bit.

it’s not that it’s impossible, but you would need a very large pile so that no matter how much heat you took out, it wouldn’t significantly cool the pile. Your not going to get enough in any compost container that i’ve ever seen.

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Posted on April 3rd, 2010 by Kitchen Compost and filed under kitchen compost | 4 Comments »

How do I seperate my good compost from that which is still composting?

I have a compost bin that I am constantly adding to. I also constantly turn it. But that gives me the problem that I cannot use the good compost since it has the yet to be composted stuff in it. What do I do? Suggestion?

You make a sieve or screen and separate it. http://www.nifty-stuff.com/compost-sifter-screen-sieve.php

Go to the hardware store and find their widest hole wire mesh…….not chicken wire. Make a frame and stable the mesh to the frame and go for it. http://www.instructables.com/id/Compost-Screen/

This video is clever. Another way is to build a bigger sieve and set it on an angle……support it of course. And then toss the compost against the sieve, the finer stull will fall through and larger stuff that needs to compost more, falls straight down.

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Posted on April 2nd, 2010 by Kitchen Compost and filed under kitchen compost | 3 Comments »
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