Cheryl Desha, Griffith University; Kimberley Reis, Griffith University, and Savindi Caldera, Griffith University
Knowing exactly what to put in your compost bin can be tricky – and views differ on whether you should add items such as meat and citrus.
Composting is fairly simple, but it’s important to get it right. Otherwise, your compost mix may be too slimy or smelly, or attract vermin.
We are experts in food resilience and sustainability, and have prepared this “dos and don’ts” guide to get you on your way.
Your own composting system
Composting is a way of doing what happens in nature, where raw organic materials are converted to soft and spongy soil-like grains. These help soil retain water and make nutrients available to plants.
In fact, compost is so valuable for your garden, it’s often referred to as “black gold”.
For those of you composting at home, here’s how to make sure the system delivers what you need for your home gardening projects.
Dos:
• use a couple of bottomless bins so when one is full you can start on the other, in a shady spot
• have a good mix of ‘browns’ (two parts) and ‘greens’ (one part). Combine brown materials (hay, straw, sawdust, woodchips, leaves, weeds that have not gone to seed) with food scraps and other materials (fruit and vegetable peels and rinds, tea bags, coffee grounds, eggshells), and some types of animal manure (chicken, cow, horse)
• let the temperature climb. Heat in the centre of your compost pile is a good sign, as the microbes are breaking down what you’ve put in. As the compost matures it cools, creating a great environment for worms and other microbes to finish off the process
• make sure your coffee grounds and tea bags can break down, so remove the bag before you add it to the compost pile. Moist tea leaves can help your pile break down faster. Citrus fruit (lemons, oranges), spicy peppers, onion and garlic are fine, just don’t add them to your worm farm; the worms will suffer under the acidic conditions produced when these items break down
• get creative with natural ‘brown’ materials – as long as there is no plastic mixed in, throw it in. This includes anything from cereal boxes to cotton balls, wine corks, fireplace ashes, and even human hair and pet fur.
Don’ts:
• don’t let your compost bin be a feast for local rodents such as rats. Bury the base slightly into the ground, lining the bin with wire mesh and keeping it covered. Avoid adding meat scraps, cooking fats and oils, milk products and bones, which will attract vermin
• don’t let your compost get stinky or slimy – that means it’s too wet. Slimy compost means you need to add more “brown” materials. You can also speed things along by having a dig through the heap every week or so, or adding extra bits and pieces at various stages (chook poo, crushed rock and lime) to help it all happen faster
• don’t let nasty chemicals and germs get into your compost. This includes things like treated wood waste, pet waste (if they take medication or eat meat) and sick plants. Home compost bins are limited in what they can process. It is a good idea to wear gloves as an extra safety measure.
Council compost collection
Local councils are increasingly offering food waste collection programs, sometimes along with garden green waste. In such cases, these materials are processed at large scale composting sites.
In Victoria, a four-bin waste and recycling system will be rolled out in partnership with councils. Most households will be using this system by 2030.
If your council offers food waste collection, make sure you follow their particular ‘dos and don’ts’ advice. Depending where you live, it may differ slightly to ours.
To bag, or not to bag?
Working out how to bag up your food scraps – whether for your home bin or council collection – can be confusing. Check your local instructions for kerbside collection to make sure your food waste is bagged in the right way.
You can try putting ‘home compostable’ bags in your own compost bin, experimenting with your bin temperature to achieve the best outcome. Compostable plastic is designed to break down back into nutrients, but most still need managed, high-heat conditions to activate this process.
Don’t be tricked by ‘degradable’ bags – these are likely to be made of plastic and just break into millions of tiny pieces. Also, as others have written, some ‘biodegradable’ plastics made of plant-based materials might not be better for the environment, and they can take just as long to degrade as traditional plastics.
The benefits of composting
Making compost at home doesn’t just lighten our rubbish bin and help our gardens. It also helps tackle climate change.
Each year in Australia, food waste rotting in landfill creates methane equivalent to around 6.8 million tonnes of carbon dioxide. If global food waste were a country, it would be the third-largest emitter of greenhouse gases in the world, behind the United States and China.
So clearly, there are many great reasons to compost. And by following a few simple rules, you too can create your own ‘black gold’.
Cheryl Desha, Associate Professor, School of Engineering and Built Environment, and Director, Engagement (Industry), Griffith University; Kimberley Reis, Lecturer, School of Engineering and Built Environment, Griffith University, Griffith University, and Savindi Caldera, Research Fellow, Cities Research Institute, Griffith University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons licence. Read the original article.
Do you make your own compost? Why not share your tips in the comments section below?
Also read: How to go green with a gardenless garden