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How to compost

Compost Safely

School Wormeries

Emptying your bin

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Too much grass

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Prickly prunings

Leaves for leafmould

To turn or not to turn

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Topical Composting

Composting demonstrated

TOPICAL COMPOSTING TIPS:     January

During the winter, cardboard egg boxes and toilet roll holders should be mixed in with vegetable scraps for best results

 

Don’t bin your Christmas Tree!

Christmas tree branches provide invaluable plant supports in the garden.  Snip the branches as close to the trunk as possible and store them upright.  When the needles have dropped, you’re left with a range of different sized supports.

The large branches at the base make ideal pea sticks and will support the larger flowers at the back of the herbaceous border.  Place the sticks in the ground early in the season, before the plants need them.  The flowers will cover and  completely conceal the branches.

Use the small and medium-sized branches in a similar way.  The small ones can be used for tiny peas seedlings and will prevent birds from ripping them out of the ground.

The medium and large branches can also be used as ‘cloches’ for fleece and enviromesh and you can grow a couple of sweet peas up the tree’s trunk.

Don’t throw out all these free gifts – buy some more plants at the garden centre rather than cloches and plant supports.  Recycling can save you money as well as being good for the environment

Christmas tree

Winter prunings

Don’t be tempted to prune your roses at this time of year, even during a milder spell.  Frost will still get into the pruned ends and this will lead to die-back.  Leave this type of pruning till later in the Winter.  We’ll look next month at how all these prunings can be recycled in the garden.  Even if you can’t compost a rose branch, you can always recycle it.

 

Composting problem?

Contact us  if you would like us to solve any composting problem.  We'll post the answer  here.

Mrs S. from Kelso asks:
Can I compost potato peelings or will they spread disease?” 

It’s perfectly safe to compost tattie peelings.  Diseases like late blight are spread by spores on diseased tubers and you’re most unlikely to be eating them!

 Posted 6/01/2008

If you would like to see other "Home Composters" click below
January Home Composter Reusing your Christmas decorations
February Home Composter Dealing with prickly prunings
March Home Composter -Making your own potting mixes
April Home Composter - Harvesting last year's compost
May Home Composter - Dealing with weeds
June Home Composter - All that grass
July Home Composter - Worms and wormeries
August Home Composter -Your top 5 queries
September Home Composter -To turn or not to turn your compost?
October Home Composter - Autumn clearing
November Home Composter - Leaves

 

Useful links:
Scottish Borders Council: Reduce Reuse Recyclewaste aware logoWRAPWRAP logo

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