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How to Grow Vegetables and Fruit by the Organic Method (Hardcover) newly tagged "composting"

How to Grow Vegetables and Fruit by the Organic Method
How to Grow Vegetables and Fruit by the Organic Method (Hardcover)
By J I Rodale

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First tagged "composting" by Flora
Customer tags: composting, insect control, freezing and canning, organic gardening, improving soil

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Organic Gardener's Composting (Illustrated) (Kindle Edition) newly tagged "composting"

Organic Gardener's Composting (Illustrated)
Organic Gardener's Composting (Illustrated) (Kindle Edition)
By Steve Solomon

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Kidz Gone To Potz (Paperback) newly tagged "composting"

Kidz Gone To Potz
Kidz Gone To Potz (Paperback)
By D. S. Watkins

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Learn How to Compost - A Guide to Composting (Kindle Edition) newly tagged "composting"

Learn How to Compost - A Guide to Composting
Learn How to Compost - A Guide to Composting (Kindle Edition)
By Margette Riley

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Customer Rating: 4.2

First tagged "composting" by Lee Dobbins
Customer tags: composting

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The Backyard Vegetable Factory: Super Yields from Small Spaces (Hardcover) newly tagged "composting"

The Backyard Vegetable Factory: Super Yields from Small Spaces
The Backyard Vegetable Factory: Super Yields from Small Spaces (Hardcover)
By Duane Newcomb

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Composting Plants Article

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Composting Worms




Composting worms has become a great way to not only help the economy but also get some great fertilizer. In fact, composting worms will give you the some of the most effective fertilizer you've every used. Another term often referring to worm compost is vermicompost or worm castings. Composting worms is easy, fun and will help you have the healthiest plants you've ever raised. About the only items you'll need for composting worms are worms, bedding, worm food and a bin.

You don't need a large bin to begin composting worms, in fact, anything from 8" to 16" deep is sufficient. Many use a shipping crate, dish pan or old washtub. You can also buy a commercial worm bin. The important thing is to have a lid to keep out rodents and flies and also have holes in the bottom for drainage and ventilation. A good idea for an appropriate bin size is two square feet of space per person. The bin for composting worms should be in a shady space as worms like moderate temperatures. The patio, garage, laundry room or right outside the back door all makes good choices.

Newspaper torn into strips one inch wide will make excellent bedding. Moisten the newspaper so it's like a damp sponge. You can also put in horse or cow manure to absorb any excess moisture. Add a few handfuls of soil to the moist newspaper and you can add the worms and food. Every couple of months, it's a good idea to add crushed eggshells, soil and ground limestone for calcium and grit. This is how composting worms begin. As time passes, the worms will eat the food and bedding, turning it into worm compost.

Most people composting worms choose red wigglers or red worms, which can be purchased at a worm farm. You can also find them in old compost pile. Red wigglers and red worms both do very well in confinement and reproduce quickly. They also have a big appetite so always make sure they have sufficient food. In fact, on a daily basis, they'll eat more than their own weight. If you're just starting out with your composting worms' project, one pound of worms is more than enough. Worms are not picky eaters and enjoy the same things we enjoy. Some of the do's and don'ts include: no bones, meat, fats, dairy products or greasy foods. Do compost fruit peelings, vegetable scraps, tea bags, bread, coffee grounds and filters, grains, crushed eggshells and non-greasy leftovers. Start them off with just a small amount of food, increasing as they get older.

You'll need to harvest your worms at least two times a year and can start after you've been feeding them 3 to 6 months. A quick method of harvesting worms is to move all the contents to one side of the bin and put new bedding in the empty space. For the next month, put your food wastes in the new bedding. Once the worms have all moved to the new bedding, you can take out the worm compost. The compost you get from composting worms is great around plants, spread 1 to 2" thick.


Other Composting Plants related Articles

Worm Composting
Composting With Worms
Building A Compost Toilet
Composting Horse Manure
Sheet Composting

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Composting Plants News

Toss that toothbrush onto the compost heap - Kansas City Star


Toss that toothbrush onto the compost heap
Kansas City Star
The toothbrush is designed to fully compost within 3 to 6 six months when sent to a commercial composting facility. Simply sending the toothbrush and caseto the landfill will not allow it to biodegrade because that kind of site is not designed for that ...

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Compost operation at crossroads - Cape Gazette


Cape Gazette

Compost operation at crossroads
Cape Gazette
Most of the waste Blessing has accumulated on his compost farm comes from chicken manure, carcasses and eggs from chicken farms, he said. Though permitted to accept sewer sludge from wastewater treatment plants, he said he received only a small amount ...

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For gardeners and other plant-lovers, here's a sampling of regional events: - Philadelphia Inquirer


For gardeners and other plant-lovers, here's a sampling of regional events:
Philadelphia Inquirer
Composting Workshop Class on making & using compost to improve garden soil. Awbury Arboretum, One Awbury Rd. 5/19. 10 am-12 pm. " Container Gardening Class on the basics of creating & tending an attractive container garden. Linvilla Orchards, 137 W.

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Passaic County offers education on composting, water conservation - NorthJersey.com


Passaic County offers education on composting, water conservation
NorthJersey.com
"Composting is nature's way of recycling," said Nina Seiden, Passaic County's solid waste and recycling administrator. "Turning all your vegetative kitchen scraps, coffee grinds, tea bags, grass clippings, brown leaves and dead garden plants into rich ...

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Events for May 19-26 - OregonLive.com (blog)


OregonLive.com (blog)

Events for May 19-26
OregonLive.com (blog)
Spring Garden Event: 10 am-4 pm Master gardeners and garden professionals give seminars on composting, moles, lavender, microgreens and other topics, plus plant sales. The Wade Creek House, 664 Wade St., Estacada; http://thewadecreekhouse.blogspot.com ...
Photograph by: Sheila SimMontreal Gazette

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