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Composting in Hullavington |
| Full of the Joys of Spring. |
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A song of praise for compost from your compost ambassador. I’m writing this in mid March having just spent a fantastic afternoon giving the lawn its first mo w
and indulging the irresistible urge to decant last year’s compost. The
verdict… my 330 litre bin, started last April, has completely rotted down to
sweet-smelling, crumbly compost, writhing with wonderful worms, leaving
almost no evidence of all the cardboard, veg etable
waste, and grass cuttings that have gone to make it up. All that was to be
found was the centre of corn on the cob, which the worms love but which
takes a while to rot down, a few woody bits of hedge cuttings, and a few
strips of that clear stuff at the front of envelopes which must have gone
through our shredder. It was easy enough to pick that out, and the paper
part had completely vanished. As I distributed my new compost, I was
serenaded by the local dunnock and robin. (Don’t forget, if you’re spreading
home-made compost around the garden you will need to mix it with soil. It’s
rich stuff!)Yep, I’ve saved some cash. I’ve about 200 litres of free compost. I’ve also saved myself a few trips to the recycling centre, (think of all that petrol), and the local birdlife is happy too. It’s really satisfying to find that, by getting the mix of green and woody/cardboardy things right, compost making speeds up and is ready when you need it. Good news for those of you who would like to start composting now, or expand your compost heaps. There is a new offer, limited to three bins per household (Wiltshire residents only). * The COMPOST CONVERTER 330 litre costs just £5 * The SOIL SAVER 600 litre is just £15 * The KOMP 1050 litre is £30. If you would like one of these call 0845 073 2002. If you would like more details about the bins, general information about composting, or to share your composting successes or disasters, please do contact me. Happy composting. Maggie Dyson 837358. |
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Early in 2004 I applied to be a Compost Ambassador, and was trained by Wiltshire Wildlife Trust. I’ve been interested in compost since 1971 and have had a compost heap in each of the eight places where I have lived since then. I’m naturally lazy, so a compost heap seems a good way of disposing of grass cuttings and vegetable waste which can then be added to the soil. Of course, there is another side to composting. We all pay for the use of landfill sites one way or the other, so there is huge logic to positive recycling at home. A Free Lunch for your Garden!Why Compost? Compost is nature’s way of recycling. There is a cost to us all in throwing away more and more, and a limit to the amount of our environment we want to destroy by covering it with landfill sites. Composting also helps to save our peat bogs, (home to rare and endangered wildlife) by avoiding commercial peat-based composts. What’s in composting for you?
If you already make and use compost you will know how simple it is to make, and all the benefits you gain, especially on our free-draining soil. Compost retains moisture and restores freely available nutrients to the soil. Look out for offering huge discounts on ready –made compost bins, although improvised ones work just as well.
More than half of everything we throw away can be composted.In the spring you can become a green gardener. When you use home-made compost as a soil improver it needs to be mixed with soil. Or you can use it as a mulch. When mixed to make a potting compost it can be used as a peat substitute, to avoid depleting peat bogs, which take thousands of years to form. Apparently, 90% of our British peat–bogs are already destroyed, and now Europe’s peat is being plundered. I guess most of us will find it difficult to avoid peat-based composts completely, but I’m planning to get started now. When we get to the grass-cutting season keep the clippings where they can be useful. In your compost heap. We don’t want more land-fill sites! The problem with composting grass cuttings is that you need to mix them with drier material so that they don’t turn into a soggy mess. Why not try collecting all those bits of cardboard, egg boxes, loo roll middles, paper shreddings and junk mail to alternate layers of grass with dry materials, and generate healthy compost to feed the garden?
WHAT SHALL WE DO WITH THE PLASTIC DUSTBIN? If you’re not already converted to composting, why not cut a few holes in the bottom of your old dustbin to let the worms in and out? A few rough circles about 2 inches in diameter should do the trick! Stand your new compost bin on soil or grass, bung in a mixture of moist plant material and dry fibrous material or crunched cardboard, and stand back and let nature get on with the work of making compost for you. (My prototype works brilliantly. Worms love it!) Birds, bats and other wildlife.Robins love me when I spread my fresh compost over the soil. There are always plenty of startled worms trying to wriggle out of the light. They have been doing their bit to break down the vegetation in the bin and now they will get to work mixing and aerating the soil in the garden. In summer, little fruit flies hover in the warm air over the heap and attract bats to our garden as well as insect-loving birds, which can while away their idle moments by stripping aphids from our treasured plants. How to get in touch with your compost ambassador. If you have never composted before, contact me for a free leaflet, or advice to get you started. Ring 837358, email maggie.dyson@btinternet.com , or call in at the ‘Compost Embassy,’ @ 67 The Street. (opposite The Star) with any composting queries. Remember, you don't have to work at compostingIt happens naturally.
The secret of compost?Get started. Every little bit of vegetation composted makes a difference. It ’s not just muck and magic, it ’s many a mickle makes a muckle. Please do keep asking composting questions. I have amassed quite a repertoire of composting literature, so as I don’t know all the answers I can look them up. Do send photos of your bins to the village website. It would be lovely to see what others are doing. These worms have enjoyed living in my ‘old dustbin’ compost heap. They like to congregate in the space round the lid. Here they are happily chomping up old leaves and the odd windfall Bramley. Healthy worms performing a Mavis Dance in my compost bin. |