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sylviatexas1

Compost From Thrown-Away Materials

sylviatexas1
18 years ago

To make compost, all you need are carbon & nitrogen.

Carbon:

cardboard, available at stores of every description.

Dollar stores, grocery stores, fast-food restaurants, & beer or liquor stores have them by the zillion.

Find out when their trucks deliver, & pick up your materials that evening or the next morning.

If you work in an office, you may have access to shredded office paper, which also works beautifully.

Newspaper, too, is a good carbon source.

Nitrogen:

coffee grounds, available at Starbucks by the bagful.

"Grounds for the Garden" is a Starbucks corporate program, & all company-owned Starbucks participate:

Occasionally, a franchise such as the Starbucks in, say, a Target store, doesn't do it, but generally you'll get a friendly greeting when you ask for "grounds for the garden".

It's good publicity for Starbucks, & it reduces their waste disposal costs, 'cause *you* are "taking out the trash"!

If there's no Starbucks nearby, approach a locally-owned place (especially one that specializes in breakfast).

I pick up tea grounds every night from a local fried chicken place, both because that's polite & because they'll throw out the tea grounds if I don't:

tea grounds sort of ferment & get smelly if not removed every day.

Lay down some cardboard, cover with coffee or tea grounds, then cardboard, then coffee grounds, just like making lasagna! Be sure the top layer is grounds or a little soil, to keep the cardboard or paper from blowing away.

Wetting it down will speed up the process & help weigh down the materials.

Soil already has microbes in it, so adding it to the pile gives it a "jump start".

You don't even need a bin:

just dedicate an area & pile up your materials.

You can even use a hot concrete slab in a sunny area:

the hotter the surface it sits on, the faster your compost pile will "process").

Compost is "black gold":

it costs about $30 a cubic yard if you buy it in bulk, or $8 to $10 for a 2 cubic foot bag in the stores (& that bagged stuff is to compost as fried pies in the grocery store are homemade peach cobbler!)

and it can be made:

*free*

in an urban setting

with no "eau de horse manure"!

Have fun!

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