cylinder
Basements and garages are places to put compost bins in winter. It is possible to compost year-round in some places, in which case bins may remain in place and functional as long as air, heat, light, and moisture requirements can be met. Otherwise, it tends to be a good idea to keep the bin out of the way of foraging wildlife and inclement weather.
it save energy by.............................................
compost bins help us by taking certain live trash and making it a nutrient rich fertilizer for our gardens . it is the complete cycle of a vegetable.
Where do you get parts for Soilsaver Compost Bin?Read more: Where_do_you_get_parts_for_Soilsaver_Compost_Bin
You won't have any compost next Spring.
compost will kill us in the near future
Collecting leaf litter, leaving grass clippings in place and using compost bins, heaps, piles and pits and worm bins are examples of ways that people compost. People compost when they allow recyclable materials to break down through the work of air, heat, micro-organisms and moisture. Recyclable materials involve food scraps and yard debris that decompose into dark-colored, fresh-smelling, nutrient-rich organic matter to be used as soil amendment, fertilizer or mulch.
Metal, plastic and wood containers are examples of compost bins. The container must be flexible enough to have small ventilation holes drilled into the bottoms, sides and tops but strong enough not to break or crack from so doing. They need to be supportive of regular openings and shuttings for adding activators or moisture and for turning layers every other day or every week.
There are certainly compost bins that can be kept in the house year round. The website "http://www.naturemill.com/" provides composters designed for inside use.
Air, moisture and temperature are examples of non-living factors that are needed for compost bins to work. Living macro- and micro-organisms consume and excrete carbon- and nitrogen-rich recyclables before becoming additional non-living factors with death. Non-living air, moisture and temperature make life possible for the organisms within compost bins just as they do for animal and plant life outside them.
No, caterpillars cannot be put in compost bins. Caterpillars represent the larval stages of butterflies and moths. A compost bin will not support the life cycles and natural histories that lepidopterans must experience to breed, feed and fly.