May 14, 2024

VIDEO: Turn This $100 MILLION Dollar Waste Product Into FREE Fertilizer!


Halloween is a time when over 1 billion pounds fo pumpkins are thrown at the side of the road every year worth an estimated $100 Million and of that nutrients are worth more than half!

26 thoughts on “VIDEO: Turn This $100 MILLION Dollar Waste Product Into FREE Fertilizer!

  1. My pumpkin was nicely 'splatted' into the vege garden today (the innards were already there from carving day) … the pumpkin was already rotting and being nibbled on … even before Halloween.

  2. Great idea. I generally put mine in a far corner of the garden and just let them rot but I think this year…. since I put in several raised beds, I think they can rot in there just as easy. Seeds already scooped out so no worries about that.

  3. Thanks for this great information! I never thought about how nutritious pumpkins would be in the compost or directly in the beds. Thank you for the suggestion about giving them to my chickens too! I may be knocking on doors for pumpkins tomorrow. haha
    I think I will seek out some people's jack-o'lanterns and use them to start my winter collection in the "stank tank". Next spring, it will be part of the fertilizer juice I use to get things going. I plan to spread whatever is currently above ground in my pile on the beds this week, and then dig a hole to bury the current contents of the tank. Pumpkins and then whatever compost we collect in the kitchen this winter will get the tank going for next year.

  4. Another reason for not keeping a pumpkin is garden space. I'd love to grow some for pumpkin custard or a pie. I'm just limited in space. And I know that even in a limited space, much can be grown.

  5. Since we have chickens, and their run has a compost area, that is where open pumpkins go. BUT, in our rural community brush pile/burn pile site, not many carved pumpkins show up there but the whole ones with seeds still in them and used as autumn decoration. Thus, since they literally throw them into the pile, many are broken open and that goes to the chickens. They eat the seeds and all excepting the outer most of the rind. The whole ones are deseeded and the flesh used in soups, stews, etc. The rind goes to the chickens and the seeds saved for growing some of our own.

  6. Every year I get maybe 20 pumpkin sprouts in my small garden: those seeds seem to survive my hot compost (not hot enough, obviously). So I try to put all the seeds in the green bin to go to the city compost and any seed-free flesh goes to my worm bin. They love it!

  7. No-dig gardening is way more easy. No need to dig a trench, only add 1 inch of compost to your raised beds each year. So just chop up your pumpkins, add them to the compost bin and cover them with the fall leaves that are trying to suffocate your lawn.

  8. in 2 more days, people in my neighborhood will start putting out yard trash to the side of the road for monthly pick-up. Looks like I should do a drive around the area this weekend looking for pumpkins! i usually don't get them anymore myself, but I did have one a few years ago that I tossed in the compost pile afterward. I let it 'cold compost' through winter since it rarely reaches freezing temps here (Texas), but the spring afterward, I had a bunch of pumpkin vines growing out of my compost bin! It's a very shaded spot though and my garden is too small for large vines, so I ended up turning them over back into the pile.

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