Home Composting
There are plenty of things in your kitchen that can be used for composting. Leftover foods and other edible materials from the kitchen contain plenty of nutrients that are essential for growing plants in your home garden. To create your own garden soil using your kitchen leftovers, you should have good bin and a proven formula for mixing compost.
It is very important to have a reliable composting bin especially if you want to compost indoors. Make no mistakes about it, leftover foods can emit an awful smell after being kept for a few days so if you do not want your home to stink, use a sealed composting bin. A good recycling bin with a cover is very important to prevent the stinky smell of rotting garbage from invading your home and to deter rodents and insects from feasting on your pile of kitchen waste. No, you need not buy an expensive recycling bin for your home composting project. There are plenty of cheap recycling bins in the market and most of these bins are quite reliable.
Once you have a reliable recycle bin, start filling your bin with kitchen waste. For best results, you should vary the composition of your bin and include both green and brown stuff from your kitchen. Remember that what you put inside the bin is the same kind of materials that will turn into garden soil so make sure that you put green kitchen waste including leftover vegetables, fruits, coffee grounds, leftover tea leaves and other nitrogen rich waste into your bin.
When it comes to brown waste, be sure to add your leftover cereals, stale bread, cardboard and cardboard tubes into your home composting bin. As for waste paper towels, paper bags and eggshells, these things may be used in moderation. Just make sure that you do not use too much of these things in your compost. Eggshells, paper towels and brown bags do not decompose as fast as kitchen leftovers. Once your bin is filled, seal it to keep insects and rodents out.
Your kitchen waste will decompose faster if you turn it over every two weeks. When turning over the contents of your bin, make sure that you wear protective gloves and mask. Note that some types of kitchen leftovers rot slowly and they tend to emit foul smell while rotting so make sure that you cover your nose and mouth when you turn the pile. Remember that you are dealing with smelly garbage here so protect yourself from the stink.
Friday, 2 April 2010
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