[Ag-eq] Compost

Michelle Creedy michelle.creedy at gmail.com
Wed Mar 27 14:03:54 UTC 2013


Tracy, thanks for all the tips.

Michelle


-----Original Message-----
From: Ag-eq [mailto:ag-eq-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Tracy Carcione
Sent: Wednesday, March 27, 2013 5:08 AM
To: Agricultural and Equestrean Division List
Subject: [Ag-eq] Compost

You guys are so lucky to have manure!
There's a technique where you put fresh manure under some soil under a cold
frame, and the composting manure heats everything up so you can grow things
very early.  I'd love to try it, but I don't have any manure, and I'm not
sure how my neighbors would feel about it, either.
When I've heard the technique discussed, no one mentioned grass coming up,
though.

Michelle, I've heard about apartment dwellers using a worm bin for
composting.  I think most people in New York City who want to compost save
up their kitchen scraps and such and take it over to a community garden once
a week or so.

I'm kind of a compulsive composter.  I put in kitchen waste, (anything
vegetable, and eggshells), plus leaves, garden debris, sometimes paper,
weeds that haven't gone to seed... I used to put in small branches and
sticks, but not any more--they don't break down so well.
When I first started, I made a pile and surrounded it with a 4-sided cage of
hardware cloth to keep it confined a bit.  But that started attracting
rodents, so I bought a big bin with a rodent screen in the bottom.  That
worked well for years, but, since I keep adding stuff at the top, all the
compost was at the bottom, and getting it out is something of a chore.  So,
last fall, I bought a set of compost tumblers.  It's 2 bins hanging on a
stand, with an axle running through the bins.  When one bin is full, I put
on the lid marked Finish, and start putting new stuff into the bin marked
Start.  Every couple days, I give the bin a push to flip it over a few times
and mix it up.  It's kinda fun, and easier than turning it with a fork. 
Guess I'm lazy.
My big bin has water holes all over, so it got plenty of water just from
rain.  The new bins only have small holes, so I have to remember to add
water every few days.
When the compost is ready, one flips the bin over and out comes the compost.

I've only done it once so far, and it wasn't quite that easy, but it was
definitely easier than digging it out of the old bin.
I used to put the finished compost into old bags I'd saved, like mulch or
soil bags, but they tend to break down, and weeds try to get in, too.  So
last fall I put a plastic garbage barrel by the compost bins, and started
putting the finished stuff in there.  That seems to be working well.
I made all these changes in the fall, and winter is not primo composting
time, so I'm interested to see how things work, once it finally gets warm
and the compost should really start cooking.
Meantime, I have plenty in my barrel to start spreading over my garden.
Tracy


_______________________________________________
Ag-eq mailing list
Ag-eq at nfbnet.org
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/ag-eq_nfbnet.org
To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for Ag-eq:
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/ag-eq_nfbnet.org/michelle.creedy%40gmail.c
om





More information about the AG-EQ mailing list