so, living at the top of a hill in central California, I need a lot of good
compost.
What I do now is 4 or 5 3x3x3ft compost piles with layers of leaves and grasses combined with scrounged aged goat and
chicken manure, and I add my own 'new' (1-3)
chicken coop cleanings. I wet it down in summer with grey
water as needed. I probably only flip - do a real stir - once a month at best. Then I sift with a chicken wire home built sieve.
I'm interested in getting into worms to improve the compost even more, especially with this 'worm tea' I hear so much about. Also, the older I get, the more I want to work on having worms do the work rather than my back and pitchfork.
So, looking for experienced advice on these simple questions:
type of food/fill:
we don't create much kitchen waste, and that still goes to the
chickens anyway. I hear so much about people using paper and
cardboard, and that does flow in, but can I:
- use a majority of leaves and grass?
- have them work through my sifted compost, with it's broken down state, including all the goat and chicken manure?
about size:
I've got plenty of space, so I don't need some small, cute, stacking thing if I can go bigger... but I don't want to start big and realize there's problems.
- instead of a stacking sort of design, I'm thinking about maybe a stock tank divided in half by worm-passable screen. Then fill one side with food and worms, wait, then when it looks mostly done, add food to the other side, let them migrate, then gather the castings from the done side.
- or maybe the same idea, but only a 50gal barrel cut in half the long way?
thanks for your time,
Tys