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Gardening Forum   ORGANIC GARDENING FORUMS  Composting Forum

Comment please on my plan of action




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24 posts • Page 1 of 2 • 1, 2

Comment please on my plan of action

Fri May 06, 2011 1:43 pm

Hi everyone,

As I age I listen more. So last Fall I built three bins. Each three feet by three feet by three feet tall. Pressure treated slats. I have millions of leaves stockpiled and get at least a gallon of kitchen scraps/coffee grinds each week. I add the scraps and cover with leaves weekly. I add ten gallons of water each week except in the winter. Bins are in the shade. Bin number one is full since last December. Once bin two is filled I'll transfer bin one to bin three, thus turning it. That's my current plan. Anything I should do differently?

Thanks everyone in advance.
wsommariva
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Fri May 06, 2011 2:08 pm

I would add some garden soil on top the leaves once a week. I would also sprinkle some nitrogen holding mix like blood mill or cottonseed meal on the leaves when you add the dirt.! You have a nice set up and should have alot of worms. Some manure would not hurt! Some wood ashes if you have any! Asd long as the leaves do not get to soggy you are in good shape!That is what I would do!
I enjoy fishing ,gardening and a solar greenhouse! carpet installation repair and sales for over 45 years! I am the inventor of the Bobber With A Brain - Fishing Bobber!
Bobberman
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Fri May 06, 2011 2:14 pm

Thanks for the input. Garden soil is hard to come by. I do add it when I can. How about sheep manure? I can get that cheap. And I'll add either the blood mill or cottonseed meal, whichever I can find.
wsommariva
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Fri May 06, 2011 2:18 pm

Sheep manure is great and you will not need the blood meal or cottonseed mill if you add the manure! What is the manure mixed with straw or sawdust! Straw is excellent also!
I enjoy fishing ,gardening and a solar greenhouse! carpet installation repair and sales for over 45 years! I am the inventor of the Bobber With A Brain - Fishing Bobber!
Bobberman
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Fri May 06, 2011 2:26 pm

I don't know what it's mixed with, never bought it before. I'll pick some up tomorrow. How much should I add per week?
wsommariva
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Fri May 06, 2011 2:41 pm

Add it when you add the stuff from the house scraps. Just mix them together and they will decay faster and maybe add worms! The sheep manure will also be great in the garden! or mixed in raised bed and will make bad soil much better! I am not sure but sheep wool is also good for a compost does anyone here know? Every state has something in abundance that is cheap in that area that makes great compost! By products of some factories are great and cheap in certain area so look around for that compost gold!
I enjoy fishing ,gardening and a solar greenhouse! carpet installation repair and sales for over 45 years! I am the inventor of the Bobber With A Brain - Fishing Bobber!
Bobberman
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Fri May 06, 2011 2:50 pm

Thank you very much. The sheep farm will be fun for the whole family. I'll also use the sheep manure instead of Planttone which is a bit pricey.
wsommariva
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Fri May 06, 2011 3:50 pm

Sounds like a great, well thought out plan.

I can smell that good "earthy" black gold from here! :D
Zone 4a.
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Halfway
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Fri May 06, 2011 3:52 pm

Thanks for the nice comment. Smells good indeed.
wsommariva
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Fri May 06, 2011 4:52 pm

If you can get fresh manure you will have plenty of nitrogen to speed the decomposition of your leaves. Therefore the blood meal and cottonseed meal would not be essential, although there is nothing wrong with adding it. I tend to avoid paying for anything that goes into the compost, because in my mind it is a way to make a nutrient-rich soil amendment from wastes. Of course it's up to you.

How is the moisture content when you turn it or dig down into it? 10 gal. seems like a lot but you have to be the judge. It should be damp but not dripping wet. Observe and adjust.

Soil is also optional, if your piles are on the ground you will get plenty of microbes in the piles. Also, half-composted chunks from the finished pile can be tossed back into Bin 1 to inoculate it.

Finally, with a 3-bin setup the most efficient way is to make a pile in bin 1, turn that into #2 and make a new batch in #1, so you always have finished compost in #3 and a fresh pile being added to in #1. Once you get that rolling you will like it.

Good luck!
Tox
toxcrusadr
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Fri May 06, 2011 5:26 pm

Moisture is good with the ten gallons that goes into the bins that are close to full. I think that the sheep manure will cost me maybe $4 a month; and it will be a nice trip to the farm.

Since this is my first year I need to figure out a good system. Currently I build my pile weekly with kitchen scraps, (will start manure) and then the leaves. I think it will take six months to fill a bin.

Last Fall I cheated. I filled a bin with leaves and added fertilizer for nitrogen. That bin is about six months old and I'll turn it into a free bin soon. I'm very excited as my current soil is really poor.
wsommariva
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Fri May 06, 2011 6:39 pm

I am new to composting but I thought the bins were supposed to be in the sun so it warms up faster...?
SOB
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Fri May 06, 2011 6:51 pm

Not allowed by wife. Must be out of site.
wsommariva
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Fri May 06, 2011 7:10 pm

A compost will heat up anywhere even in a cave! They grow mushrooms in mines with a compost mix that heats up some but ha slost most of its heat from the manure they use!
I enjoy fishing ,gardening and a solar greenhouse! carpet installation repair and sales for over 45 years! I am the inventor of the Bobber With A Brain - Fishing Bobber!
Bobberman
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Sat May 07, 2011 10:26 am

I too am a big fan of the three-bin composting setup. For many years I used tumblers and found the results acceptable but not great. About 8 years ago I went to the bin system. My bins are 4 x 4 and I pile the initial one to about 5 feet. It's a considerable chore to turn so I use a compost aerator to aerate the most active pile while it's still growing and use pipes to occasionally introduce rain water. It's amazing how long the pile stays hot. When it finally loses its heat, the contents of each bin get moved along, the contents of number three are spread or given away, number two to three to finish, number one to two to basically free up number one for new stuff. The major problem I have with this arrangement is that some of the compost never finds itself in the middle of the heat core, and therefor not all seeds in it are cooked. Presently in bin three, I have squash and cuke volunteers growing from last year's additions. Obviously, if diseased plant material from the previous year is added as compostible material, you put yourself at great risk when using the mature compost.
"Good gardeners do not have green thumbs. They have brown knees, soiled hands and big hearts."
vermontkingdom
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Please Share. Thank you!

 
 
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