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DIY: Compost Bin
Jaymi Heimbuch gives a step by step on how to create your own compost bin.
Compost is an ideal addition to any garden, and rather than spending $4 a bag at the store, you can make your own. By composting, you save money, put garden waste to use, recycle paper, and send less kitchen waste to local landfills.
There are two ways to go about composting. If you have the room in your yard, simply start a pile. Or, if you want it contained, use a bin. Here is how you make a bin:
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1. Use an old trash can or large storage container. It needs to be at least 3 cubic feet large so the pile can generate enough heat to compost. Drill holes into the sides and bottom of the bin. Or, if you want to encourage worms, cut out the bottom and place over dirt. Worms help to speed the process, break down larger material, and enrich the compost by leaving castings. |
2. Fill your bin with about 50% dry material and 50% green material. Chop up your garden clippings and plant debris, dry leaves, sawdust, and grass clippings; add kitchen debris like vegetable peels, tea bags, coffee grounds and filters, egg shells, paper wrappers, shredded news paper, cardboard, corn cobs, and dryer lint. You don’t have to fill the bin all at once. You can fill it as you have material. Do not use meats, oils, fats, or any droppings from carnivores. You can use droppings from vegetarian animals like horses, cows and goats.
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3. Moisten the pile with water until it is damp but not soggy, and put the lid over the bin.
4. Turn the material in the bin at least once or twice a week to make sure all the material is thoroughly mixed together. If you have a round garbage can, you can roll it. If you have a square bin, you can open the lid and turn by hand. Make sure the compost stays damp, but not wet or dry to the touch. Add more material as often as you’d like.
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| 5. After about 4 weeks, you can begin to harvest your compost. Use a piece of chicken wire to filer out the compost that is ready. Chop up and replace any material that is still composting. You can place your compost in your garden as topsoil, mix it in to existing dirt for rich vegetable or flower beds, or use as potting soil for indoor plants. |
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This DIY was first published in Girlistic
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