November 23, 2024

VIDEO: The Perfect Compost Recipe – How to Get Your Compost Heap Cooking!


💛 📖 See the GrowVeg book here: https://www.growveg.com/growveg-the-beginners-guide-to-easy-gardening.aspx.
Compost is the very best food you can give to the plants in your garden. However, making really great compost requires the right mix of ingredients. In this video we demonstrate how to create that perfect recipe from the ingredients you have at home. You’ll see the compost mix being created, find out what materials to avoid, trace how the compost heap progresses as it ‘cooks’ and discover how to fix common problems.

If you’ve noticed any pests or beneficial insects in your garden recently please report them via http://bigbughunt.com

You can plan where to site your compost heap using the drawing tools available in our Garden Planner which is available from several major websites and seed suppliers:
http://www.GrowVeg.com
http://gardenplanner.motherearthnews.com/
http://gardenplanner.almanac.com/
and many more…

The compost bin system comes from http://www.recycleworks.co.uk/

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29 thoughts on “VIDEO: The Perfect Compost Recipe – How to Get Your Compost Heap Cooking!

  1. You must love Jehovah your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength. You must love your neighbor as yourself. Jesus the anointed is Lord! Repent and be baptized and believe the Gospel.

  2. To anyone struggling to find enough browns, you can use your junk mail, newspapers, and cardboard waste as a source of carbon. I've been shredding my paper and cardboard waste for a few years and using it in my compost instead of sending it to the recycling center. Just don't use glossy paper and it will work just fine.

  3. Holy crap…hello, eight years ago! Time flies. Have to compliment you on your developing presentation skills. A lot more engaging these days…not that this wasn't awesome, too, mind you. It's true that just dumping a bunch of green in, like lawn clippings, will result in a slimy, matted mess. But I've also found it the best way to get that heat going if that's an issue, as it usually is with my piles. Just get in there and mix it up daily, or as often as possible.

  4. I have 2 double composting bins that I used to roll every week. MY fingers have since decided they were too old to be rolling all that heavy material any more. Started thinking about it again because of your video here. That compost has been in there for 3 to 4 years. Does compost ever turn rancid with age? Or as long as it still "smells" OK, maybe I can still use it? Need your thoughts and advice! Thanks!

  5. There is no such thing as a perfect recipe. Do with what you've got and work from there. Some of the best compost is leaf compost from windrows 15 to 20 feet high that only takes about 9 months to add a rich compost rich in minerals that only trees can provide and as these windrows have hit temps exceeding 160 degrees Fahrenheit, no weed seed worries. Worry more about making compost than worrying about the correct ingredients.

  6. Hi, I have a small garden, plus I live alone, hence I don't have much brown and green material to use 4 composting. I do put what I've got, but the pile is small. What can I do

  7. Thanks., to date I've just bunged everything into a store bought plastic composter. It works but has some of the issues you mention so going to build one.
    Two questions. 1) what is the process with two compost bins as you appeared to move some from one to the other 2) roughly how long until compost breaks down to be useable.

  8. Hello. I am new to all of this, and I am doing research so I can start my own compost pile in the near future. I have a question. I heard him say that the compost will cool, and the worms can move in. Does this mean that there is a point in the compost process where one should stop adding any greens and browns, and allow it to sit, cool, and do it's thing? I assume that any time you add stuff, it will continue cooking. If I am correct in my thinking, when should one stop adding stuff, and for how long?

  9. Dear GrowVeg. Thanks for the video! I have a question here: cooked grinded coffee and egg shells are green or grey? Would you recommend them to the compost? Thanks in advance!

  10. Anyone who expects that perfect finished product can expect a LOT OF WORK. Be realistic and use what you produce. Mine is always beneficial to the plants and it does not look perfect. Since I fish A LOT, I dig a hole in my garden 2 shovels deep, add fish remains, cover with finished compost and cover with the soil. As I have been doing this for years, when I dig down, I am turning over finished compost / fish bones.

  11. Great video !
    I use a hand made wire mesh cylindrical bin like container

    And layer it green -yellow – soil( brown) . I feel newspaper works well in place of soil too .

    In summer in India ( 42 deg celcius) a 3-5 feet high wire mesh open air bin can be ready with great compost in as little as 3-4 weeks
    We often add raw jaggery and earthworms.

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