The recent 70s and 80s started the bins cooking so well, I have ashes where there was celery trimmings and coffee grounds. It is still cooking, but the ashes really showed how hot it became.
A good turn and soaking from the hose along with another couple pounds of grounds will have this really roasting.
Ahhh springtime!
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That's a bit hot, dontcha think?
Actually you may have some kind of fungus going there, it's said the ashy looking residue is actually a fungus and not combustion by-products. Unless it actually spontaneously combusted. There was an incident here just yesterday where a bale of hay caught a farm building on fire.
Actually you may have some kind of fungus going there, it's said the ashy looking residue is actually a fungus and not combustion by-products. Unless it actually spontaneously combusted. There was an incident here just yesterday where a bale of hay caught a farm building on fire.
- swickstrum
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The fungus is a good thing though, isn't it? I've always thought that the white stuff was ashes too. I was just waiting to see smoke signals from my compost pile before I put out the fire...toxcrusadr wrote:That's a bit hot, dontcha think?
Actually you may have some kind of fungus going there, it's said the ashy looking residue is actually a fungus and not combustion by-products. Unless it actually spontaneously combusted. There was an incident here just yesterday where a bale of hay caught a farm building on fire.