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Composting tips
There are lots of innovative things you can do to help reduce your
rubbish - check out some of the tips below to get started.
Tips about what can and can't be composted:
- Shredded paper can be composted.
- Paper can't be recycled if it's contaminated with food, but it
can be composted. Next time you have pizza, don't dump the boxes in
the rubbish bin - soak the box, break it into pieces and add it to
your compost bin instead.
- Kids' lunches can be wrapped in paper instead of cling wrap. The
used paper can be put in the compost.
- Vacuum cleaner bags can be emptied onto the compost heap.
- Compostable kitty litter takes longer to break down than regular
compost. Put the kitty litter into a separate compost bin and add
an equal amount of soil every time you add more.
- If the prunings from plants and shrubs are small enough they can
be run over with the lawn mower and put on the compost heap.
- Don't compost pumpkin seeds. They often don't work very well in
the compost - too hard for worms and they sprout - but they can be
cleaned off and saved for salads and lunches. If they are not to your
taste, they can be donated to the local foodbank.
Tips about worm farms:
- For people who don’t have enough garden waste to make their
composting bin work effectively, a worm farm may be a better option.
- Worm farms take very little space and maintenance, and are a great
way to get rid of most compostable food scraps. The 'juice' is really
powerful as a fertiliser.
General composting tips:
- Buy two bins for the kitchen: one for rubbish, the other for compost.
This will remove the need to separate compostable waste from non-compostable
waste later on.
- A compost bucket can get messy and smelly. An easy way to keep a
bucket clean is to put water in the bucket before adding scraps. (The
water can be emptied on to pot plants.)
- If you have too much material for your compost bin, stick it in
a black plastic household rubbish bag (thin-walled), loosely twist
off the opening, and store it beside the compost bin. A few weeks
later, the volume of material in the bag will have reduced and you
should find worms have made their way in to the bag and started breaking
the waste down. The waste can be added to the compost bin when there
is room.
- You can compost directly into the garden itself. The vegetables
will love you for it, and the compost will attract the worms to that
area and the soil benefits directly.
- If your compost bin starts to smell offensively give it a turn -
odour can be a sign of a lack of aeration.
- Contribute your organic matter to a neighbour’s compost if
you don’t have one, or invest in a worm farm.
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