Hmmm... interesting replies!
AND... if anyone reading this actually uses a shredder that handles garden waste, more green tough and fibrous than dry, please chime in with a make and model! Mega bonus points if it costs less than $1000 and is smallish and portable!
The actual model we are considering at the moment is a (link in Spanish but you can probably understand the tech specs down below)
Garland 790G which looks a lot like a Mighty Mac model I'm pretty confident would work for us (the SC800) and from what little info I can find in the tech specs, it seems like it may have a hammermill with free-swinging hammers. That's what I've been told (by a Mighty Mac salesman) I need, though I'm pretty sketchy on the free-swinging hammer bit, not being an expert in hammermills. Yet.
Roberto, I love your idea of a mass bike-powered flywheel powering a DIY hammermill! That is not a short-term solution for us but it is a great long-term goal -- maybe we could pull it off around here! We've got lots of bike fanatics, mechanical engineers and welding and boilermaking shops! Thanks for a real
permie permie solution! By the way, being in Europe we are on 230V, the equivalent in NA of plugging into the electric dryer outlet, but still, I'm not seeing electric models advertised even here that would work.
Kevin, thanks for the suggestion of an agricultural waste shredder, that gives me another search term to use! These Indian models could no doubt do the job, but are still too big for us. Our entire community garden with 70+ plots fits on well under 1/2 an acre, about 2000m2 if you throw in a lot of the common areas. We have very, very limited storage space, so it needs to be smallish. Also our budget is really around $700-800. We might pay more if there's no way to do the job done otherwise, but that's our limit now... should've made that clear from the outset!
André -- would a chaff cutter necessarily handle wet stuff and tough/stringy stuff like old pepper plants and cabbage stems, etc? Anyway, thanks for the warning on the shipping cost.
Michael... right, very timely warning! We're building our next hot compost pile this coming Saturday the 22nd, and you've reminded me we need to order up a trailerload of cow manure and maybe a dozen bails of hay from the farmer up the road! With maybe 200 people pitching things into our compostables pile, there is no practical way we can keep all the unwanted things out (like rose prunings or what have you), we just need to deal quickly and effectively with whatever's in the pile. (Of course we remove anything stupid like plastic vine trellising, but everything else goes straight in as it's our only waste outlet.) Town hall here supplied the toilets already and they're the plain old flush kind, and I think there might be a bit of political flack at the thought of
humanure in our veggie gardens, so I can't see a sawdust toilet on the horizon here any time soon. Ideally, we'd like to get our composting system efficient
enough to be on a 4- or 5-month cycle, so October's pile is ready by the beginning of April and November's by the beginning of May. We don't have too much space to keep it around. That's another reason we want to shred, as well as turning a couple of times.
QUESTION OF THE DAY: Any good experiences with a garden waste shredder out there? Which one? (Mostly for annual plants, not leaves, grass, branches or woody stuff)