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Buying compost bins permits composting, which is widely recognised as essential in organic farming. It acts as a fertiliser and soil additive, nourishing plants and the soil food web. It is arguably the most important contribution to the health of your organic garden, especially in the long run. You can buy compost by the bag at garden shops, but if you have a large garden, buying enough to maintain it may bankrupt you. Furthermore, you never know the origins of the bagged compost you buy or that from your local municipal facility. Most committed organic gardeners eventually manufacture their own compost. Perhaps not everything they require, but enough to balance the cost of purchasing it or the inconvenience of carrying it.
But invariably they face the question, which type of compost bin should I buy? A stationary bin or a tumbler? Plastic or wood? And how big a compost bin do I need?
Truth be told, you can build a compost bin on the cheap from a stack of bricks or concrete blocks, a plastic garbage can or used shipping pallets. Or you can spend a little or a lot on a compost tumbler or large, stationary bins. You can even spend zero and find an out of the way place in your yard to simply stack your yard waste in a big pile. Anything that gets the job done for you and your garden is fine. If you’re like most gardeners, the biggest determinant of which type of compost bin you need is how much compost you use in a season. If you’re like me and the answer is as much as I can make but I can’t make it fast enough, then save your shekles for the biggest bin you can find (I built a homemade compost bin from shipping pallets years ago it’s – 4x4x4, and it still doesn’t generate enough compost for me).
The second determinant is how large a bin can you physically handle? If you have mobility or strength issues, a tumbler may be out of the question and you might want to go with a stationary bin. If it’s a stationary bin, you’ll probably want to find a good location in your landscape where it can be out of sight yet still catch enough rain and heat to cook the compost and keep it moist. But a stationary bin can also be challenging, as you’ll have to give it a stir once in awhile.
Note: You won’t see much agreement on the terminology for types of compost bins online. Sometimes they’re just “bins” and “tumblers”. Sometimes broken down into 6 categories. I’ve broken down the types here in the simplest terms: tumblers, stationary bins like those made from plastic, and movable bins, like those made from wire. One could also argue that stationary bins also include large bins made from salvahed materials, which they are.
Check out Compost bins on Amazon
If you make large amounts of compost, a stationary bin (or 2) is usually your best bet. This may be a plastic or cedar bin with or without a lid. The lid serves 2 purposes: to seal in moisture and heat and to deter curious mammals chasing fresh kitchen scraps. Stationary bins are sometimes also called continuous composters, as yard waste and food scraps can be added at any time as the pile breaks down. Compost is created slowly in a continuous bin and generally falls to the bottom where it can be scooped out every few months and filtered from the larger debris. Many stationary compost bins have a tray or hatch at the bottom which makes removing finished compost easy.
Read the post: Compost: Today’s leftovers, tomorrow’s plant food.
A batch composter or tumbler compost bin is a faster way of making compost, although smaller batches are made at one time than with the continuous bins. A tumbler, which is round or cylindrical, must be stirred or rolled once a day to mix the ingredients and moisture must remain consistent.
The initial compost ingredients must be balanced when starting compost in a tumbler – a proper mix of greens and browns – but compost is created in as little as 4 weeks, faster than with a stationary bin.
Buyer beware: Tumblers are great, but closely inspect the stand or base supplied with the tumbler. Is it rugged enough to support repeated, heavy, fresh loads of compost and stand up to years of abuse from weather?
Open style, movable compost bins like wire bins are inexpensive (preferred for making leaf mold). These can be bought commercially or you can fashion one yourself from hardware cloth or similar rugged, flexible metal mesh. Wire compost bins are frequently set up in a series: The first to hold fresh yard waste, the second to hold composting materials as they break down and the 3rd to hold finished compost. There is considerable overlap in terminology regarding movable compost bins – many of the plastic bins mentioned above are certainly movable (unlike a bin made from shipping pallets or concrete block).
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Explore the vibrant colors and flavors of fall harvests, from root vegetables to fruits and grains. Learn about traditions, culinary uses, and economic impacts.
Add the distinctive Prickly Pear Cactus to your garden and get vibrant yellow flowers! Enjoy its edible fruit, flowers, stems, and leaves. Learn the best growing conditions and how to care for it. Enjoy this unique, cold-hardy cactus, with over 100 species distinguished by its spiny, club-shaped pads.
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Discover our resident and migratory birds in the Vallarta Botanical Garden! This February, the Gray-black Warbler (Setophaga nigrescens) brings its buzzing song, grayscale plumage and yellow dot to the garden. Join us for our Bird and Nature Festival to celebrate the diversity of these feathered travelers and explore our coniferous and oak forests while they hunt insects and their larvae! Listen to the Warbler's song: http://bit.ly/3kPMpP6
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