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I love this recipe. So many channels ask you to use chicken manure cow manure, other things most people don’t have. I like the simplicity and using what we have. And the fact that it’s very cheap.
Glad to help and it works. isit my blog, The Rusted Garden Journal, for the written DIY recipes and more garden information: therustedgarden.blogspot.com My new Podcast: The Rusted Garden Homestead https:bit.ly/443SSGL Thanks... Here is how you can support me, more videos, and The Rusted Garden... The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com
You are my most favorite gardening channel. You break everything down, step by step, with the lowest cost choices possible. In today’s economy, that’s a blessing. Thank you for sharing!
Greetings from the UK. I compost a cardboard/grass/vegetable garden waste in 3'x3' bays. I'm fortunate in having a commercial paper shredder which reduces the cardboard to 1½"x¼" chips & add it at a volumetric rate of 1:3 cardboard to grass/garden waste. This mix is added once a week. I've found that generally, I'll have to wet down the mix after 10 days, when the core temperature falls from 150°F to 125°F. This immediately brings the temperature back up, demonstrating falling moisture levels due to evaporation. It usually takes me 6 weeks to fill one bay due to ongoing decomposition reducing the level & after that, I turn it all into the next, empty bay & after a further 6 weeks, it's reduced by half, at which point temperature is little above ambient & fungal/worm decomposition is the main activity. This compost then stands until applied in the winter (I'm 100% "no dig") & a 1-1½" layer annually, provides sufficient nutrients for 2-3 crops a year off each bed.
My dad cold composts. I've been working in the produce department of the local grocery store for over a year, and as such I have ample access to cardboard and scraps/waste, which I take advantage of. I regularly collect cardboard, which I cut into small squares and place in trash bags. As for scraps, the ones I'm most able to collect are cabbage leaves, corn husks, bell pepper shells, and asparagus trimmings. I also collect leaves and pine needles whenever possible, and my dad uses grass clippings as mulch.
All great stuff! Join this channel to get access to perks which focus on garden mentoring and member influenced videos: ru-vid.com/show-UCptL6_qMImyW_yZwiMjQdpgjoin You can find items I use or discuss in videos, by checking out my Amazon Storefront for fertilizer, pest management, shade cloth, seed starting supplies, books and more! at www.amazon.com/shop/garypilarchiktherustedgarden As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualified purchases. Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop (My Shop) for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise, and more at www.therustedgarden.com Please subscribe if you have a chance (Thanks!)
Congrats on both Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Good tip. The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com Thanks... Here is how you can support me, more videos, and The Rusted Garden... My new Podcast: The Rusted Garden Homestead https:bit.ly/443SSGL My Blog: The Rusted Garden Journal therustedgarden.blogspot.com
Yep. Just did another compost video today and said the same thing. Check out our new Fall Gardening PODCAST Gardening Coast2Coast at gardeningcoast2coast.net. Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden shop for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise and more at www.therustedgarden.com
Every time I’m looking for gardening help. Seems like you are always the one I find my self watching. I think you have answers for everything. Thanks for all the help.
Very glad to help. Get your Fall Garden Seeds & Spring Seed Starting Supplies at... Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com
Glad to help. Saving is good! Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
So glad to read it. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
@@THERUSTEDGARDEN just made a purchase of as many purple plants i could find. It's the least I can do after you, and other gardeners on youtube, have inspired so much of my own garden! Keep up the excellent work!
It works so well Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
You will find it is very rewarding Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Thats a good word Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
I almost ended the video too early and missed the experiment; That is why I came to the video was to see if anyone else was doing a cardboard box compost. I was using egg cartons and clippings only inside a cardboard box so this looks similar and I will have to also try it. Nice production.
It work actually. Just don't forget to keep the pile moist. Once change I would make is less roofing. When it gets hot here... it dries out too fast. Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden shop for seeds, seed starting supplies, neem oil, TRG merchandise and more at www.therustedgarden.com & Please Ring the Bell (next to subscribe) to get immediate real-time video notifications of new videos. I have over 1250 garden videos you can search and find the answer you need. Thanks
I just got a greenhouse for my birthday...I plan to keep a compost pile inside to produce heat for the winter ;) The cardboard is great. I let my cardboard soak in a bin of water beforehand. It really retains the water well.
I hear that works. Good luck Get your Fall Garden Seeds & Spring Seed Starting Supplies at... Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com
Now you have a great reason! Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Thanks for this. I keep forgetting that card board is so compostable. With the huge Amazon influx of boxes these days. It would make sense for every household that buys from any online shop, have a compost pile so those boxes don’t end up in land fills. I’m always looking for brown in the summer months. Ty
Cardboard is loved by worms Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden shop for seeds, seed starting supplies, neem oil, TRG merchandise and more at www.therustedgarden.com & Please Ring the Bell (next to subscribe) to get immediate real-time video notifications of new videos. I have over 1250 garden videos you can search and find the answer you need. Thanks
It works great for that Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Great tip, I will have to start collecting cb. I am using grass (my own) and leaves that I gathered in the fall and chopped up with the mower. It has been around 140 degrees. Also have been adding more beds this yr. I started my plants from seeds this yr and ran out of room too fast.
Nice job on the seed starts Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
I don’t have a lot of room, so I use the SoilSaver. It is a lot more work, but I use a regular shredder from Office Depot. With the big bags of used coffee grinds from Starbucks and kitchen scraps and outside greens (don’t use my husband treated grass), it literally is boiling overnight. I went into the garage and found some empty U-Haul boxes I was holding onto and into the shredder it went. The compost is done in three months. It is magical. I will be interested to see how quick your compost comes out. I know the black SoilSaver really heats it up too. My daughter actually helped me today because she enjoys the smell of the freshly used coffee grinds. One last hint, the large amounts of coffee grinds eliminates any smells.
Thanks on the grounds. Sound s like a nice system. Ill be doing vids every couple days for the 3 composting video on the pile. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
How often do you turn the compost? I live on a farm in germany and could probably produce in large quantaties (Straw + Grass + ocasional cardboard). Turning would be done with a telescopic handler. I could help a lot of gardeners in my area out with cheap compost.
So probably ever 7 to 10 days. Ill be working on that for video 3 Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
This a very informative video. I also enjoyed your in-bed vermi-composting video with the PVC. We shred our cardboard and paper, we bag our grass clippings, and save our veggie scraps, coffee, tea, and egg shells. We layer that on the compost pile and turn it once a month. In the spring and summer, we also add in our chickens' bedding, which is mostly pine shavings with a small amount waste.
I’m doing my own experiment with cardboard. Had some thick boxes from a brewing supplier. Using a couple as growing towers for some potatoes. So far they are working wonderful. Thought I would use them and then compost the remaining cardboard in the fall. The potatoes are coming out of the 24 inch boxes already. I just fill around the plants as you would any grow tower.
I did use cardboard in my first year, last year, and it worked ok. Its relatively easy to get, but there is some work in processing it. Last fall I gathered 13 big compressed bags of leaves from my tree lined neighborhood. But when I run out it will be back to cardboard.
That works Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Oh smart on the cardboard. So simple Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
That's a great idea! I was debating using my leaf shredder after soaking the cardboard. Not sure how that will work but the lawn mower is a great idea!
I think this is fantastic idea! It saves the landfill from so much garbage. I use a lawn company that claims their weed and feed is safe enough to let dogs and children walk on it after it has dried. Would those grass clippings be safe to use?
It works well too. Please subscribe if you have a chance (Thanks!) As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualified purchases. Check out my Amazon Storefront for garden lights, seed starting supplies, fertilizer, pest management, books and more! www.amazon.com/shop/garypilarchiktherustedgarden Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise, and more at www.therustedgarden.com Check out my new gardening PODCAST Gardening Coast2Coast at gardeningcoast2coast.net with CaliKim. Please subscribe as it really helps me in making videos.
Gary (and everyone) - if you want to heat up your compost pile big time, get spent grains from your local brewery. Holy hell it's AMAZING. And it doesn't take much. But keep an eye on it because you don't want it 'too' hot to where you're hurting your bacteria. Also corrugated (cardboard) has those channels in it that worms LOVE which is why it's such a hit with worm people. I have a micro-cut paper shredder for browns but at this point I mostly rely on getting straw bales and add layers of it. But damn - spent grains is off the charts amazing.
Thanks so much. The cardboard is great. We have several breweries around hear. Thanks Introduction to Creating an Edible Landscape: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-iOMJ_rbFupM.html
I don't need 30-day compost, but with limited space on a small urban property with many large trees, I need all of last year's yard waste returned to the garden before this year's yard waste overflows the system. I shred all my household cardboard (glossy, colorful, etc) with a crosscut shredder, and I shred all my yard and kitchen waste under the lawnmower before it goes in the compost bin. Only plastic and aluminum go to the curb. I generally do a big batch with the lawnmower once in spring and once in fall. The rest of the time I am mindlessly accumulating whole material. Now having three Earth Machine composters and five 100L Rubbermaid trash bins I'm almost able to keep on top of the volume! One more Earth Machine ought to do it.
I'm lucky in that I have a commercial size paper shredder which handles even heavy duty corrugated cardboard easily, cross cutting it into 1½" by ¼". I mix it with grass clippings & other green waste 2:1 greens to cardboard by volume, mixed well together & watered 7-10 days later, as it's surprising how dry it gets. I've seen temperatures hit 155°F then a few days later fall to 90°F & invariably it's down to drying out, as adding water brings the temperature back up around 140 or more where it stays for much longer If I run out of composting bay space, I move the oldest into those bags used to deliver bulk sand & aggregate, with polythene over the top & they're breathable enough to ensure aerobic breakdown continues.
Might be worth investing in one myself Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden shop for seeds, seed starting supplies, neem oil, TRG merchandise and more at www.therustedgarden.com & Checkout my quick and to point 2 minute (or sow) TRG Gardening Tips playlist: ru-vid.com/group/PLMsTQWKi63STRub6SgaV6PlB9-O1ooM5l
Great variations on composting Gary! Your box in a box experiment could be very enjoyable to follow along with you and any results that may naturally flow. Happy Gardening! -Bob...
Trying to keep it simple and doable for everyone. I love the experiments Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Thanks so much for sharing! This is so in time! I’m trying to compost 1st time and don’t have much “brown”, now all the package boxes have a perfect place to go! Thanks!
That will work! Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Hi Gary. Another great video from you sir 👍👍👍. How about those brown paper bags for yardwaste? whats the best way to compost them instead of tearing them into small pieces?
Thanks so much. Brown bags can be layered in and just left to break down. Once wet they start to go quickly Fabric pots are on sale for Black Friday. Keyword search 'Black Friday' at my shop. Lots of sales are up. Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden shop for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise and more at www.therustedgarden.com Check out my new gardening PODCAST Gardening Coast2Coast at gardeningcoast2coast.net with CaliKim.
Is there a certain length of time I can wait to use the compost if I use grass clippings that had weed and feed pellets within the last 2 or 3 months? Like, let it sit for 1 or 2 years before use?
If that is all I have is it really still considered good compost for providing all vegetable plants need. If so it’s an answer to my problem of finding the money to buy in compost by the bag which is all that is available in my remote town. I can add my chicken house clean out hay and manure but only every 6 weeks. Should that also be layered for a more beneficial breakdown process combined with a layer of grass and cardboard? Or do you just throw it on top of the pile? I have never made compost as I don’t have leaves etc etc that seemed to be required. You have certainly made the idea doable for me both financially and physically. Thank you.
So the layering helps it heat up but anything will compost over time. You have good stuff. I would just start by layer it as you get it in an area. Worst case it takes a year and you have great stuff. Ill talk more about the idea in next videos. Chicken bed and waste great stuff to compost. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
That's something that I wish I had was a chicken coop to clean out or Rabbit beds! Those are both perfect fertilizers. I wouldn't see why you couldn't add them.
@@shandysgarden idk either. But I know if I add it strait to my garden I have to do it in the winter or fall because anywhere I added some extra shortly before planting transplants they got burnt up really bad.
Of course. They would be great. I am just giving you 2 things that work together well. More in manures is better Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
I have been thinking of doing the same. A lot of videos on RU-vid are recommending using hemp bedding instead because it is supposed to work better in coop and compost quicker then pine shavings. If you are laying would you just add the chicken manure as another layer?
My compost only stays hot for 3-4-5 days then cools back down again. I use grass clippings, veggie scraps and pine chips from my chicken coop. Every time I cut my lawn I pull out all the compost material and layer it again with the new grass clippings and it heats up again for a few days 🤷♂️
That sounds about right. Nice stuff Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Thanks for the video. I have access to lots of free newspapers. Can i tear newspapers in small pieces abd and use these and grass clippings as the only two ingredients for making compost?
Yep that works. The 'Rusted Garden Red' Vertical Gardening Towers are Back for a Limited Time! Use the Discount Code THERUSTEDGARDEN on GreenStalk 'Vertical Tier Systems'. Use this link and enter my code for the discount store.greenstalkgarden.com/?afmc=therustedgarden or this short link lddy.no/4eal
As Marylanders we also have a great resource from the Bay in shells. Can one use crab shells in a compost pile? I think we're obviously going to expect a longer decay for those items, but wondering if they are usable. Wife wants to use them...I think they will smell rotten and attract flies. Any insight appreciated Gary. Thanks again!
I'm not sure if Gary uses the crab shells but you might check out John @ Growing Your Green.com's' videos about composting those shells. I'm going to guess the video was about a year ago but I'm not sure. He says to use them in your compost because it has a component, chitin that is good for the soil. I use my shrimp shells in my worm bin. I bury it deep so the stray cats don't dig it up. They do take a while to decompose.
I heard you could but I havent seen how. The would have to be well crushed though. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Maybe run them through a blender with some water before to crush them up! I agree with the notion that they need to be as small as possible, but technically they should compost.....all organic matter does eventually.
Thanks for this video! I love all your stuff! 2:04 Do you want a ton of it in the fall so you cover your beds with it for overwintering? What sort of cover crop do you plant over the compost if so? Also, have you ever tried to pick up old veggies/fruit from local grocery store to compost? Stuff they throw out. I was going to drive around to the grocery stores and ask and also hit the starbucks for coffee grounds.
Yep. I want to have it for overwintering and for spring. Thats why I am no rush but getting it hot helps. No cover crops yet. That will be in the future. I used to get coffee grounds but never old produce. I never tried. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
This is great! I really want to try it. May have to wait for Autumn though. I'm a bit concerned about the heat in my area. The Indian reservation near us tried a community compost system a few years back. It got so hot in the summer that it caught fire 😱 (Southern Nevada Desert. We can get 115f- 120f temps for weeks).
Hi Gary, any update on the $0 garden dig project you started? Was really looking forward to the update video you said would be posted the next day haha. Thanks!
I know sorry. Side tracked side track and now its embarrassing. Ill plant it today and show the protection piece. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
It would Episode 1 of Growing Tomatoes: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-9gKnH3NJD1A.html Episode 2 of Growing Tomatoes: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-DdmiyLq1XUM.html Episode 3 of Growing Tomatoes: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-hELpYoHhcOg.html
My grass still has a lot of seed... isn't that an issue? Here I thought I was doing great... layering, turning it every few days, even ordered a thermometer. I finally gave up on mine because when I put a thermometer in the middle, it went down to 60°. Ruh roh! There were big brown bugs all in the pile under the cardboard. That's not a good sign. Well, this video makes me want to start again, so much simpler. I am concerned about all the grass seed sprouting later, though.
So just as I showed seems to be working. Really fluff the grass. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
These chunks of 3-layered cardboard won't break down anytime soon. I have seen intact pieces of those in soil, burried under a think layer of mulch after 2 years. I have also seen those in a compost pile well after a year sitting among greens. I'd either shred them into very fine pieces (if I had a machine to do it) or maybe rinse them with water prior to layering, since that helps to break them down mechanically.
These are all gone quickly. Moisture is key but if they have any wax on it it can take much longer. Thanks... Here is how you can support me, more videos, and The Rusted Garden... The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ Companies I am Affiliated With... Bentley Seed Company bentleyseeds.com GreenStalk Garden Vertical Towers: lddy.no/4eal Vegega Metal Raised Beds:www.vegega.com/?ref=le64f3gm30 AgroThrive Water-Soluble Fertilizer: bit.ly/3qx7rot The Rusted Garden 'Scan & Grow' Seed Collection www.therustedgarden.com/search?type=product&q=qr Just scan the QR code and watch a planting video: Follow me on Instagram instagram.com/therustedgarden/ Join The Rusted Garden Homestead FB Group facebook.com/groups/Therustedgardenhomestead Follow me on TikTok www.tiktok.com/@therustedgarden My Books The Modern Homestead Garden: amzn.to/43iXbyx Growing and Edible Landscape: amzn.to/3NgMUxj Visit My Amazon Store Front I earn from any eligible purchases you make. www.amazon.com/shop/garypilarchiktherustedgarden Become an affiliate of The Rusted Garden and Earn 15% on sales. Sign up here: the-rusted-garden.goaffpro.com/create-account
In the playlist for compost I show the walk through and discuss the design. I dont build it but give lots of close up on how it was made. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
What state do you live in if you don’t mind me asking? Your videos are fantastic and I love following them. I’m not the best at gardening, but I’m also in a zone 9 location. It seems very different from where you are.
I doesnt have to be but it helps keep it moist. Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden shop for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise and more at www.therustedgarden.com Check out my new gardening PODCAST Gardening Coast2Coast at gardeningcoast2coast.net with CaliKim. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualified purchases. Check out my Amazon Storefront for garden lights, seed starting supplies, fertilizer, pest management, books and more! www.amazon.com/shop/garypilarchiktherustedgarden
I noticed since you now have a new garden and starting composting that you have not mentioned anything about the use of coffee grounds. Have you stopped using coffee grounds either in your compost barrel/pile or garden? Great garden! Because I'm in Texas and about a month ahead in the garden I tend to watch your 2019 series.
The Starbucks stopped keeping them for us all. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Sorry to hear that. I had to stop picking up grounds because I had more than I probably ever use. I ordered my second set of grow bags from your shop a couple days ago.
Question: I don't really have access to grass. I am in the country, and my lawn is not just grass (a lot of weeds too) and I just like to let it sit and reabsorb into the soil. Can I use other green leaves from plants or stuff pulled from the garden instead? Also what about veggie scraps?
For compost, yes to all the above. Anything can be composted down and greens can be leaves Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden shop for seeds, seed starting supplies, neem oil, TRG merchandise and more at www.therustedgarden.com & Checkout my quick and to point 2 minute (or sow) TRG Gardening Tips playlist: ru-vid.com/group/PLMsTQWKi63STRub6SgaV6PlB9-O1ooM5l
This is very interesting! We have a big pile of grassroots we had to pull off to open a few beds. We're new gardeners and now we're stuck with this big pile of grassroots with soil and don't know what to do with it... Do you think this technique could work with the kind of material we have?
Yeah it would work. Some clippings too. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
If your worried you can keep the roots and debris in black garbage bag in the sun for a while before adding to compost piles. The heat will kill the roots but the plastic will hold all the good organic matter. Then just dump it into your compost piles.
You can Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden shop for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise and more at www.therustedgarden.com Check out my new gardening PODCAST Gardening Coast2Coast at gardeningcoast2coast.net with CaliKim.
So easy, would love to do this but I have no lawn for grass clippings. Tons of cardboard and maple leaves, (both browns) but no grass. If I buy a bale of fresh green hay (not straw) would that work instead?
I read add a lot and feel it is not toxic and good to go. Usually sugars etc. Very simple. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
You definitely can add in the food, just balance it with some brown material like boxes, dried leaves, pine needles... This is just what he is doing in his and wanted to show how simple it can be to create a large amount of compost easily :)
Hi gary, love your channel, I have a question. I dont have the space to really build a compost pile or the set to you have... could I use this technique in a garbage bin? With a lid.. maybe some holes on the top or side?? Thanks!!
Holes in it... yep. Youd want to as youll have to move it occasional to aerate it. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
I know say wait a good 60 days. You might be fine but it is getting absorb into the plants As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualified purchases. Check out my Amazon Storefront for garden lights, seed starting supplies, fertilizer, pest management, books and more! www.amazon.com/shop/garypilarchiktherustedgarden Check out my new gardening PODCAST Gardening Coast2Coast at gardeningcoast2coast.net with CaliKim. Please subscribe as it really helps me & please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise, and more at www.therustedgarden.com
I put a black plastic compost bin in a shady part of my garden . I have been layering produce scraps and a little weeds with brown leaves. It never seems hot and it's filling quickly! Think it will still compost?
It will. It will be slow but it still happens. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
It helps for hot composting as you want some insulation around a core. But you can still pile it and build it now. It just breaks downs slower. As you build it up and get quantity, you can make a hot composting pile later. Flower Box & Container Gardening Series Playlist ru-vid.com/group/PLMsTQWKi63SSwiFPke11QQw7SrcajtlVR
You dont want it soak. A light spray make it tear pretty easily Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Just a question, we don’t use it but just wondering. If your pile is getting up to 140+ degrees, wouldn’t that kill off any pesticide residues? Also weeds?
It is suppose too kill off seeds. The pesticides could be. But it all might not all heat up. I have read it does but not so sure for what chemicals. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
It can if you over do it the layer. It can smell but nothing a fork and turn wont fix. You can find items I use or discuss in videos, by checking out www.amazon.com/shop/garypilarchiktherustedgarden It's my Amazon Storefront for seed starting supplies, fertilizer, pest management, books and more! As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualified purchases. Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise, and more at www.therustedgarden.com Please subscribe if you have a chance (Thanks!)
Thanks. Dried grass becomes a brown or carbon like the cardboard. You can use it but you still need a nitrogen source. Flower Box & Container Gardening Series Playlist ru-vid.com/group/PLMsTQWKi63SSwiFPke11QQw7SrcajtlVR
I thing so. Just want all to be loose and fluffy to start Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
I just finished shredding paper for this exact purpose. Browns can be hard to find in spring which is why his advice about cardboard is so spot on. Get stuff out of the waste stream and build epic soil!
Any thing green is good. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Hay becomes a carbon brown. Depends how green it is. Might be passed its nitrogen content benefit. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
In my experience alfalfa hay....if that's what your referring to, will heat up on its own very well on its own even when dried. Rained on dry hay baled too soon can lead to haystack fires. Straw or grass hay would be more brown in my opinion. I would not hesitate to use alfalfa hay as a green ingredient with the cardboard.
They can be composted the wont act like the cardboard though in this mix however Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Ill talk more about it in video 3 but as little as possible. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Yep and when green actually greens as a nitrogen source Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Well if it heats up, it does kill the seeds but not all the pile heats. Can you cut when plants arent seeding. They usually have to get to a certain height. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
I never had mice but bugs are always around Please visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden shop for your fabric pots, fall & spring seeds, seed starting supplies, peppermint oil, neem oil, TRG merchandise and more at www.therustedgarden.com Check out my new gardening PODCAST Gardening Coast2Coast at gardeningcoast2coast.net with CaliKim. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualified purchases. Check out my Amazon Storefront for garden lights, seed starting supplies, fertilizer, pest management, books and more! www.amazon.com/shop/garypilarchiktherustedgarden
None. It is heavily researched too. Not sure about glossy ink but that seems to be okay too but I am still looking. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Glue is fine. Tons of research. Flat ink is fine. Glossy ink is probably okay but I have read mixed results. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Nope just green is green. Weed or grass Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
Possible but most are made with nontoxic glue and wood pulp. They make it cheap. Get your Fall Garden Seeds & Spring Seed Starting Supplies at... Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/
Help! Followed another RU-vid recipe that ended up smelling like sewer. It was suppose to be ready in 2 weeks with grass clippings, shredded paper, kitchen scraps soil and any brown garden scraps. Then each layer was to be sprayed with a mixture of beer, coke and ammonia. I did turn and mix it then abandoned the project till this spring and it still smelled some. I spread it evenly across the ground and tilled it in as soon as ground could be worked. Plants are very happy but boy did it stink in the process. You mentioned ammonia smell but this was sewer. What do I do to prevent this?
Ugh. Well stink smell is bad but doesnt mean its not breaking down. More browns or carbons cut the smell down but 2 weeks i aggressive and it is going to stink. Please Visit The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More
I dumped my grass clippings into a hardware "cloth" bent in a cylinder thing and forgot about them, noticed a boggy smell in about two weeks, removed the cylinder and found the bottom of the pile was burning hot, black and grayish, and very stinky. Stinky like a bog = anaerobic, I believe. Needs air. I had been told grass clippings dumped in a pile would begin to stink. No cardboard was needed to make it burn. I was also told that burned grass like that is not real compost. I don't know. I dumped the stinky part in a hugel bed I am building and I am going to add cardboard as shown here next time.
Brendan Hall I’ve used cardboard and grass to build garden beds for years. But usually by layering directly in the new bed. Had never tried this “quick” method and probably will now just stick to Gary’s way and add more cardboard to cut the smell. Have never, in 40 years of gardening, had something so stinky to deal with. It was like sewer on steroids 😂
Depending on how hot you keep it 8-12 weeks. Some can do it faster but that is a lot of turning adding greens. Please visit, The Rusted Garden Seed & Garden Shop: www.therustedgarden.com/ - Seeds, Starting Supplies, Neem Oil, Peppermint & Other Oils, Calcium Nitrate & More