Because of the fat content and animals being attracted to the rotting cheese. The decaying vegetable compost is normal smelling to animals but the smell of rotting meat or dairy products, besides smelling bad to your nose would get the local animals all lined up for a free meal. Meat and cheeses and fats in general rot much slower than vegetation. They also make your compost stink and hang around too long.
To effectively compost cheese, shred or crumble it into small pieces before adding it to your compost pile. Mix the cheese with other organic materials like fruit and vegetable scraps, yard waste, and coffee grounds. Make sure to turn the compost pile regularly to aerate it and help the cheese break down faster. The cheese will add nutrients to the compost, which will create nutrient-rich soil for your garden when the compost is fully decomposed.
Yes, you can put fruit in compost.
Yes, you can put corn cobs in compost.
Yes, you can put dead flowers in compost.
well if you got cheese on your face you probly were wasted last night and cant remember a thing and a friend put it on you. or your a homosexual that likes cheese puffs
Yes, you can put flowers in compost. Flowers are organic materials that can break down and enrich the compost with nutrients.
meat scraps
I think you're not meant to put fats in a compost bin because it can attract vermin. But it probably will compost.
Yes. You an compost almost any organic substance.
Yes, you can put coffee filters in compost. They are biodegradable and will break down over time in a compost pile.
a. How do you dispose your biodegradables? Do you bury them or put in a compost pit?
Yes, you can put cooked corn cobs in compost. They will break down over time and add nutrients to the compost.