Essential Website Maintenance – Thursday 9th January 2020

We will be carrying out essential website maintenance in the afternoon which will affect some functionality. We apologise in advance for any inconvenience the work may cause and will do all we can to keep disruption to an absolute minimum.

Home Composting


Summary (optional)
Over 30% of your household rubbish can be composted. By taking it out of the bin you'll save money, help to protect the environment and reduce the need for landfills and incinerators.
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Why Compost?

Home-composterHome composting benefits your garden and your environment, and it's easy and fun!

Composting is nature’s way of recycling. Composted kitchen and garden waste is a great alternative to expensive artificial fertilisers and peat.

Home-made compost saves you money, improves your garden’s soil and saves water by helping the soil hold moisture.

Garden bonfires pollute and create a nuisance - composting stops the need for burning.

Composting is the easiest way to recycle your waste.  You can do it at home and involve all the family!

How does it work?

  1. Collect all your suitable kitchen and garden waste regularly (aim for half ‘green’ and half ‘brown’)
  2. Chop materials to less than 15cm (6 inches)
  3. Put it in your compost bin on bare soil
  4. Put an old piece of carpet on the top to keep the warmth in
  5. Turn over the composter contents regularly
  6. Wait for the mini beasts (from tiny organisms to worms) to break down the waste and make your free supply of compost!

What goes in the compost bin?

Green (fresh)

  • Vegetable peelings
  • Fruit skins and cores
  • Tea bags and coffee grounds
  • Crushed egg shells
  • Animal waste from herbivores (such as rabbits, hamsters or horses)
  • Grass cuttings
  • Weeds
  • Clippings
  • Natural fabrics such as wool and hair
  • Vacuum dust

Brown (dry and old)

  • Kitchen roll and shredded paper
  • Straw, hay and sawdust
  • Egg boxes and toilet roll tubes
  • Prunings and twigs
  • Leaves

What shouldn’t go in the compost bin?

  • Used paper tissues
  • Meat, fish or dairy
  • Animal waste from carnivores (such as dogs or cats)
  • Left-over cooked food
  • Glossy magazines
  • Diseased plants
  • Roots of perennial weeds (such as dandelions)
  • Disposable nappies

 

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