Medicinal herbs, kitchen herbs, perennial edibles and berries: https://mountainherbs.net/ grown in the Blue Mountains, Australia
"Study books and observe nature; if they do not agree, throw away the books." ~ William A. Albrecht
Medicinal herbs, kitchen herbs, perennial edibles and berries: https://mountainherbs.net/ grown in the Blue Mountains, Australia
List of Bryant RedHawk's Epic Soil Series Threads We love visitors, that's why we live in a secluded cabin deep in the woods. "Buzzard's Roost (Asnikiye Heca) Farm." Promoting permaculture to save our planet.
Medicinal herbs, kitchen herbs, perennial edibles and berries: https://mountainherbs.net/ grown in the Blue Mountains, Australia
Whatever it takes to dodge a time clock.
List of Bryant RedHawk's Epic Soil Series Threads We love visitors, that's why we live in a secluded cabin deep in the woods. "Buzzard's Roost (Asnikiye Heca) Farm." Promoting permaculture to save our planet.
Elizabeth Geller wrote:I can’t help but notice that nobody that responded to this thread has actually used one of these types of bins!
I know it’s an older thread, but I hate to think that someone might run across it and pass on buying an excellent tool that would be perfect for their particular situation because of the comments here.
Based on 8+ years of experience with Algreen SoilSavers, the answer to the OP’s question is yes, you can make great compost with a plastic bin unit.
I’d be happy to share more information and address some misconceptions if anybody is interested.
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Works at a residential alternative high school in the Himalayas SECMOL.org . "Back home" is Cape Cod, E Coast USA.
Diane Kistner wrote:Now I'm totally confused about what I need to get in the way of a composter. I have little dogs who love nothing more than rolling around in chicken litter and stinky kitchen scraps. Even when I dump it into the middle of big brush piles, they manage to climb down in between the branches and perfume themselves. Then they are determined to sleep with me!
What I want is something to dump kitchen scraps and chicken litter (mostly pine shavings, sometimes leaves) into and just leave it, no turning, not expecting any compost to come back out anytime soon but having a place to put it where it can rot down and the dogs can't get into it. I was looking at those black free-standing bins with the open bottom, but then I read some reviews that said the squirrels chewed into the plastic. Most of my leaves and branches I just pile on the ground, but I could use some to keep the green stuff from getting too stinky if the pine shavings wouldn't be enough.
What would y'all recommend? Would I be happy with a Soilsaver? How do the squirrels do with those? I've thought about doing a pallet compost bin, but that's larger than I have room for.
List of Bryant RedHawk's Epic Soil Series Threads We love visitors, that's why we live in a secluded cabin deep in the woods. "Buzzard's Roost (Asnikiye Heca) Farm." Promoting permaculture to save our planet.
Bryant RedHawk wrote:
I used a plastic waste bin (garbage can in the USA) buried it a little deeper than half way, cut out the bottom and planted it lid up.
List of Bryant RedHawk's Epic Soil Series Threads We love visitors, that's why we live in a secluded cabin deep in the woods. "Buzzard's Roost (Asnikiye Heca) Farm." Promoting permaculture to save our planet.
Weeds are just plants with enough surplus will to live to withstand normal levels of gardening!--Alexandra Petri
Mk Neal wrote:I do similar set-up to what Dr. Redhawk described, but with galvanized steel trashcans. Keeps out any rodents, but lets in worms if you drill holes or pop the bottom off..
List of Bryant RedHawk's Epic Soil Series Threads We love visitors, that's why we live in a secluded cabin deep in the woods. "Buzzard's Roost (Asnikiye Heca) Farm." Promoting permaculture to save our planet.
Angelika Maier wrote:We will be doing a workshop on composting. And I never liked these plastic bins. My gut feeling says that you cannot make decent compost in them because 1) there is not much air flow and 2) they are way too small. Councils like them. What do you think? Does the compost get anaerobic in them? (I find them very ugly too)
Chad Sentman wrote:
This seems like something a sales rep would say.
Diane Kistner wrote:Now I'm totally confused about what I need to get in the way of a composter. I have little dogs who love nothing more than rolling around in chicken litter and stinky kitchen scraps. Even when I dump it into the middle of big brush piles, they manage to climb down in between the branches and perfume themselves. Then they are determined to sleep with me!
What I want is something to dump kitchen scraps and chicken litter (mostly pine shavings, sometimes leaves) into and just leave it, no turning, not expecting any compost to come back out anytime soon but having a place to put it where it can rot down and the dogs can't get into it. I was looking at those black free-standing bins with the open bottom, but then I read some reviews that said the squirrels chewed into the plastic. Most of my leaves and branches I just pile on the ground, but I could use some to keep the green stuff from getting too stinky if the pine shavings wouldn't be enough.
What would y'all recommend? Would I be happy with a Soilsaver? How do the squirrels do with those? I've thought about doing a pallet compost bin, but that's larger than I have room for.
At my age, Happy Hour is a nap.
Bryant RedHawk wrote:hau Diane, If you have a small space where you can dig a hole you can use an in-ground composter setup. I used a plastic waste bin (garbage can in the USA) buried it a little deeper than half way, cut out the bottom and planted it lid up.
Now I can simply toss anything I want to compost into this bin, put the lid on and wait until I have something else to add to it. I never turn never have to remove anything but, if I wanted to get the compost from this bin all I'd need would be a dog poop picker upper and a bucket to drop my compost in after I grabbed a scoop full. Worms will do a good job of moving the decomposed goodies under ground for you. (my old one that was used for 20 years, had quite a large circle of superior soil around it starting at 1 year and the circle just kept growing larger every year after that.
Redhawk
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