How to Make Compost
Cold Compost
Try,
if possible, to collect enough compost materials to make a layer of
at least 30cm or more in the compost bin. Weed the garden, mow the
lawn, empty the kitchen bucket! Mix in some straw, woody prunings,
scrunched up cardboard packaging eg cereal boxes – this helps create
air spaces within the heap. It may help if you place a few woody
plant stems or small twigs on the bottom first as this will improve
the air circulation and drainage.
Continue to fill the container as and when you have ingredients. If
most of what you compost is kitchen waste, mix it with egg boxes,
toilet roll middles and similar household paper and cardboard
products to create a better balance.
When the container is full - which it may never be as the contents
will sink as it composts - or when you decide to, stop adding any
more. Then either just leave it to finish composting (which could
take up to a year) or go to Step 4.
Remove the container from the material, or the material from the
container – whichever you find easiest. If the lower layers have
composted, use this on the garden. Mix everything else together
well. Add water if it is dry, or add dry material if it is soggy.
Replace in the bin and leave to mature.
Hot Compost
Gather enough material to fill your compost container at one go.
Some of this may have been stored in a cool heap and have started to
rot slightly. Make sure you have a mixture of soft and tough
materials.
Chop up tough items using shears, a sharp spade (lay items out on
soil or grass to avoid jarring) or a shredder.
Mix ingredients together as much as possible before adding to the
container. In particular, mix items, such as grass mowings and any
shredded paper, which tend to settle and exclude air, with more open
items that tend to dry out. Fill the container as above, watering as
you go.
Give the heap a good mixWithin a few days, the heap is likely to get
hot to the touch. When it begins to cool down, or a week or two
later, turn the heap. Remove everything from the container or lift
the container off and mix it all up, trying to get the outside to
the inside. Add water if it is dry, or dry material if it is soggy.
Replace in the bin.
The heap may well heat up again; the new supply of air you have
mixed in allows the fast acting aerobic microbes, ie those that need
oxygen, to continue with their work. Step 4 can be repeated several
more times if you have the energy, but the heating will be less and
less. When it no longer heats up again, leave it undisturbed to
finish composting.
A hybrid route
There’s nothing wrong with doing a bit of both. Fill your heap as
you create waste (as for the cool method), then turn it when you
have time. This will help it heat up. You can turn it as much or as
rarely as you please – the more often you turn the heap, the quicker
your compost will be ready.
When is it ready?
Compost can be made in as little as six to eight weeks, or, more
usually, it can take a year or more. In general, the more effort you
put in, the quicker you will get compost.
When the ingredients you have put in your container have turned into
a dark brown, earthy smelling material, the composting process is
complete. It is then best left for a month or two to 'mature' before
it is used. Don't worry if your compost is not fine and crumbly.
Even if it is lumpy, sticky or stringy, with bits of twig and
eggshell still obvious, it is quite usable. It can be sieved before
using if you prefer. Any large bits can be added back into your new
compost heap.
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