Actions

  Print Article
  BookMark Article

Categories    Category List

Advertising
Arts
Autos
Business
Careers
Computers
Current Affairs
Education And Reference
Entertainment
Finances
Food
Gaming
Gardening
Health
Holidays
Home And Family
Insurance
Internet
Investing
Legal
Medical
Men Only
Motorcyles
Outdoors
Pets And Animals
Relationships
Religion
Self Improvement
Shopping
Society
Software
Sports
Staying Fit
Technology
Travel
Weddings
Women Only
Writing And Speaking

Online Now    Online Now

Guests Online (7)

Googlebot/2.1 (1)

Baiduspider (1)

Author Login    Author Login

Welcome Guest! Please login or create an account.

Username:

Password:



If you do not have an account yet, you can register ( Here ), or you may retrieve a lost user/pass ( Here ).

Sponsors    Our Sponsors

Navigation    Navigation

   10 newest articles RSS

Author Highlights    Featured Author

Jan Michaels
Seattle

"Jan Michaels is the creator of the Article Friendly Article Publishing Script for php..."

View My Bio & Articles


Station Master
London

View My Bio & Articles


Differences In Fixed And Rotating Compost Bins

Author : Stewart Wrighter   Top Author

Submitted : 2012-02-12    Word Count : 7    Popularity:   Not Rated

Tags:   compost bins, compost tumbler, compost bins for sale, rotating compost bins, plastic compost bins

Author RSS Feed   Author RSS Feed

Rotating compost bins are not required for the making of compost. After all, people have been composting by creating very simple compost piles in their backyards for a long time without the benefit of tumbling action. However, compost tumblers can make the process much more convenient, particularly for those who want to create large quantities of compost.

Rotating composters speed up the decomposition of kitchen and garden waste by distributing air and water and breaking up layers of material that have been compacted together. Of course, you can and should break up material in a traditional composter with a pitchfork or shovel, but rotating composters are easier on your back in most cases. Tumblers make the process easier by placing the bin on a stand and adding a turning crank.

Whenever the material in the composter is turned, the material inside starts to break up more quickly. Moisture and heat are kept in, and the contents are mixed well. Some compost bins for sale claim that the process of creating compost can go from taking a few months to taking a few weeks.

If your composting bin is outdoors, then there are other advantages to using a rotating composter over a fixed one. The fact that they remain closed, keeping the smells of the decomposing foods inside is a bonus, and as long as they are latched and on a stand, they're very hard for backyard animals like raccoons and opossums to get into.

Then again, if you're on a budget, or if you're composting a small enough amount of waste that you can easily upend your compost container or stir it with a garden fork, you may not find a tumbling composter to be that much of an improvement over a simple closed bin.

Whether you choose a fixed or rotating compost bins, metal or plastic compost bins, you're doing yourself and the earth a favor by diverting useful substances from the waste stream. You can compost most kitchen waste, except for meat, bones, or dairy products. You can compost crushed egg shells, used coffee grounds, and even small amounts of shredded paper. The result, after a few weeks or months of decomposition magic, is a crumbly, nearly black substance that can be added to soils to greatly improve them without the use of chemical fertilizers.

Even if you don't garden, you can add compost to the soils in house plants, or you could give them to a friend who gardens. Good compost is often referred to as "black gold" because of its many benefits to soils and gardens. If you do garden, mixing compost in with your normal garden soil enriches it and can improve garden yields with little extra effort or expense.

Adding compost around bedding plants and trees enriches the soils, discourages weeds, and even discourages some insect pests. The combination of ground up dead leaves and grass clippings makes terrific compost over the winter that you can use when you plant in the spring. Composting is one of the easiest, most earth-friendly practices you can undertake, and there are plenty of ready-made composting bins that will help you do it.

Author's Resource Box

Jason Bacot - Are you looking to save some money when it comes to your home gardening? Then I suggest you check out our Rotating Compost Bins and Compost Bins for a natural fertilizer at Compostbins.Nixtie.com as soon as possible.

Article Source:
Intra Realm! Build Your Own Zone!

 

  Report Article
Badly Written Offensive Content Spam
Bad Author Links Mis-spellings Bad Formatting
Bad Author Photo Good Article!