Hi there!
After listening to Hellen Atthowe talk about how she feeds the soil nowadays, I'm going to try a new composting method.
I am not heading for a sanitized, perfectly safe
compost, but looking for the kind of substrate that mimicks how organic matter is found in nature.
Here is what I'm going to do.
+ Two to three bins, numbered #1 #2 #3. (I actually have one bin and two bathtubs).
+ I want to obtain a substrate that has 80% finished compost, 15% in the process of composting and 5% fresh. This substrate
should smell good and be just slightly hotter than the environment.
+ I mix kitchen scraps with
cardboard and a little bit of mineral dirt in a
bucket, because that's what I'm dealing with, but any other mixes that do not produce bad smells can be used (use proper
carbon to nitrogen ratio). Then pour the bucket into bin #1.
+ Whenever I pour a bucket of ingredients in a bin (twice a week), I mix it with the aerator tool, and check that the humidity stays between 30 and 60%, watering if needed.
+ When a bin is full, I take a bucket of composted ingredients out. If it smells nice and it is not hot, I can use it directly*. Otherwise, I pour the bucket with the half baked ingredients into the next bin. Rinse and repeat.
+ The first bin is critical, it has a higher quantity of fresh ingredients, meaning that the risk of rotting is higher. It needs to be aerated properly.
Disadvantages:
It's more work!
It's cold compost that may contain weed seeds and pathogens.
It's not a homogeneous product, it contains a little bit of trash.
Advantages:
Less rotting risk.
Rather easy to do.
Plants like eating in small quantities.
(*) This product is better used as potting soil with a pregerminating process.
So far, bin #1 is doing well, and I am starting to fill bin #2 (bathtube in my case).