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Composting
6 months ago  ::  Dec 04, 2011 - 4:58AM #27
Karma_yeshe_dorje
Posts: 7,866

I now have also a spherical compost tumbler. And it's full! I found that latex gloves hadn't rotted. So I took them out and put them in the rubbish bin.


I finished improving the soil around the plants in the front garden and nature strip. Then I improved the soil around the blackberry in the back garden.


With the help of a neighbour, I re-erected the first (larger) compost tumbler. With lawn scissors, I attacked the grass and clover in the back garden. Thereby I filled up that tumbler.

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9 months ago  ::  Sep 05, 2011 - 4:16AM #26
Karma_yeshe_dorje
Posts: 7,866

I bought more compost caddy liners, and five hundred worms. I put the worms into the compost tumbler, and covered them with kitchen scraps.

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11 months ago  ::  Jul 31, 2011 - 2:37AM #25
Karma_yeshe_dorje
Posts: 7,866

A nut fell off the end of my tumbler's axle. And so the tumbler collapsed! I'm trying to bury compost from it. So I've been digging up clay around basket grass in the nature strip.

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13 months ago  ::  Jun 09, 2011 - 5:21AM #24
Karma_yeshe_dorje
Posts: 7,866

G'day posterboy:

A meat thermometer can be inserted into a compost heap


I have used an in/out car thermometer to measure outdoor temperature.

I wouldnt  turn a compost heap mere frequently than once a week


Mine is a tumbler; I invert it daily!

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13 months ago  ::  Jun 09, 2011 - 12:59AM #23
posterboy
Posts: 85

hi there Karma_yeshe_dorje


Thus have I heard:


A meat thermometer can be inserted into a compost heap to determine  the internal temperature.  I wouldnt  turn a compost heap mere frequently than once a week  because the heat would dissipate resulting in more chance of weed seeds surviving the process, but of course you need aeration too. It is a trade-off. 


The idea of destroying weeds by rotting them in a barrel full of water (submerged) I got  from a book  entitled "no work garden" by an Englishman named bob flowerdew.  ISBN 1-55285-440-X .The author claims the Romans used this method to deal  with weeds.  The edition I have was published  by Whitecap publishers in Vancouver,  British Columbia, but was printed in Singapore.  The author's gardening books are published around the world in various languages.

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13 months ago  ::  Jun 08, 2011 - 8:37PM #22
Karma_yeshe_dorje
Posts: 7,866

G'day posterboy:


To a great extent  compost microbes provide their own heat.
Can you measure the internal temperature of a compost heap?


I did a fortnight retreat at a Soto Zen Monastery in California
A long time ago, I did a nine day Vipassana retreat in Western Australia.


latex
I have assumed that latex gloves were compostable!


I have thought of uploading a picture of myself snowshoeing back from the compost pile.
Any original artwork would improve upon your current avatar!


some people  manage to  have a continuous  flow  system of composting such that what they remove from the bottom is older and ready to use
I tried that. Unfortunately the plastic compost bin was flimsy and flew apart under pressure! So I took it back to the shop for a refund.

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13 months ago  ::  Jun 08, 2011 - 3:45AM #21
posterboy
Posts: 85

Yes it could have been el Nina.  Certainly it was a challenge to get around.  It is just as easy in my opinion to let time and suitable weather do the composting  work for me, because I have a fairly spacious yard for setting up composters.  To a great extent  compost microbes provide their own heat.   Weather records for Edmonton have been compiled since 1880 and this past winter was the eighth largest amount of snow besides being the most in  78 years.  In 1994 I did a fortnight retreat at a Soto Zen Monastery in California, and when they weeded their vegetable fields and grounds, they had a separate compost heap for noxious weeds.  It is true that most  weeds will not reassert themselves because of the heat generated by composting, and also the  little  that does have the temerity to poke above the soil can be turned under again.  You need to keep at it, where weeds are concerned. 


The Ford Motor company is doing research on extracting latex economically from dandelion roots.  Also a ubiquitous weed in Canada called stinkweed is being  grown experimentally  on poor soil in northern Alberta for the the potential use of its seeds as a source of bio fuel  which can be produced on land not suitable for either  grazing pasture or food production.  "A weed is a flower nobody picks".  I have thought of uploading a picture of myself snowshoeing back from the compost pile.


I have heard that some people  manage to  have a continuous  flow  system of composting such that what they remove from the bottom is older and ready to use, but I am not certain that is a workable scheme.  Better to do rotating batches as they are ready.

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13 months ago  ::  Jun 06, 2011 - 7:12AM #20
Karma_yeshe_dorje
Posts: 7,866

Wow, posterboy:

winter  with the most snow in 78 years


Is that something to do with the La Niña that we had?

the active  period of decay is not  long enough


Is there some way that you could insulate or warm your compost?

composting of weeds


Yes, I compost those.

put weeds in one of those huge 30-gallon pots used to cook lobsters and after "pasteurizing"  these weeds so they are dead, then putting them into ordinary compost


Composting is biological degradation, and should do most of that work for you. But your problem is lack of warmth for the biota! I suggest piling a lot of insulation on top. Perhaps adding manure might help.

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13 months ago  ::  Jun 05, 2011 - 1:42AM #19
posterboy
Posts: 85

I compost and even take my kitchen residue to the compost bin in my back yard in the depth of winter. During  this past winter  with the most snow in 78 years, getting vegetable scraps to the compost  bin necessitated the use of snowshoes until the path was trodden down firmly.  The somewhat short summers in this part of Canada mean that the active  period of decay is not  long enough for a compost batch to finish off in one season.  Therefore I have two composters going and when one is full I let it alone to rot the contents till it is finished, meanwhile proceeding to fill the other one with new material.  Both composters are capacious.


One idea I have contemplated but not tried is anaerobic  composting of weeds  submerged in water in a large barrel.  I found this  idea in an English gardening book.  To prevent the barrel from bursting  during winter freezup the water could be drained  and used as compost tea when watering in perennial shrubs during  early autumn.  Weeds after all, have plundered nutrients from my ground and it would be gratifying to force them to yield up these nutrients again through the composting process.  Another idea  that I have contemplated is to put weeds in one of those huge 30-gallon pots used to cook lobsters and after "pasteurizing"  these weeds so they are dead, then putting them into ordinary compost.  I would appreciate any feedback on this topic because I find composting fascinating and I am always looking for more ideas.

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1 year ago  ::  May 15, 2011 - 10:53PM #18
Karma_yeshe_dorje
Posts: 7,866

I also mixed in a lot of sawdust. The tumbler is pretty full! Wintry weather is here. So I expect decomposition to be slow.

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