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Packaging & Delivery
Only £5 Delivery for all orders

ONLY £5 DELIVERY
for all orders

Also Available From A Garden Centre Near You

Composters and water butts are also available for collection from 3 local garden centres.

No delivery charge and no need to wait.

Blackbrooks Garden Centre,
New Road, Sedlescombe, Battle
Tel: 01424 870673

Paradise Park Garden Centre,
Avis Road, Newhaven
Tel: 01273 512123

Scats Country Store,
Station Road, Heathfield
Tel: 01435 866938

Composting Tips

Simple tips to help you with your composting.

Composting is not just for gardeners - it helps the environment too.

Every year thousands of tonnes of kitchen and garden waste are thrown in the dustbin, which usually ends up in expensive, unsightly and environmentally damaging landfill sites.

Up to 35% of household waste is organic and suitable for home composting. Simply put it in a compost bin and leave it to breakdown for a few months. The end result is a rich nutritious crumbly compost which can be dug into the garden to improve soil structure. It can also be used as a mulch to suppress weeds and improve drainage.

Composting is an entirely natural process carried out by worms and a myriad of tiny creatures, many of them too small to be seen by the naked eye.

Composting Tips

  • Site your compost bin in a sunny spot if possible. The plastic will absorb the sun’s UV rays and heat up the compost.
  • To get the compost started you can use an activator, which helps speed up the composting process. We recommend ‘Biotal Multi-Purpose ’, a natural liquid which has a good reputation among gardening experts.
  • Good aeration is required to produce the best compost. To help aerate your bin you can add scrunched up newspaper which creates air pockets.
  • It is essential to have a good mix of waste material in your composter to aid decomposition, ie. grass, paper, leaves, fruit & vegetable peelings.  Add the different types of material in layers - approximately 3” to 6” deep.
  • Get yourself a Kitchen Caddy to collect scraps. It saves time and the effort of having to nip out to the compost bin every time you prepare a meal.

Hot Composting Recipes

Composting is often viewed as a process rather like cooking. The following recipes recommend a mix of ingredients that will result in the very best quality compost.  In time you will learn which ingredients work best for yourself.  The idea is to get a good balance of brown carbon rich materials (i.e. leaves and wood shavings) and nitrogen rich materials (grass clippings, weeds, food scraps).

Recipe 1

  • 2 parts dry leaves
  • 2 parts straw or wood shavings
  • 1 part manure
  • 1 part fresh grass clippings
  • 1 part fresh garden weeds
  • 1 part food scraps

Recipe 2

  • 2 parts dry leaves
  • 1 part fresh grass clippings
  • 1 part fresh garden leaves
  • 1 part food scraps

Condiments

Any of the following will add nutrients to your compost mix.  These materials are not necessary but can be beneficial to the process.  Sprinkle like salt the condiments onto your compost.

  • Garden soil is full of micro-organisms - half shovel maximum.  Too much will slow the process down.
  • Finished compost is also full of micro-organisms - half shovel maximum. Again, too much will slow the process down.
  • Bone / blood meal - nitrogen activators. Use sparingly.
  • Fireplace ashes are high in potash and carbon.  Can be mixed in when you have a lot of nitrogen rich material (e.g. grass).

Composting Trouble Shooting

Problem Reason Solution
Compost is not getting hot enough to break down material Compost mix not right Add more soft sappy nitrogen-rich activating materials (e.g. grass) or worms or another activator
Composter slows down in winter Heat loving bacteria slow down Activators in the compost heap will warm the bacteria into action
Compost heap dries out in summer Evaporation of water due to hot weather Water until compost is moist. Keep lid on composter
Flies Larvae feed on the vegetation. They are okay but you don't want too many Avoid using pesticides. Cover the pile with paper and bury kitchen scraps
Unpleasant smell No air getting to compost Aerate the compost using fork or aeration stick
Wet and smelly Too much green material such as grass Put in less green material. It must be mixed with other materials.