I decided to dump all my left over non-meat related meal leftovers in a covered barrel, here in zone 5 the ground is frozen, you know, to save it for next spring. Is there any problems or enhancements I should know about?
Iterations are fine, we don't have to be perfect
My 2nd Location:Florida HardinessZone:10 AHS:10 GDD:8500 Rainfall:2in/mth winter, 8in/mth summer, Soil:Sand pH8 Flat
Rick is there not enough to start a compost heap? I don't know why but every winter I end up with a deep freeze of frozen crap that I thought was food. It's a pain getting the tempurature up to 110f in 4-6 days if you wanna go intensive, but it melts and heats up just dandy being all extra broken down from defrosting. Soo many balls of frozen cabbage and strange dead body's of things like the hawk that got electrocuted, or a mountain of frozen failed to incubate eggs.
Worms provide one of the finest fertilizers known to man...as well as 'worm tea'.
Worms are also possibly the easiest 'livestock' you can raise: no fencing, predator worries, etc.
For the cold northern winters, they provide an 'in house' solution to kitchen waste + composting.
Once you get started, you'll wish you had more 'waste' to get rid of.
Saybian Morgan wrote:Rick is there not enough to start a compost heap? I don't know why but every winter I end up with a deep freeze of frozen crap that I thought was food. It's a pain getting the tempurature up to 110f in 4-6 days if you wanna go intensive, but it melts and heats up just dandy being all extra broken down from defrosting. Soo many balls of frozen cabbage and strange dead body's of things like the hawk that got electrocuted, or a mountain of frozen failed to incubate eggs.
I think so, but then I am concerned about attracting rodents and such.
Soaking up information.
S Bengi
pollinator
Posts: 3827
Location: Massachusetts, Zone:6/7 AHS:4 GDD:3000 Rainfall:48in even Soil:SandyLoam pH6 Flat
worm composting has 1000x the diversity in good oxygen loving microbes(think worm tea), whereas hot composting only has two types of bacteria(anarobic) and they are only found in the soil at low levels.
Iterations are fine, we don't have to be perfect
My 2nd Location:Florida HardinessZone:10 AHS:10 GDD:8500 Rainfall:2in/mth winter, 8in/mth summer, Soil:Sand pH8 Flat
S Bengi wrote:worm composting has 1000x the diversity in good oxygen loving microbes(think worm tea), whereas hot composting only has two types of bacteria(anarobic) and they are only found in the soil at low levels.
Aha! I have learned about anaerobic digestors in relationship to cow manure (I know how to build one even, but haven't). Thank you for the comparison, makes the decision to get some worms very easy!
Soaking up information.
The longest recorded flight time of a chicken is 13 seconds. But that was done without this tiny ad: