Compost brands, the good, the bad and absolute ****

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Electric_Andy

Heavy Metal Fan
Location
Plymouth
Ive become quite a womble as regards to collecting anything compostable :laugh: i walk my local beach most days and gather seaweed, when the council workers cut the grass i rake it up and layer it between the seaweed :okay: also leaves in autumn, mainly from cherry trees. My 'garden' was a gravel desert and now its thriving with fruit trees and bushes, roses, shrubs and flowers. ^_^

That sounds good. Is manure good for composting? Sadly I don't live on a farm anymore but I'm thinking of throwing the dog poo in ours!
 

annedonnelly

Girl from the North Country
Location
Canonbie
I had a wormery but I've lost the worms over the winter. Not sure if they got too cold or I cut back on the feeding too much. I need to get it set up again.

I use bokashi composting for food waste - you can include cooked food but I rarely have any cooked waste so it's mainly ends of veg, fruit peel, tea leaves, etc. It sort of pickles the waste and then it goes into the compost bin.
 

siadwell

Guru
Location
Surrey
That sounds good. Is manure good for composting? Sadly I don't live on a farm anymore but I'm thinking of throwing the dog poo in ours!

I think dog and cat poo are best avoided as it can contain eggs and larvae of parasites that are nasty for humans. Also, I've noticed that my dog's poos tend to sort of fossilize rather than decompose if they are inadvertently left on the borders.
 
OP
OP
Chief Broom

Chief Broom

Veteran
That sounds good. Is manure good for composting? Sadly I don't live on a farm anymore but I'm thinking of throwing the dog poo in ours!
Definitely no to dog pooh! Manure is very good especially when mixed with leaves/grass etc Well rotted horse manure is best imo, find a local supplier and if its fresh make sure its gets nice and hot when composting to kill any weed seeds. Roses especially like a mulch of well rotted manure. :okay:
 

Jameshow

Guru
Definitely no to dog pooh! Manure is very good especially when mixed with leaves/grass etc Well rotted horse manure is best imo, find a local supplier and if its fresh make sure its gets nice and hot when composting to kill any weed seeds. Roses especially like a mulch of well rotted manure. :okay:

Any stables will readily give you some...
 

tom73

Guru
Location
Yorkshire
I had a wormery but I've lost the worms over the winter. Not sure if they got too cold or I cut back on the feeding too much. I need to get it set up again.

I use bokashi composting for food waste - you can include cooked food but I rarely have any cooked waste so it's mainly ends of veg, fruit peel, tea leaves, etc. It sort of pickles the waste and then it goes into the compost bin.
Worms are great composters they eat though waste like mad, the more waste you add they will breed.
Boksahi composting is pretty good and so easy to do. The liquid diluted can be use as plant feed. Or neat it's a great natural drain cleaner
 

Emanresu

I asked AI to show the 'real' me.
Miracle Grow apparently kills off soil bacteria.

I volunteer at a horticultural charity. They do things differently.

The first approach is no-dig gardening in that you try not to disturb the soil structure so put new lawyers of compost over old. Cardboard is used as weed suppression. The second issue is no chemicals as they try to encourage natural predators through plant choice. They also look for pollinating plants alongside fruit trees such as crab apples (which was something that I hadn't considered). They also pay well over the odds for compost compensating for the boost that chemicals can give - but fade after a while. They get good results but it takes years to get the soil right.
 
I volunteer at a horticultural charity. They do things differently.

The first approach is no-dig gardening in that you try not to disturb the soil structure so put new lawyers of compost over old. Cardboard is used as weed suppression. The second issue is no chemicals as they try to encourage natural predators through plant choice. They also look for pollinating plants alongside fruit trees such as crab apples (which was something that I hadn't considered). They also pay well over the odds for compost compensating for the boost that chemicals can give - but fade after a while. They get good results but it takes years to get the soil right.

My old lawn soil was like concrete. I dug it over and raked it and before I was finished, worms were colonising the broken up ground.
 
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